Antje Geerk


Biography

Filmography

 

Cast (Feature Film)

False Shame (1964)
Monika Gruber

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Terror On A Train (1953) -- (Movie Clip) It's A Detonator You're Playing With Director Ted Tetzlaff has established a train, packed with explosives, leaving Birmingham, as we meet a stowaway (Victor Maddern), constable Baron (John Horsley), his supervisor Collins (Martin Wyldek), then railroad cop Warrilow (Maurice Denham), in Terror On A Train< 1953, starring Glenn Ford.
Terror On A Train (1953) -- (Movie Clip) We Don't Make Nuts And Bolts Unaware that he’s about to be recruited to defuse a sabotaged freight train, our second encounter with Canadian engineer and explosives expert Lyncort (Glenn Ford), residing in Birmingham, who is surprised his French wife (Anne Vernon) is serious about leaving him, in Terror On A Train, 1953.
Terror On A Train (1953) -- (Movie Clip) Straight Through The Graveyard Authorities are evacuating the fictional English town of Felsworth, police officials Branson, Warrilow and Reed (Campbell Singer, Maurice Denham, Bill Fraser) explaining to engineer Lyncort (Glenn Ford) about the train wired with explosives, Harcourt Williams the vicar, in Terror On A Train, 1953.
Criminal Code, The (1931) -- (Movie Clip) Between Me And The Boys New warden Brady (Walter Huston) being awesome stepping into the yard,facing down inmate Tex (an un-credited actor), in Howard Hawks' The Criminal Code, 1931.
Criminal Code, The (1931) -- (Movie Clip) They Framed Me Stoolie "Runch" (Clark Marshall) worried he may be the cause of the ruckus in the yard, begging inmate Bob (Phillips Holmes), much fancy montage, whereupon trusty Galloway (Boris Karloff) intervenes, in Howard Hawks' The Criminal Code, 1931.
Talk Of The Town, The (1942) -- (Movie Clip) Such Monumental Inefficiency Law professor Lightcap (Ronald Colman) expresses his displeasure with his reception then dismisses his new landlord Nora (Jean Arthur), whom he still doesn't know has escaped accused killer Dilg (Cary Grant) hidden upstairs, in George Stevens' The Talk Of The Town, 1942.
Talk of the Town, The (1942) -- (Movie Clip) That's The Gardener, Joseph Escaped convict Dilg (Cary Grant) reveals himself to vacationing Professor Lightcap (Ronald Colman) but is rescued by landlord Nora (Jean Arthur) who announces that he's only Joseph, the gardener, in George Stevens' The Talk of the Town, 1942.
Window, The (1949) -- (Movie Clip) The Boy Cried Wolf On location in New York, Bobby Driscoll as "Tommy," loaned out from Disney, terrific opening by cinematographer-turned-director Ted Tetzlaff, Academy Award-nominated editing by Frederic Knudtson, from The Window, 1949, based on a Cornell Woolrich story.
Window, The (1949) -- (Movie Clip) You Never Mean Any Harm Only child Tommy (Bobby Driscoll) with parents (Arthur Kennedy, Barbara Hale), when the landlord shows up acting on a rumor the kid spread earlier in the day, confirming the boy does have a problem with confabulating, in The Window, 1949, from the Cornell Woolrich story The Boy Cried Murder.
Love Before Breakfast (1936) -- (Movie Clip) She Ran After An Old Airedale Engaged New Yorkers Kay (Carole Lombard) and Bill (Cesar Romero), introduced here, have no idea that zillionaire Scott (Preston Foster) is behind the job offer that’s got him rushing for the boat to Japan, all meeting with the kooky countess (Betty Lawford) at the pier, early in Love Before Breakfast, 1936.
Love Before Breakfast (1936) -- (Movie Clip) Where'd You Get This Blue Eye? Carole Lombard as socialite Kay was accidentally clobbered by her rich suitor Scott (Preston Foster) the night before, so she visits Charles (George Andre Beranger) at the salon, only to find he?s not given up, in Universal?s Love Before Breakfast, 1936.
Love Before Breakfast (1936) -- (Movie Clip) Is That A Name Or A Condition? Another big outfit for Carole Lomard, as society gal Kay, with her mother (Janet Beecher), who is sort of supporting Scott (Preston Foster), her rich and rejected would-be boyfriend, who has already intercepted her date Stu (Don Briggs), in Love Before Breakfast, 1936.

Trailer

My Man Godfrey (1936) - (Re-issue Trailer) A zany heiress (Carole Lombard) tries to help a tramp (William Powell) by making him the family butler in My Man Godfrey, 1936, directed by Gregory La Cava.
Remember the Night -- (Original Trailer) Assistant D.A. Fred MacMurray takes shoplifter Barbara Stanwyck home for Christmas in Remember the Night (1940).
Dangerous Profession, A - (Original Trailer) A bail bondsman (George Raft) is asked to raise money to free his ex-girlfriend's husband. It's A Dangerous Profession (1949).
Johnny Allegro - (Original Trailer) A reformed hoodlum (George Raft) gets mixed up with counterfeiters and a deadly manhunt in Johnny Allegro (1949).
Should Ladies Behave - (Original Trailer) A young girl (Mary Carlisle) falls for her aunt's lover (Lionel Barrymore) in Should Ladies Behave (1933).
Notorious - (Original Trailer) U.S. agent Cary Grant recruits Ingrid Bergman to infiltrate a Nazi spy ring in Brazil in Alfred Hitchcock's Notorious (1946).
Day of Reckoning - (Original Trailer) A man's nagging wife drives him to crime on the Day of Reckoning (1933).
White Tower, The - (Original Trailer) Mountain climbers in the Swiss Alps mull over past problems while trying to conquer a perilous peak. Starring Glenn Ford and Claude Rains.
Son of Sinbad - (Re-issue Trailer) The legendary pirate's son fights an evil caliph over a magical secret in Son of Sinbad (1955).
Enchanted Cottage, The - (Original Trailer) A scarred veteran and a homely woman are transformed by love in The Enchanted Cottage (1945) starring Dorothy McGuire and Robert Young.
Fools For Scandal - (Original Trailer) Carole Lombard is a Hollywood star whom a broke aristocrat tries to blackmail into marriage in Fools For Scandal (1938).

Bibliography