Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
For Whom the Bell Tolls is a 1943 American epic war film produced and directed by Sam Wood and starring Gary Cooper, Ingrid Bergman, Akim Tamiroff, Katina Paxinou and Joseph Calleia. The screenwriter Dudley Nichols based his script on the 1940 novel For Whom the Bell Tolls by American novelist Ernest Hemingway .
For Whom the Bell Tolls (1943) This Is the Army (1943) Best Foot Forward (1943) The Song of Bernadette (1943) (included on the soundtrack CD, reinstated on the Blu-Ray release) Since You Went Away (1944) Spellbound (1945)
"For Whom the Bell Tolls" was an American television play broadcast in two parts on March 12 and March 19, 1959, as part of the CBS television series, Playhouse 90. It is a television adaptation of the 1940 novel by Ernest Hemingway. John Frankenheimer was the director. The cast included Jason Robards, Maria Schell, and Maureen Stapleton.
The Bell Keeper is a 2023 American action horror film directed and edited by Colton Tran, and written by Joe Davison. It was released in the United States by Screen Media Films on October 13, 2023. Plot
Akim Mikhailovich Tamiroff [a] (born Hovakim Tamiryants; [b] [1] October 29, 1899 – September 17, 1972) was an Armenian-American actor of film, stage, and television. One of the premier character actors of Hollywood's Golden Age, [2] Tamiroff developed a prolific career despite his thick accent, appearing in at least 80 motion pictures over a span of 37 years.
After the Storm is a 2001 American adventure film starring Benjamin Bratt, Mili Avital, Armand Assante, and Simone-Élise Girard.The story centers around the efforts of a group of people to salvage valuables from a sunken yacht in the Bahamas in 1933 and their schemes to betray and double-cross one another.
MacLean elected to adapt his novel for the cinema himself, and kept the adaptation close to the novel. [7] The story is very close to the source text, and features some of the same witty dialogue. Some of the twists in the ending have been changed, however, and a shootout replaces MacLean's original Agatha Christie -style summation.
The film was given the biggest advertising campaign for a Paramount film since For Whom the Bell Tolls. [5] The New York premiere was held on August 6, 1947 at the Paramount and in its initial release period in the United States, the film took in $6.1 million in rentals, making it the second highest-grossing film of 1947.