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  1. Leo McCarey
    American film director, screenwriter and producer

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  1. Leo McCarey introducing "Meet The Governor", which he wrote & directed. An unsold sitcom pilot w/homespun comic Herb Shriner, briefly in vogue at the time. Featuring a rare onscreen role for Arthur Q. Bryan, voice of Elmer Fudd.

  2. 2 days ago · This is the ending of the 1929 film Liberty, directed by Leo McCarey and starring Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy.

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  3. www.ncpamumbai.com › event › movies-under-the-stars-20Movies Under the Stars - NCPA

    Apr 12, 2024 · Make Way for Tomorrow (1937) B&W Film Screening An NCPA & Film Heritage Foundation Presentation Make Way for Tomorrow, by Leo McCarey, is one of the great unsung Hollywood masterpieces, an enormously moving Depression-era depiction of the frustrations of family, aging and the generation gap. Beulah Bondi and Victor Moore headline a cast of incomparable […]

  4. 1 day ago · The life and inventions of Thomas Alva Edison. Good movie! The invention of the lightbulb and the subsequent use of electricity to light a neighborhood: that whole sequence of events, a good chunk of the latter half of the film, offers exciting laboratory adventures, a showcase for its ensemble of male character actors, set design that manages to recreate how utterly surreal the commonplace ...

  5. 4 days ago · Make Way For Tomorrow (Leo McCarey 1937) Tokyo Twilight (Yasujirō Ozu 1957) I Was Born, But… (Yasujirō Ozu 1932) Tokyo-ga (Wim Wenders 1985) Sans Soleil (Chris Marker 1983) A Man Escaped (Robert Bresson 1957) Mommie Dearest (Frank Perry 1981) Toni Erdmann (Maren Ade 2016) Paris, Texas (Wim Wenders 1984) Wild Strawberries (Ingmar Bergman 1957)

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  6. 4 days ago · The thriller would lose to lighter fare, with Bing Crosby, director Leo McCarey, and the film “Going My Way” receiving the honors on the big night. It was a great year for film, ...

  7. May 1, 2024 · Going My Way. Bing Crosby, Barry Fitzgerald, Rise Stevens. 177 votes. Released: 1944. Directed by: Leo McCarey. Bing Crosby won his first and only Academy Award for Best Actor for his stunning portrayal of Father Charles "Chuck" O'Malley in this 1944 feel-good classic directed by Leo McCarey.

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