Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Although it was released at the end of 1935 and appears on the List of American films of 1935, A Tale in Two Cities was one of ten films competing for the Academy Award for Best Picture of 1936 at the 9th Academy Awards on March 4, 1937.
January 9 – Silent screen actor John Gilbert, perhaps best known for his appearances in films such as The Merry Widow and The Big Parade, dies suddenly of a heart attack at his Bel Air home, aged 38. February 15 – first Republic serial, Darkest Africa, is released.
This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:1936 films. It includes 1936 films that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. This category is for musical films released in the year 1936 .
The serial film was also edited into a 72-minute feature version in 1936, which was only exhibited abroad, until being released in the US as 1949 as Rocket Ship by Sherman S. Krellberg's Filmcraft Pictures. [10] A different feature version of the serial, at 90 minutes, was sold directly to television in 1966 under the title Spaceship to the ...
Broadway Melody of 1936 is a musical film released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1935. [2] In New York, the film opened at the Capitol Theatre , the site of many prestigious MGM premieres. It was a follow-up of sorts to the successful The Broadway Melody , which had been released in 1929, although, there is no story connection with the earlier film ...
Follow the Fleet is a 1936 American musical comedy film with a nautical theme starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in their fifth collaboration as dance partners. It also features Randolph Scott, Harriet Hilliard, and Astrid Allwyn, with music and lyrics by Irving Berlin. Lucille Ball and Betty Grable also appear, in supporting roles.
The Big Show (1936 film) Bingo Crosbyana; Birds of a Feather (1936 film) Black Eyes (1936 film) Black Gold (1936 film) The Black Network; Blackmailer (1936 film) The Bank Messenger Mystery; Blazing Justice; Blind Man's Bluff (1936 film) Blood on Wolf Mountain; The Blow Out; Blue Blazes (1936 film) The Blue Mouse (1936 film) Boccaccio (1936 film ...
On the whole, as screen entertainment and as musical adaptation, Par’s ‘Goes’ will do." [5] Writing for The Spectator in 1936, Graham Greene panned the film and criticized Crosby's slow and "moony methods" of singing in "a picture which should rattle quite as fast as a sub-machine gun." Greene also wrote that the song "You're the Top" had ...