Gordon Flemyng


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Movie Clip

Split, The (1968) -- (Movie Clip) I'll Blow Your Face Off After staging real-world encounters with Ernest Borgnine, Jack Klugman, Donald Sutherland and Warren Oates (as Klinger, Kifka, Negli and Gough) planner Gladys (Julie Harris) explains why heist-man McClain (Jim Brown) has brought them together, in The Split, 1968, also starring Gene Hackman.
Split, The (1968) -- (Movie Clip) You Never Hit Me Before Following credits in which he gets off the bus somewhere on the Pacific Coast Highway, Jim Brown (as "McClain") meets unusually big-haired Julie Harris (as "Gladys") then his ex-wife Ellie (Diahann Carroll), setting the emotional backdrop for the grim all-star caper The Split, 1968.
Split, The (1968) -- (Movie Clip) You Get The Parade SPOILER here in that the outcome of the heist and a murder are revealed, but also the introduction of Gene Hackman, about 70 minutes into the feature, as cop Brill, confronted by head thief McClain (Jim Brown), demanding to know what the cops know, in the all-star football-themed caper The Split, 1968.
Dr. Who And The Daleks (1966) -- (Movie Clip) In Electro Kinetic Theory At home in England, sister Susan (Roberta Tovey) and Peter Cushing (title character) receive new boyfriend Ian (Roy Castle) while waiting on Barbara (Jennie Linden), in the meantime showing him the Tardis time machine, in the 1966 non-canon Doctor Who feature, Dr. Who And The Daleks.
Dr. Who And The Daleks (1966) -- (Movie Clip) They Called You Monsters The iffy robot Daleks who are holding her family have sent Susan (Roberta Tovey) out into the alien planet to find the Thals, who have the anti-radiation drug they need, meeting Alydon (Barrie Ingham) back at her grand-dad’s time machine, in Dr. Who And The Daleks, 1966.
Great Catherine (1968) -- (Movie Clip) Hands Off You Swine! Brit captain Edstaston (Peter O'Toole, also co-producer), in Petersburg to brief the empress on the American revolution, meets apparently dissolute Prince Patiomkin (Zero Mostel) and niece (Marie Kean), Akim Tamiroff and Jack Hawkins in support, in the Bernard Shaw adaptation Great Catherine, 1968.
Great Catherine (1968) -- (Movie Clip) Men Have Grown Sober In Siberia Jeanne Moreau (title character) having arisen amid her court in Petersburg, tangles with an aide (Kenneth Griffith) and others before her ruffian cousin Patiomkin (Zero Mostel) delivers the outraged British envoy (Peter O'Toole), in Great Catherine, 1968, from the George Bernard Shaw play.

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