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vallo13

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Posts posted by vallo13

  1. They have the VHS only @ Amazon.com

    Try here:http://www.amazon.com/All-Mine-Give-Glynis-Johns/dp/B0009I89V0/sr=8-1/qid=1165374722/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/102-6115632-5675335?ie=UTF8&s=video

     

    it is a little costly because it's a rare film....around $27.00

     

    vallo

  2. St.Peter, This is what I found: Format: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, Original recording remastered, Special Edition, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC

    Language: English

    Number of discs: 2

    Rating: G

    Studio: Warner Home Video

    DVD Release Date: November 7, 2006

    Run Time: 185 minutes

    @IMDb.com said the film ran 178minutes so I would think the additions were added. I too remember Million Dollar Movie

    Hope this Helps...

    vallo

  3. I watched it for the first time Saturday Night. I liked it. But I was reminded of "It's A Wonderful Life" with the comparison of The Bank Run and the Owner digging into his own pockets and the final outcome in the bank .(small SIMILARITIES). Capra uses his setting's well making "the bank" is just as important as the films characters.

    Really liked "Kay Johnson" as Huston's wife.

     

    vallo

  4. You Maybe thinking of Edwina Booth who's career faded after filming "Trader Horn" with Harry Carey in Africa.

    From IMDb.com

    American leading actress of the early talkie period, whose ordeal during the production of Trader Horn (1931) led her retirement and to false rumors of her death. She had some brief stage experience before getting some unimportant film roles. She was given a leading role in the ambitious adventure film Trader Horn (1931) and travelled to Africa shoot the film. She contracted an infection (most often referred to as 'jungle fever') and was upon her return to the U.S. bedridden for nearly six years and never again acted in films. The story grew up that she had died of the fever, and it has remained one of the most persistent myths of early Hollywood. In reality, Booth was quite ill, but survived. She sued MGM, the producers of the film, for a sum in excess of one million dollars. The case was settled out of court. She spent part of her later years working at the Los Angeles Mormon Temple. She died at 86 in a Los Angeles nursing home.

     

    vallo

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