Obaka Adedunyo


Biography

Filmography

 

Cast (Feature Film)

Best Seller (1987)
Man In Car
Nighthawks (1981)

Cast (Special)

Just Life (1990)

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Goke, Body Snatcher From Hell (1968) -- (Movie Clip) Exercise Caution, Credits The killer (Hideo Ko) has tricked the first officer and flight attendant (Teruo Yoshida, Tomomi Sato) and taken the plane, but has nothing to do with weird events and reports on the radio, leading to the credits and wild music by Shunsuke Kikuchi, in director Hajime Sato’s celebrated Goke, Body Snatcher From Hell, 1968.
Goke, Body Snatcher From Hell (1968) -- (Movie Clip) I Know Nothing About That Mano the senator and Tokuyasu (Eizo Kitamura, Nobuo Kaneko) after the plane crash are realizing the killer-guy (Hideo Ko) must be the assassin in the news, so he snatches Miss Asakura (Tomomi Sato) and tries for a getaway, until they find the flying saucer-thing, and bigger trouble, in Goke, Body Snatcher From Hell, 1968.
Sparkle (1976) -- (Movie Clip) She's Bustin' At The Seams Neat two opening scenes, introducing Phillip Michael Thomas and Dorian Harewood on the front steps, with Lonette McKee, Irene Cara and Dwan Smith as “Sister,” Sparkle and Delores, Mary Alice their mom, Beatrice Winde the neighbor, Sam O’Steen directing, in the cult hit (re-made by Whitney Houston in 2012), Sparkle, 1976.
Sparkle (1976) -- (Movie Clip) Hooked On Your Love Among the reasons for buzz about Lonette McKee, singing the lead as eldest sister “Sister,” backed up by 16 year-old Irene Cara (title character) and Dwan Smith (as Delores), with a Curtis Mayfield original, certainly more in the contemporary style than that of the setting, Harlem ca. 1958, in the fictional show-biz drama Sparkle, 1976.
He Ran All The Way (1951) -- (Movie Clip) We Can Dance Here Peg (Shelley Winters) has no idea Nick (John Garfield), has just shot a cop in a robbery, or why he’s brought her all the way home from the pool where they met, but she’s flattered, and so introduces her mother and father (Wallace Ford, Selena Royle), the sportcoat full of cash, in director John Berry’s He Ran All The Way, 1951.
He Ran All The Way (1951) -- (Movie Clip) I Don't Want To Hurt Nobody Peg (Shelley Winters) is now being compassionate after Nick (John Garfield), whom we know is a fugitive who shot a cop, passed out at her apartment from tension, but his problem is revealed as her parents and brother (Wallace Ford, Selena Royle, Bobby Hyatt) return from the movies, in He Ran All The Way, 1951.
He Ran All The Way (1951) -- (Movie Clip) I Got No Luck Today Opening scenes, ne'er-do-well Nick (John Garfield) with mother (Gladys George), then with buddy Al (Norman Lloyd) plotting a job, in soon-to-be-blacklisted director John Berry's He Ran All The Way, 1951.
He Ran All The Way (1951) -- (Movie Clip) Officer Dies Of Wounds Fugitive Nick (John Garfield) has spent the night with the Dobbs family (Shelley Winters and Bobby Hyatt, Selena Royle and Wallace Ford their parents), and has promised to leave that morning, but the morning paper brings a complication, much of the scene in one shot by director John Berry, in He Ran All The Way, 1951.
He Ran All The Way (1951) -- (Movie Clip) But You Do Go For Me? Suggestive and ambivalent scene from director John Berry, where Peg (Shelley Winters), her family held hostage now for days by fugitive Nick (John Garfield), comes home dolled up, maybe truly falling for him, inspiring him to new ideas, in He Ran All The Way, 1951.
He Ran All The Way (1951) -- (Movie Clip) You're Too Tense Fresh off a robbery and shootout, Nick (John Garfield) ducking the cops in a public pool (shot in Long Beach, Ca.) meets Peg (Shelley Winters) in director John Berry's He Ran All The Way, 1951.
Near Dark (1987) -- (Movie Clip) We'll Give Him A Week Coming to in the R-V after being bitten by Mae (Jenny Wright) then captured, Caleb (Adrian Pasdar) meets the relatively gracious ad-hoc vampire family, Severen, Jesse, Diamondback and Homer (Bill Paxton, Lance Henriksen, Jenette Goldstein, Joshua Miller), in Kathryn Bigelow's Near Dark, 1987.
Right Stuff, The (1983) -- (Movie Clip) No Buck Rogers Ensemble scene, the Mercury astronauts (Dennis Quaid, Fred Ward, Scott Paulin, Charles Frank, Ed Harris as John Glenn, Scott Glenn as Alan Shepard) confront the chief scientist (Scott Beach) about their capsule, in Philip Kaufman's The Right Stuff, 1983.

Trailer

Bibliography