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Happy New Year, Colin Burstead (2018) Highball (1997) The Holdovers (2023) Ladies in Black (2018) A Long Way Down (2014) Mermaids (1990) Metropolitan (1990) More American Graffiti (1979) New Year's Day (1989) Peter's Friends (1992) Room for One More (1952) Starter for 10 (2006) Surviving New Year's (2008) Sweet Hearts Dance (1988)
Rudolph's Shiny New Year is a 1976 Christmas and New Year's stop motion animated television special and a standalone sequel to the 1964 special Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer produced by Rankin/Bass Productions. The special premiered on ABC on December 10, 1976. [1]
1897 Baby New Year with Father Time 1908 Baby New Year on the cover of The Saturday Evening Post. The Baby New Year is a personification of the start of the New Year commonly seen in editorial cartoons. He symbolizes the "birth" of the next year and the "passing" of the prior year; in other words, a "rebirth". [1]
New Year Baby is a 2006 documentary film that tells the story of a family that survived the Cambodian genocide, and started a new life in the United States.The film was directed by Socheata Poeuv and produced by Charles Vogl.
The main character in Ang Lee's Lust, Caution (2007) watches Penny Serenade in a Shanghai movie theater showing Western films. [17] In the film Thelma & Louise (1991), state police and FBI personnel watch Penny Serenade on late-night television while monitoring a phone tap at Thelma's home in Arkansas. (Only the film's audio is briefly heard ...
It is a remake of the 1939 comedy film Bachelor Mother, which starred Ginger Rogers and David Niven, and was itself an English remake of the 1935 Austrian-Hungarian comedy film Little Mother. Produced by Edmund Grainger, it was distributed by RKO Pictures. An unmarried salesgirl at a department store finds and takes care of an abandoned baby.
New Year Adventures of Masha and Vitya; New Year Blues; The New Year (film) New Year's Day (2001 film) New Year's Eve (1929 film) New Year's Eve (2011 film) New Year's Evil (film) Night Train to Paris; No Surrender (film) Now You See Me 2
Baby Boom is a 1987 American romantic comedy-drama film directed by Charles Shyer, written by Nancy Meyers and Shyer, and produced by Meyers and Bruce A. Block for United Artists. It stars Diane Keaton as a yuppie who discovers that a long-lost cousin has died, leaving her a fourteen-month-old baby girl as inheritance.