Buly


Filmography

Kalapana, 1964 (1965)

Photos & Videos

Ministry of Fear - Movie Posters
Ministry of Fear - Behind-the-Scenes Photos

Biography

Filmography

 

Cast (Feature Film)

Kalapana, 1964 (1965)

Life Events

Photo Collections

Ministry of Fear - Movie Posters
Ministry of Fear - Movie Posters
Ministry of Fear - Behind-the-Scenes Photos
Ministry of Fear - Behind-the-Scenes Photos

Videos

Movie Clip

Heat Wave (1954) -- (Movie Clip) Fast Blondes And Slow Gin Presumably Ken Hughes, the novelist, screenwriter and director, means “slow” not “sloe,” regardless, his opening introduces Alex Nicol as American hack Mark, and places the story at a real location, England’s largest natural lake, in the Hammer Films Brit-Noir Heat Wave, 1954, co-starring Hillary Brooke.
Heat Wave (1954) -- (Movie Clip) Showing Off Her Torso American writer Mark (Alex Nicol), narrating, is done working, spying Carol (Hillary Brooke), across from his rental on an English lake, recalls the party where she wounded husband (Sidney James) and stepdaughter (Susan Stephen), steam ensuing, in the Hammer Films Noir Heat Wave, 1954.
Abbott And Costello Meet Captain Kidd (1952) -- (Movie Clip) I Hate Fat Men No-account waiters on Tortuga, Bud and Lou joust over who will serve Welsh Rarebit to the feared captain (Charles Laughton), himself in negotiations with rival lady-Captain Bonney (Hillary Brooke), in their self-financed color hit comedy musical Abbott And Costello Meet Captain Kidd, 1952.
Susan Lenox (Her Fall And Rise) -- (Movie Clip) You're As Good As Mine! Early scene, callous Uncle Ohlin (Jean Hersholt) informs his disdained niece Helga (Greta Garbo) that she'll be marrying Mondstrom (Alan Hale, in a scene as nasty as any he ever played), in Susan Lenox (Her Fall And Rise), 1931, directed by Robert Z. Leonard.
Ministry Of Fear (1944) -- (Movie Clip) You Killed Me! Widower Neale (Ray Milland) and Willi (Carl Esmond), hunting spies in wartime London, join the seance hosted by Mrs. Bellane (Hillary Brooke), Cost (Dan Duryea) also a late arrival, in Fritz Lang's Ministry Of Fear, 1944, from a Graham Greene novel.

Trailer

Bibliography