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Greyhound is a 2020 American war film directed by Aaron Schneider and starring Tom Hanks, who also wrote the screenplay. [5] The film is based on the 1955 novel The Good Shepherd by C. S. Forester, and follows a US Navy commander on his first assignment commanding a multi-national escort destroyer group of four, defending an Allied convoy from U-boats during the Battle of the Atlantic.
Next Stop Wonderland (1998) – set in Boston, Massachusetts; One True Thing (1998) The Parent Trap (1998) Practical Magic (1998) Safe Men (1998) – set in Providence, Rhode Island; The Spanish Prisoner (1998) Stranger in the Kingdom (1998) There's Something About Mary (1998) The Boondock Saints (1999) – set in Boston, Massachusetts
Dealing: Or the Berkeley-to-Boston Forty-Brick Lost-Bag Blues (film) Deck the Halls (2006 film) The Devonsville Terror; Diane (2018 film) Dino at the Beach; Down to the Sea in Ships (1922 film) Dumb Money; The Dunwich Horror (film)
Black Mass (film) Blow (film) Blown Away (1994 film) Blue Hill Avenue (film) The Boondock Saints; The Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day; Boston Strangler (film) The Boston Strangler (film) The Boston Tea Party (1908 film) The Bostonians; Brink's: The Great Robbery; The Brink's Job; BUtterfield 8; By the Gun
S. Sabrina (1995 film) Salesman (1969 film) The Scarlet Letter (1934 film) School Ties; The Sea of Trees; The Secret Village; Session 9; Sex Tape (film) Shallow Hal
Johnny Tremain is a 1957 American adventure war film made by Walt Disney Productions, released by Buena Vista Distribution, [2] and based on the 1944 Newbery Medal-winning children's novel of the same name by Esther Forbes, retelling the story of the years in Boston, Massachusetts prior to the outbreak of the American Revolution.
On April 1, 2008, Greyhound Lines ceased use of the Vermont Transit Lines brand fully consolidating VTL routes into its operations timetable. [2] Vermont Transit Routes 62 (Montreal-Burlington-White River Junction-Boston), 67 (White River Junction-Springfield) and 60 (Bangor-Boston) remain in the Greyhound national network.
The New England Greyhound Lines (called also NEGL), an intercity highway-coach carrier, was a Greyhound regional operating company, based in Boston, Massachusetts, USA, from 1937 until 1955, when it became a part of the Eastern Division of The Greyhound Corporation (called also the Eastern Greyhound Lines, the first of four huge new divisions (along with Central, Southern, and Western).