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James Colton (12 May 1860 – 5 August 1936) was a Scottish anarchist, trade unionist and coal miner, who spent most of his life in Wales. He was known for arranging a marriage of convenience with the anarchist activist and writer Emma Goldman in 1925, so that she could obtain British citizenship .
The Goya Award for Best Ibero-American Film (Spanish: Goya a la Mejor Película Iberoamericana), formerly the Goya Award for Best Spanish Language Foreign Film (Spanish: Goya a la Mejor Película Extranjera de Habla Hispana, 1987–2008) and the Goya Award for Best Hispanic American Film (Spanish: Goya a la Mejor Película Hispanoamericana, 2009–2010), is one of the Goya Awards, Spain's ...
Victor Carver (Roscoe), a suitor for Mabel's hand, attempts to ruin her father in a stock deal, but Roscoe engineers a counter stock deal during the illness of James, which saves his fortune. Roscoe also sells the lane to James Colton to raise money to save his friend George Davis (Pauncefort), a cashier at the local bank, from disgrace.
A Sky Full of Stars for a Roof (1968 by Giulio Petroni with Giuliano Gemma, Mario Adorf, Magda Konopka, Julie Ménard) The Longest Hunt (1968 by Bruno Corbucci with Brian Kelly, Keenan Wynn, Erika Blanc, Folco Lulli, Fabrizio Moroni) Duffy (1968 by Robert Parrish with James Coburn, James Mason, James Fox, Susannah York, John Alderton)
EXCLUSIVE: Two new ripped-from-the-headlines movies are planned for Lifetime in October that star Kellie Martin (Army Wives), Colton Haynes (Arrow) and more. Airing Oct. 22, Swindler Seduction ...
The film, which starred Rafael Rivelles as Don Quixote and Juan Calvo as Sancho Panza, featured a young Fernando Rey as Sanson Carrasco and popular Spanish actress Sara Montiel as Antonia, Quixote's niece. The music for the film was composed by Ernesto Halffter, and the movie was shot on location in La Mancha and other Spanish regions.
An Old Spanish Custom even returned to New York theaters: once on May 5, 1972, as part of the Thalia Theater's "Cinema Cavalcade" of obscure 1930s titles, [9] and once in 1991 at the Film Forum, as presented personally by historian William K. Everson. [10] A VHS videotape version was released in 1990, and a DVD version followed in 2005.
Lovers (Spanish: Amantes) is a 1991 Spanish film noir written and directed by Vicente Aranda, starring Victoria Abril, Jorge Sanz and Maribel Verdú. The film brought Aranda to widespread attention in the English-speaking world. It won two Goya Awards (Best Film and Best Director) and is considered one of the best Spanish films of the 1990s.