Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Cross My Heart, a British drama directed by Bernard Mainwaring; Cross My Heart, an American comedy directed by John Berry; Cross My Heart, an American romantic comedy directed by Armyan Bernstein
Cross My Heart is an American romantic comedy that was released in the United States on November 13, 1987. [2] It stars Martin Short and Annette O'Toole . Plot
Cross My Heart is a 1946 American comedy film directed by John Berry and starring Betty Hutton, Sonny Tufts and Rhys Williams. It was a remake of the 1937 film True Confession , which was itself based on the 1934 French play Mon Crime written by Georges Berr and Louis Verneuil .
Cross My Heart is the 21st novel in the Alex Cross series written by author James Patterson. The novel takes place after Alex Cross, Run, in which Alex tries contemplating a life outside the Metro Police after the apparent death of Ava, an orphan girl they took in. It was initially not planned by Patterson, but was later confirmed to be in the ...
Merry Christmas, Alex Cross is followed by Alex Cross, Run and Cross My Heart. Alex Cross, Run was released February 18, 2013 in Hardcover while paperback edition was released July 30, 2013. Cross My Heart will be released initially in Hardcover on November 25, 2013. [needs update]
"Sweethearts" was a cafè in the middle of Kings Cross, Sydney in the 1970s and 1980s, "cramped between strip clubs and sex shops, patronised by the hookers, pimps and drug dealers and the lost and lonely debris of the night," [3] where author Don Walker would frequently eat. He said, "The original Sweethearts Cafe is where McDonald's is now.
Wille and Rebekah Yli-Luoma opened Heart in 2009. [1] [2] Heart's original location, known as the Eastside Cafe, is located at 2211 East Burnside Street in Portland's Kerns neighborhood. [2] Its second location, known as the Westside Cafe, opened in 2013 and is located at 537 Southwest 12th Avenue in downtown Portland's West End.
Cross My Heart is a 1937 British drama film directed by Bernard Mainwaring and starring Kathleen Gibson, Kenne Duncan and Tully Comber. It was made at Pinewood Studios as a quota quickie for release by Paramount Pictures .