"flame" The Dog


Filmography

Out of the Blue (1947)
Rabelais

Photos & Videos

Biography

Filmography

 

Cast (Feature Film)

Out of the Blue (1947)
Rabelais

Life Events

Photo Collections

The Black Pirate - Movie Posters
The Black Pirate - Movie Posters

Videos

Movie Clip

2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) -- (Movie Clip) Monolith Second stanza of Stanley Kubrick's "Dawn Of Man" sequence, the apes awaken one morning to find what will become known as "the monolith," early in 2001: A Space Odyssey, 1968.
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) -- (Movie Clip) Fight The ending of director Stanley Kubrick's "Dawn Of Man" sequence, the apes have become carnivorous and homicidal, and a bone thrown in the air leads to one of the most famous edits in film history, in 2001: A Space Odyssey, 1968.
Here Comes The Navy (1934) -- (Movie Clip) Looks Too Much Like A Casket James Cagney, introduced as grimy Navy yard worker Chesty, becomes a dance-hall dandy in the next scene, personally financing the trophy he intends to win with spikey girlfriend Gladys (Dorothy Tree), Lloyd Bacon directing from a crafty original screenplay by Warner Bros. stalwarts Earl Baldwin and Ben Markson, in Here Comes The Navy, 1934.
Three Musketeers, The (1921) -- (Movie Clip) Behind The Luxembourg The obligatory and comical if deadly inaugural bonding event, as ruffian D’Artagnan (producer Douglas Fairbanks, in his first film in his newly-formed United Artists venture) engages in duels with the three established musketeers (Leon Barry, George Siegmann and Eugene Pallette as Athos, Porthos and Aramis), soon devolving into a larger scrap with Cardinal Richelieu’s guards, in The Three Musketeers, 1921.
Close Encounters Of The Third Kind (1977) -- (Movie Clip) Can You Tell Me Where Cornbread Is? On the first night of blackouts sweeping across Indiana, lineman Roy Neary (Richard Dreyfuss) encounters director Steven Spielberg’s gimmick with the headlights, and a famous sequence from special effects expert Douglas Trumbull, in Close Encounters Of The Third Kind, 1977.
Bastard, The (1968) -- (Movie Clip) Open, Love And Money Not every jewel robbery in downtown Albuquerque in 1968 used a Jaguar Type-S getaway car, no matter here though, as Giuliano Gemma leads this gang, with an original song by Michael Magne and Carlo Rustichelli, performed by Nicolle Croisille, in the Italian-German-French co-production The Bastard, starring Rita Hayworth and Klaus Kinski.
Bastard, The (1968) -- (Movie Clip) You'll Hate Yourself In The Morning Crack-shot brother Jason (Giuliano Gemma) has just been maimed and abandoned by his crime boss brother (Klaus Kinski) somewhere in Arizona and he’s found by a kindly lady rancher (Claudine Auger), while the brother makes sure their mother (Rita Hayworth) will report on any future moves, in Italian-German-French co-production The Bastard, 1968.
Bastard, The (1968) -- (Movie Clip) I've Been Forty For A Hell Of A Long Time Having just slaughtered a bunch of rivals in Arizona, Guiliano Gemma as Jason reports to his crime boss brother Klaus Kinski (as Adam), and they’re joined by their inebriate mother, Rita Hayworth as Martha, early in Italian director Duccio Tessare’s The Bastard, 1968.
Asphalt Jungle, The (1950) -- (Movie Clip) Left-Handed Form Rich lawyer Emmerich (Louis Calhern) is questioned by two cops (Don Haggerty, James Seay) about a murder in which we know he was directly involved, then calls his mistress to arrange an alibi, and rejoins his invalid wife (Dorothy Tree) for a famous line, in The Asphalt Jungle, 1950.
Case Of The Howling Dog, The (1934) -- (Movie Clip) Funny Thing About That Girl Perry Mason (Warren William, playing Erle Stanley Gardner’s hot-shot lawyer in the first entry in the Warner Bros. series) arrives with Foley (Russell Hicks), the rival of his neurotic client, and the sheriff (Arthur Aylesworth) and meets his housekeeper (Dorothy Tree) who has an improbable bulletin, early in The Case Of The Howling Dog, 1934.
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) -- (Movie Clip) Famous Last Words Dave (Keir Dullea) and Frank (Gary Lockwood) instruct their mission-control computer "Hal" to leave them where the computer cannot listen-in, as they discuss a disturbing system-error, in Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey, 1968.
Brainstorm (1983) -- (Movie Clip) That's Not Me You're Looking At Scientists Lillian (Louise Fletcher) and Michael (Christopher Walken) use his estranged wife, their designer, Karen (Natalie Wood) as a subject in their memory-recording, semi-virtual reality device experiment, a malfunction revealing an event from their troubled marriage, in Brainstorm, 1983.

Trailer

Bibliography