Vintage Movie Resources
What Emil Jannings Fears (1926) 🇺🇸
The great German actor, discussaing art and his coming visit to this country to make pictures for Paramount, betrays a desire with which many will sympathize and which some may try to alleviate.
Richard Dix — He Rolls His Own (1926) 🇺🇸
Richard Dix explains how he and his director, Gregory La Cava, evolve their popular screen comedies, from the moment the scenario — which sometimes is nothing more than a scrap of paper — is placed in their hands.
June Knight Experiments (1937) 🇬🇧
The lovely blonde dancing star of Capitol's The Lilac Domino is going to forsake glamour for a few months and live a student life in Paris on an allowance of five pounds a week.
Wallace Ford — The Boy Without a Name (1932) 🇺🇸
From Wallace Ford — the man who is considered by many as a screen discovery — comes this story, more amazing than any Hollywood scenario.
Exposing Andy Clyde (1932) 🇺🇸
Ralph Richardson — He Started at the Bottom (1937) 🇺🇸
Margaret Lockwood — She's a Real Girl (1937) 🇬🇧
Thornton Freeland and June Clyde — "T" and "T.N.T." (1937) 🇬🇧
Louise Dresser — The Mothering Heart (1930) 🇺🇸
Leatrice Joy — Hail — And Farewell! (1930) 🇺🇸
Dolores del Río — Sad One of the River (1930) 🇺🇸
Laura La Plante — Without Benefit of Fireworks (1930) 🇺🇸
Agua Caliente — The Playground of the Stars (1930) 🇺🇸
Jeanne Eagels — The Way of an Eagle (1930) 🇺🇸
Evelyn Brent — The Melting of Evelyn (1930) 🇺🇸
Leila Hyams — Up from a Trunk (1930) 🇺🇸
Mary Nolan — "The Glory Girl" (1930) 🇺🇸
Olive Borden Repents Her Folly (1930) 🇺🇸
Mae Clarke — Thirty-five Minutes To Go (1930) 🇺🇸
Too Continental — Or What? (1930) 🇺🇸
Alice White — Naughty Baby Quiets Down (1930) 🇺🇸
Fifi Dorsay — Fifi's Magic Touch (1930) 🇺🇸
Ruth Chatterton — As She Is (1930) 🇺🇸
The most popular player brought from the stage to the screen is here subjected to friendly scrutiny.