#Terry O. Morse
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
On Trial (1939) Terry O. Morse
March 23rd 2024
#on trial#1939#terry o. morse#margaret lindsay#john litel#edward norris#janet chapman#william b. davidson#james stephenson#earl dwire#larry williams#nedda harrigan#the strickland case#annoying little brat
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
Dangerous Money (1946) dir. Terry O. Morse
0 notes
Text
Get to know you game! Answer the questions and tag 9 people you want to know better!
Oh hello, this was such a nice little thing to find in my notifs! tagged by: @smooth-mccrimmonal
——————
Last song listened to?
El Dorado, Death Cab For Cutie.
Currently reading?
Bleak House by Charles Dickens and Discworld 1: The Color of Magic by Terry Pratchett.
Currently watching?
Doctor Who, Sapphire & Steel
Inspector Morse, Dalziel and Pascoe, and Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries
Elementary and also the Jeremy Brett Sherlocks
Blue's Clues, Franklin, and Between The Lions
Red Dwarf, A Fine Romance, and Maid Marian and Her Merry Men
Perry Mason, Columbo, and Murder She Wrote
Glee
Darkwing Duck, Kim Possible, Goof Troop, The Suite Life of Zack and Cody, Wizards of Waverly Place, The Muppet Show
The Smurfs, multiple iterations of Scooby-Doo
lots of intermittency between things with more being rewatches than not sksksk - I don't have a p r o b l e m.
Currently obsessed with?
The Man From U.N.C.L.E the series, fucking G O D this gay ass show truly has me in its clutches... The Witcher, only bolstered by me now getting into The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt. RPGs in general, I've been through most of The Elder Scrolls and Dragon Age and I'm like m u c h more hooked than I used to be. And, The Amazing Devil- it's not just music, it's a wholeass lifestyle.
Tagggging... @toapoet, @joeysjaskier, @witch-and-her-witcher, @theniftycat, @speggle, and @our-future-is-up-to-us-2.
Hope you enjoyed this little slice of Lemons!
14 notes
·
View notes
Text
My Voting Record (US Democratic Primaries: 1844-2024):
1844 Democratic Primaries: Martin Van Buren
1848 Democratic Primaries: George Dallas
1852 Democratic Primaries: William O. Butler
1856 Democratic Primaries: N/A (No candidate sounds very good)
1860 Democratic Primaries: N/A (No candidate sounds good)
1864 Democratic Primaries: N/A (No candidate sounds very good).
1868 Democratic Primaries: James E. English
1872 Democratic Primaries: N/A (Democrats supported the Liberal Republicans that year. Their primary is in my Third party primaries notes).
1876 Democratic Primaries: Samuel Tilden
1880 Democratic Primaries: N/A (None of the candidates sound very good, honestly).
1884 Democratic Primaries: Grover Cleveland
1888 Democratic Primaries: Grover Cleveland
1892 Democratic Primaries: Horace Boies
1896 democratic Primaries (Top Four):
1. William Jennings Bryan
2. Richard P. Bland
3. Horace Boies
4. Henry Teller
1900 Democratic Primaries: William Jennings Bryan
1904 Democratic Primaries (Top Two):
1. Alton B. Parker
2. Nelson A. Miles
1908 Democratic Primaries: William Jennings Bryan
1912 Democratic Primaries: Judson Harmon
1916 Democratic Primaries: N/A (although I like Woodrow Wilson's fashion sense, he's also a rascist eugenicist. I can't support him).
1920 Democratic Primaries (Top Two):
1. Thomas R. Marshall
2. Al Smith
1924 Democratic Primaries (Top Three):
1. Al Smith
2. Robert L. Owen
3. Oscar Underwood (mostly just because he hated the KKK)
1928 Democratic Primaries: Al Smith
1932 Democratic Primaries: Al Smith
1936 Democratic Primaries: Upton Sinclair (my protest vote against Roosevelt from the left. How I wish Huey Long could have ran that year…)
1940 Democratic Primaries: Franklin D. Roosevelt
1944 Democratic Primaries: Franklin D. Roosevelt
1948 Democratic Primaries: Harry Truman (although I wish Henry Wallace was one of the candidates).
1952 Democratic Primaries (Top Two Candidates):
1. G. Mennen Williams
2. Estes Kefauver
1956 Democratic Primaries: Estes Kefauver
1960 Democratic Primaries: Wayne Morse
1964 Democratic Primaries: Lyndon B. Johnson
1968 Democratic Primaries: Eugene McCarthy
1972 Democratic Primaries (Top Five Candidates):
1. George McGovern
2. Shirley Chisholm
3. Hubert Humphrey
4. Patsy Mink
5. Terry Sanford
1976 Democratic Primaries (Top Three Candidates):
1: Frank Church
2: Mo Udall
3: Fred Harris
1980 Democratic Primaries: Jimmy Carter (my beliefs might be closer to Ted Kennedy, but I hate the Kennedy Clan. Except Eunice. Eunice is fine).
1984 Democratic Primaries (My Top Three Candidates):
1. Jesse Jackson
2. George McGovern
3. Walter Mondale
1988 Democratic Primaries (my top two candidates):
1. Jesse Jackson
2. Paul Simon
1992 Democratic Primaries: Tom Harkin
1996 Democratic Primaries: Nobody (I hate Bill Clinton)
2000 Democratic Primaries: Bill Bradley
2004 Democratic Primaries (Top Three Candidates):
1. Dennis Kucinich
2. Carol Moseley Braun
3. A tie between Al Sharpton and Howard Dean
2008 Democratic Primaries: John Edwards
2012 Democratic Primaries: Barack Obama
2016 Democratic Primaries: Bernie Sanders (I'd have taken Martin O'Malley too though)
2020 Democratic Primaries (Top Four Candidates):
1. Bernie Sanders
2. Elizabeth Warren
3. Tom Steyer
4. Marianne Williamson (She is definitely weird and new agey, but Wikipedia's summary of her policies don't sound too bad)
2024 Democratic Primaries: Marianne Williamson (I don't expect her to win at all, but I appreciate the challenge to Biden from the left. Remind him the progressive wing is still alive. Also, screw RFK Jr. I hate all the Kennedys. Except Eunice. She made the special Olympics; she can stay.)
PS: I made one of these for the Republican Primaries too. I might post that later.
#I wrote multiple choices sometimes#Because there were multiple I liked#us politics#politics#my voting record#If I were american or alive then#autism#asd#adhd#neurodivergent#my random thoughts#usa#america#random thoughts
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
King of Monsters-(1956)
Director- Terry O Morse
Grade- F
(oh my god we fucking hated this one so so much please dont waste your time watching)
Story: 2
Action: 5
Comedy: 5
Professor: N/A
Protagonist: 1 (fuck steve)
Average: 2
Review hidden incase you actually want to watch this shit
King of monsters is literally just an american release of the original godzilla so it hurts even more when they cut all of the emotional beats and character building for steve the reporter to make some base level observations, it started with him in rubble then does the whole film from his memory but they made all of the dialogue so stilted and awkward for every character. we hated this so much that we actually are scared to watch the other American re releases .Overall this film had so much potential but they cut all of the imoortant parts of the original and replaced it with the most nothing fucking character steve
1 note
·
View note
Text
CALIFICACIÓN PERSONAL: 6 / 10
Título Original: British Intelligence
Año: 1939
Duración: 61 min
País: Estados Unidos
Dirección: Terry O. Morse
Guion: Lee Katz. Obra: Anthony Paul Kelly
Música: Heinz Roemheld, Bernhard Kaun
Fotografía: Sidney Hickox (B&W)
Reparto: Boris Karloff, Margaret Lindsay, Bruce Lester, Leonard Mudie, Holmes Herbert, Austin Fairman, etc
Productora: Warner Bros. Pictures
Género: Romance; Thriller; War
PELÍCULA COMPLETA:
youtube
0 notes
Text
Assistir Filme Prova de Vida Online fácil
Assistir Filme Prova de Vida Online Fácil é só aqui: https://filmesonlinefacil.com/filme/prova-de-vida/
Prova de Vida - Filmes Online Fácil
Alice Bowman é viajada e experiente, mas nada a podia preparar para isto. Rebeldes de um país latino-americano em convulsão raptaram o seu marido e estão a pedir um resgate. O valor: 3 milhões de dólares. Meg Ryan interpreta o papel de Alice e Russell Crowe é Terry Thorne, o especialista em libertação de reféns que se torna a única esperança de Alice para manobrar um jogo perigoso com terroristas que dão mais valor ao dinheiro que à vida, num filme recheado de suspense, considerado pela Time como um dos 10 melhores do ano. Tayler Hackford dirige, dominando com firmeza a tensão emocional, à medida que Terry e Alice tentam descobrir os criminosos e salvar o refém (David Morse)... ao mesmo tempo que ambos se defrontam com a preocupante descoberta de que estão atraídos um pelo outro.
0 notes
Text
Cast:
Tim Allen as Buzz Lightyear
Mamaudou Athie as Wade Ripple
Emma Berman as Giulia Marcovaldo
Gael García Bernal as Papá Héctor Rivera
Lewis Black as Anger
Benjamin Bratt as Ernesto de la Cruz
Jack Bright as Spot
Jen Brown as Pixar Intern
Ben Burtt as M-O & WALL-E
Tristan Allerick Chen as Tyler Nguyen-Baker
Rosalie Chiang as Meilin Lee
Sawyer Cole as Dashiell Parr (Dash), Luca Paguro, & Nemo
Billy Crystal as Mike Wazowski
Joan Cusack as Jessie
Charlie Day as Art
Pete Docter as Himself
Jordan Fisher as Robaire
Dave Foley as Terry Perry & Flik
Jamie Foxx as Joe Gardener
Jim Gaffigan as Lorenzo Paguro
Janeane Garofalo as Colette Tatou
Brad Garrett as Dim
Brian George as Chef Skinner
Alex Gonzalez as Miguel Rivera
John Goodman as James P. Sullivan
Kelsey Grammer as Stinky Pete the Prospector
Tony Hale as Fear
Tom Hanks as Woody
Sean Hayes as Terri Perry
Bonnie Hunt as Rosie
Caz Inghram as Russell
Samuel L. Jackson as Lucius Best/Frozone
Catherine Keener as Evelyn Deavor
Yonas Kibreab as Elio Solis
Richard Kind as Molt
Diane Lane as Jill Andersen (Mom)
Liza Lapira as Disgust
Larry the Cable Guy as Sir Tow Mater
Denis Leary as Francis
Jason Lee as Buddy Pine/Syndrome
Leah Lewis as Ember Lumen
Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Princess Atta
Bud Luckey as Rick Dicker
Kelly Macdonald as Merida
Kyle McLachlan as Bill Andersen (Dad)
Michael McShane as Tuck & Roll
John Morris as Andy Davis
Ava Morse as Miriam Mendelsohn
Joel Murray as Don Carlton
Craig T. Nelson as Bob Parr/Mr. Incredible
Randy Newman as Himself
Raymond Ochoa as Arlo
Catherine O’Hara as Brook Ripple
Patton Oswalt as Remy
Keke Palmer as Izzy Hawthorne
Hyein Park as Abby Park
Bob Peterson as Dug & Roz
David Hyde Pierce as Slim
Amy Poehler as Joy
Maitreyi Ramakrishnan as Priya Mangal
John Ratzenberger as P.T. Flea & Underminer
Lou Romano as Alfredo Linguini
Maya Rudolph as Daniela Paguro
Wallace Shawn as Rex
Phyllis Smith as Sadness
Peter Sohn as Scott “Squishy” Squibbles & Emile
Andrew Stanton as Hopper & Emperor Zurg
Kensington Tallman as Riley Andersen
Alanna Ubach as Mamá Imelda Rivera
Alma Versano as Princess Dot
Owen Wilson as Lightning McQueen
Once Upon a Pixar (2026)
Hello. It's me, and this is the Pixar version of Once Upon a Studio called Once Upon a Pixar.
(The film opens with the headquarters at Pixar as the employees leave for the day.)
Pixar Intern: It's so incredible to think that George Lucas started Pixar back in 1979 until it was founded by Steve Jobs in 1986 40 years ago today. To think of all those talented animators and unforgettable characters who have been a part of the studio over the years.
Pete Docter: Yep. (as he and the intern turn around one last time) If the characters could talk to each other.
(Pete Docter and the intern leave as the door closes while the title comes up: "Once Upon a Pixar". The camera zooms into a photo picture of Woody, Jessie and Bullseye running on a record player. Woody glances back as everything seems quiet in the lobby.)
Woody: Psst! Atta. Princess Atta. You there?
(Princess Atta flies into the lobby and over to his picture.)
Woody: Is that it? They all gone?
Princess Atta: Yep, they're all gone.
Woody: Yee-haw! (he, Jessie and Bullseye leap out of the picture) Come on, Jessie, this is it.
Jessie: Let's get everyone. Yodel-ay-hee-hoo!
Joy: (gasps) There's the signal! All right, everyone! (she, Sadness, Anger, Fear, and Disgust jump out of their production cell) It's picture time!
Elio: That's tonight?
Joy: That's now.
Ember Lumen: The 40-year group photo. (she and Wade jump out of their production cell as well) And the sun's going down. Come on, Wade, let's feel the burn!
Wade: Ooh, a fire pun. (chuckles) Got to like that.
(Suddenly, Arlo and Spot come out of their production cell as Wade gasps and goes against the wall.)
Arlo: (chuckles nervously) Sorry.
Woody: Picture time, gang!
Mei Lee: (chuckles) Okay, here we come!
(Mei Lee, Miriam, Abby, Priya and Tyler jump out of their production cell while they laugh.)
Abby: Wake up, everyone!
(The Oozma Kappa come out of their production cell as Squishy yells while Russell, Carl and Dug walk down the hallway.)
Russell: Whoa!
Dug: Awesome!
Russell: Oh, Mr. Lightyear! Get the folks upstairs!
Buzz Lightyear: Roger that, Russell. To infinity and beyond!
(Buzz Lightyear flies upstairs as Lightning McQueen drives happily down the hall with Mater.)
Mater: Yee-haw!
Merida: (jumps out of her production cell) It's picture time! (runs to the lobby) We're meeting at the lobby!
Flik: Okay! See you there!
(Miguel Rivera and Riley Andersen ride on Dim as Dim flies to the lobby.)
Miguel Rivera: (hollers)
(Francis gives a fun ride to Dash Parr.)
Dash Parr: Whoa! Higher! (laughs)
(Francis chuckles as Remy and Emile slide down the stairs as Luca Paguro lands on the floor and sighs as he catches Nemo.)
Nemo: Water.
Luca Paguro: (shudders and rushes to the counter)
P.T. Flea: No, no, no, there's no time for snacks!
Luca Paguro: Uh, Andy! A little help here?
Andy Davis: Oh, uh, let me see here. There we go, a nice bucket of water.
(Luca Paguro dunks Nemo to a bucket of water.)
Nemo: (grunts)
Linguini: (chuckles) Oh, waiter! There's a fish in the bucket! (laughs)
(Ernesto de la Cruz tries to get candy from the vending machine while he curses in Spanish as Mr. Incredible and Frozone walk down the hall.)
Mr. Incredible: Yikes! Do you think all the villains might catch up?
Frozone: Hmm. (freezes Syndrome in his frame) Not all.
Syndrome: (strains)
(Rex goes to the elevator with Imelda Rivera, Manticore, Ian, Barley and Laurel Lightfoot.)
Imelda Rivera: Going down?
Roz: Hold the elevator. I'm going to the lobby.
Rex: Huh? Oh, you've got to be joking.
(Joe Gardner hums to "Put On Your Sunday Clothes" while he draws Hector Rivera.)
Brook Ripple: Hey, black man. Shake a leg, will ya?
Joe Gardner: The leg won't make a difference, it's all in the wrist.
(Hector Rivera bursts out of the drawing as Joe Gardner shrieks in surprise.)
Hector Rivera: Ay! I haven't seen a fall like that since Spain. (fixes the chair) Oh! Much better.
(At the men's room, Hopper, 4*Town and Chef Skinner freshen up as Chef Skinner blows a kiss and chuckles. Suddenly, Tuck and Roll appear in front of his eyes, laughing, as Jessie opens the door.)
Jessie: Let's move it, gentlemen!
(While Lorenzo Paguro tries to free his wife Daniela Paguro from her picture, Giulia Marcovaldo walk with Buster, Mr. Mittens, Larry and Machivelli.)
Giulia Marcovaldo: Uh-huh. Meeting at the lobby. Don't eat the rats.
(Scud tries to eat Remy and Emile but Dante pops up and scares Scud away, thus saving the rats' lives. While Izzy and her team walk by, Mei Lee and her friends watch a cartoon on a TV.)
Izzy Hawthorne: Come on, everyone, you're gonna have nightmares.
(Zurg pops out of the TV and scares Mei Lee and her friends away, laughing. Back at the elevator, Roz makes it in time.)
Roz: Thanks very much for holding the elevator.
Rex: (groans)
Evelyn Deavor: I'm also going to the lobby as well.
Rex: Huh? Oh, come on!
(While M-O is being followed and annoyed by Dot, Mr. and Mrs. Anderson follow down the stairs, where Mr. Anderson is the one to drop his wallet and they laugh. Buster picks up the wallet and runs off with it.)
Mr. Anderson: Hey, Buster! Andy, get your dog!
(Woody follows up the stairs as he looks amused when he sees Underminer leading Colette Tatou with his hypnosis watch.)
Woody: Underminer? Underminer! You-- You stop that now, Underminer!
Rosie: Don't worry, Woody. (chuckles) I got this.
(Rosie hits Underminer offscreen unconsciously.)
Woody: Huh. (gasps) Wow.
(Woody looks up at photographs of John Lasseter, Andrew Stanton, Pete Docter, Lee Unkrich and Joe Ranft while he takes his hat off.)
Buzz Lightyear: Oh, Woody, where are you? We're at the lobby!
Woody: (chuckles) Got to go, but thanks. (puts his hat back on) On with the show.
(At the lobby, Woody rides on WALL-E with a fire extinguisher)
Woody: Yee-haw!
Mike Wazowski: Coast is clear, Sheriff.
Woody: Great! (holds the door open) Right this way, everybody.
(Sulley bumps into the door.)
Woody: Oh! Sulley, are you okay?
James P. Sullivan: (grunts) Never better, Eastwood. (accidentally trips the trash can)
Stinky Pete: I knew I'm surrounded by... (gets startled by Slim who rides on EVE) Idiots!
Slim: Tallyho! Whee! I'll show you the world! (laughs)
Woody: Oh, great, the ladder.
(Buzz sets the ladder while he hums.)
Mr. Dicker: Every time it gets hard. Money, money, money.
Woody: All right, everyone. Get-- Get together now. (to Tinny) Oh. After you, Tinny.
Emile: Oh. Pardon me.
Francis: (holds up a camera) Here's the camera, Lightyear.
Buzz Lightyear: (takes a camera and chuckles) Thanks, Francis. (climbs up the ladder)
Woody: Buzz, be careful!
Buzz Lightyear: (makes it to the top) All right, now where's the timer button?
Molt: Oh, oh! Three, two, one! (Randall Boggs grins)
(Buzz accidentally falls off while he screams and breaks the camera. As Buster walks to the broken camera, Buzz recognizes it.)
Andy Davis: Come on, Buster. (Buster runs back to Andy)
Buzz Lightyear: Huh? Oh, no. It's ruined.
Anger: Well, that was fun!
Sadness: Maybe we can try again in another forty years.
(The characters sigh disappointedly and are about to leave.)
Woody: Oh, no, no, wait. Come back. It-- It-- It'll be fine. It'll be...
(Just as the characters are about to leave, Randy Newman appears from nowhere while he plays "You've Got a Friend in Me" on piano with his orchestra.)
Randy Newman: ♪ You've got a friend in me ♪
♪ You've got a friend in me ♪
♪ When the road looks rough ahead ♪
♪ And you're miles and miles from your nice warm bed ♪
Hopper: I knew this was gonna happen.
Randy Newman: ♪ You just remember what your old pal said ♪
♪ Boy, you've got a friend in me ♪
♪ Yeah, you've got a friend in me ♪
(While the song goes on, Mr. Incredible fixes the camera as Buzz looks excited and Sulley puts the ladder back in position. Manny and Gipsy lift Buzz to help him up as Buzz sets the camera up for the photo.)
♪ Some other folks might be ♪
♪ A little bit smarter than I am ♪
♪ Bigger and stronger too, maybe ♪
♪ But none of them will ever love you ♪
♪ The way I do, it's me and you, boy ♪
♪ And as the years go by ♪
♪ Our friendship will never die ♪
♪ You're gonna see it's our destiny ♪
All: ♪ You've got a friend in me ♪
♪ You've got a friend in me ♪
♪ You've got a friend in me ♪
(The camera flashes as the group photo in the Pixar hall is taken, and the short ends with a text "To the animators, directors and crew of Pixar who worked for 40 years on movies and short films, Thank You." and then the song ends.)
Well, I think this is the transcript. I hope you like it. I also hope Pixar does a new short film like Once Upon a Studio did. Have a Happy New Year.
#disney#pixar#once upon a studio#toy story#a bugs life#monsters inc#finding nemo#the incredibles#cars#ratatouille#wall e#up#brave#inside out#the good dinosaur#coco#onward#soul#luca#turning red#elemental#elio
44 notes
·
View notes
Text
Chris: This is the American version of Godzilla with Raymond Burr inserted and pretty much all value and meaning of the film removed because of the Americanization, fun to see this in the Chicago Svengoolie hosted horror show but the original film is the one to see so Avoid.
Richie: This version is awful, give me the original any day, Avoid.
0 notes
Photo
Margaret Lindsay-Boris Karloff “British intelligence” 1940, de Terry O. Morse.
6 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Robinson Crusoe on Mars (Byron Haskin, 1964) Cast: Paul Mantell, Victor Lundin, Adam West. Screenplay: Ib Melchior, John C. Higgins, based on a story by Daniel Defoe. Cinematography: Winton C. Hoch. Art direction: Arthur Lonergan, Hal Pereira. Film editing: Terry O. Morse. Music: Van Cleave. The average third-grader today can spot the scientific inaccuracies of Robinson Crusoe on Mars. Who doesn't cringe when Christopher Draper (Paul Mantell) tries to start a fire by feeding the flames with the oxygen from his supply tank, an attempt most likely to send him up in a large fireball? The special effects, too, are primitive: The attacking spaceships are two-dimensional, paintings on a black backdrop. But does any of this really matter? With older films, even science fiction, datedness often counts for less than style and substance. Byron Haskin's movie has both, largely because it's derived from a classic source, Daniel Defoe's 1719 tale of solitude and companionship. It plays on the primal fear of loneliness that makes solitary confinement the worst of punishments and is the backbone of many classic adventure stories, including such other great sci-fi films as 2001: A Space Odyssey (Stanley Kubrick, 1968) and The Martian (Ridley Scott, 2015). Even though Draper has a companion on Mars, a small monkey, his inability to converse with another human drives him near to madness -- a hallucination of his dead companion, Col. McReady (Adam West) -- before he finally encounters his Friday (Victor Lundin). Even then the breakthrough is slow to come: The alien humanoid at first refuses to speak, causing Draper to fume that he's "an idiot" and "retarded." But finally the alien trusts Draper enough to speak and the rapport blooms into a kind of interplanetary bromance as they learn each other's language and culture. (The master-servant Crusoe-Friday relationship remains, however: Draper expects his Friday to learn English first. Colonialism dies hard.) So forget everything we've learned from the various NASA probes about Martian terrain -- the absence of flaming volcanoes or of anything resembling "canals," let alone abundance of water and subaqueous plant life -- and accept the movie's vision for what it is: more a fable about long-ingrained human character than about what the future may be like. Byron Haskin's direction keeps the action crisp and steady, and while the studio sets have a certain cheesy quality, the footage shot at Death Valley's Zabriskie Point is often strikingly real.
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
42 governors, including at least 19 Republicans, consent to resettle MORE refugees
How to turn red states blue, and first world third. Trump should have ended the fraudulent refugee resettlement program on day one in office.
youtube
Read more at Refugee Resettlement Watch via Three More Republican Governors Turn on Trump, Cave to Leftists on Refugee Program Reform
The list below is from one of the taxpayer-funded enemies within who is flooding America with refugees and flipping cowardly, weak-kneed Republicans (in name only). via Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services
Governors who have given consent
Gov. Wolf (D-PA) Public Statement and Letter of Consent
Gov. Whitmer (D-MI) Public Statement and Letter of Consent
Gov. Mike DeWine (R-OH) Public Statement via Spokesperson
Gov. Murphy (D-NJ) Public Statement and Letter of Consent
Gov. Polis (D-CO) Public Statement and Letter of Consent
Gov. Grisham (D-NM) Letter of Consent
Gov. Baker (R-MA) Public Statement and Letter of Consent
Gov. Kate Brown (D-OR) Letter of Consent and Tweet
Gov. Gary Herbert (R-UT) Letter of Consent (& Salt Lake Tribune Article)
Gov. Jay Inslee (D-WA) Letter of Consent
Gov. Burgum (R-ND) Public Statement, Consent Letter, and AP article
Gov. Northam (D-VA) Press Release and Letter of Consent
Gov. Sununu (R-NH) Letter of Consent and AP Article
Governor Steve Bullock (D-MT) Letter of Consent
Governor Laura Kelly (D-KS) Letter of Consent and Press Release
Governor Ducey (R-AZ) Letter of Consent and Article
Governor Cooper (D-NC) Letter of Consent
Governor Lamont (D-CT) Letter of Consent
Governor John Carney (D-DE) Letter of Consent
Governor Kim Reynolds (R-IA) Letter of Consent
Governor Tim Walz (D-MN) Letter of Consent and Press Release
Governor Gina Raimondo (D-RI) Letter of Consent
Governor Eric Holcomb (R-IN) Letter of Consent
Governor J.B. Pritzker (D-IL) Public Statement with Expected Consent and Letter of Consent
Governor Bill Lee (R-TN) Letter of Consent, Press Release, and Letter to the Lt. Governor & State Speaker of the House
Governor Tony Evers (D-WI) Letter of Consent
Governor Janet Mills (D-ME) Letter of Consent
Governor Kevin Stitt (R-OK) Letter of Consent
Governor Pete Ricketts (R-NE) Anticipated Consent via Spokesman
Governor Steve Sisolak (D-NV) Letter of Consent
Governor Kristi Noem (R-SD) Article on Consent
Governor Bashear (D-KY) anticipated consent
Governor Justice (R-WV) Letter of Consent & Press Release
Governor Edwards (D-LA) Letter of Consent and article
Governor Hutchinson (R-AR) Letter of Consent and article
Governor Newsom (D-CA) Letter of Consent
Governor Parson (R-MO) Letter of Consent and article
Governor Little (R-ID) Letters of Consent by county and article
Governor Larry Hogan (R-MD) Letter of Consent and article
Governor Dunleavy (R-AK) Article on Consent
Governor Cuomo (D-NY)
Governor Phil Scott (R-VT) Article on Consent
Local Authorities who have given consent*
*Non-exhaustive list
Mayor Ben Walsh – Syracuse, NY
Mayor Jacob Frey Tweet of consent– Minneapolis, MN
Mayor Andrew Ginther– Columbus, OH
Mayor Steve Schewel and Letter of Consent – Durham, NC
Mayor Jenny Durkan Letter of Consent – Seattle, WA
Mayor Nancy Vaughan Letter of Consent – Greensboro, NC
Alexandria City Council resolution, statement from Mayor Justin Wilson – Alexandria, VA
Durham County, NC Board of Commissioners – Letter of Consent
Knoxville City Council Consent – Knoxville, TN
Fort Worth Mayor Betsy Price (R) letter to Governor Abbott
Erie County, NY – Letter of Consent
Mayor Byron Brown Letter of Consent – Buffalo, NY
Mayor Patti Garrett Letter of Consent – Decatur, GA
Chatham County, GA – Letter of Consent
Polk County, IA – Letter of Consent
Warren County, KY – Letter of Consent
Daviess County, KY – Letter of Consent
Mayor Nicole LaChapelle Letter of Consent – Easthampton, MA
Mayor Alex B. Morse Letter of Consent – Holyoke, MA
Mayor David Narkewicz Letter of Consent – Northampton, MA
Mayor Kimberly Driscoll Letter of Consent – Salem, MA
Mayor John Engen Letter of Consent – Missoula, MT
Mayor David Engen Letter of Consent – Grand Forks, ND
Mayor Frank G. Jackson Letter of Consent – Cleveland, OH
Mayor Michael P. Summers Letter of Consent – Lakewood, OH
Mayor Timothy J. DeGeeter Letter of Consent – Parma, OH
Mayor Nan Whaley Letter of Consent – Dayton, OH
Erie County Pennsylvania – Letter of Consent
Mayor Jorge O. Elorza Letter of Consent – Providence, RI
Bexar County, TX – Letter of Consent
Mayor Ron Nirenberg Letter of Consent – San Antonio, TX
Mayor Levar Stoney Letter of Consent – Richmond, VA
Kalamazoo County, MI – Letter of Consent
Kandiyohi County, MN – Letter of Consent
Pima County, AZ Letter of Consent – Pima County, AZ
Mayor Kim Maggard Letter of Consent – Whitehall, OH
Mayor Betsy Price Letter of Consent – Fort Worth, TX
Mayor John Dailey Letter of Consent and Proclamation – Tallahassee, FL
Burleigh County, ND – Commission Vote
Franklin County, OH – Final Resolution / Commission and Article
Mayor of Dallas Letter of Consent – Dallas, TX
Mayor Thomas McNamara Letter of Consent – Rockford, IL
Winnebago County, IL – Letter of Consent
DuPage County, IL – Letter of Consent
Mayor Jim Bouley Letter of Consent – Concord, NH
Mayor Kate Gallego Letter of Consent – Phoenix, AZ
Mayor Jonathan Rothschild Letter of Consent – Tucson, AZ
Mayor Edward Terry Letter of Consent – Clarkston, GA
Mayor William Reichelt Letter of Consent – West Springfield, MA
City of Ypsilanti, MI – Council Resolution and Consent
Olmsted County, MN Letter of Consent
Mayor Lyda Krewson Letter of Consent – St. Louis, MO
Mayor Mary-Ann Baldwin Letter of Consent – Raleigh, NC
Cass County, ND – Letter of Consent
Mayor Alvin Brandl Letter of Consent – Madison, NE
Mayor Jim Donchess Letter of Consent – Nashua, NH
Mayor Joyce Craig Letter of Consent – Manchester, NH
Hamilton County, OH – Letter of Consent
Montgomery County, OH – Letter of Consent
Mayor Lucy Vinis Letter of Consent – Eugene, OR
Mayor Christine Lundberg Letter of Consent – Springfield, OR
Mayor Wayne Evans Letter of Consent – Scranton, PA
Mayor Andy Berke Letter of Consent – Chattanooga, TN
Cache County, UT – Letter of Consent
Salt Lake County, UT – Letter of Consent
Weber County, UT – Letter of Consent
Fairfax County, VA – Letter of Consent
Mayor Sherman Lea, Sr. Letter of Consent – Roanoke, VA
Mayor Kelli Linville Letter of Consent – Bellingham, WA
Pierce County, WA – Letter of Consent
Mayor Satya Rhodes-Conway Letter of Consent – Madison, WI
Mayor Fischer Letter of Consent – Louisville, KY
Mayor Kenneth Miyagishima Letter of Consent – Las Cruces, NM
Mayor William Peduto Letter of Consent – Pittsburgh, PA
Mayor Mark Behnke Letter of Consent – Battle Creek, MI
Macomb County, MI – Letter of Consent
Washtenaw County, MI – Consent Resolution
Wayne County, MI – Letter of Consent
Oakland County, MI – Letter of Consent
Mayor David Berger Letter of Consent – Lima, OH
Mayor Martin Walsh Letter of Consent – Boston, MA
Mayor Joe Hogsett Letter of Consent – Indianapolis, IN
Dallas County, TX – Letter of Consent
Ingham County, MI – Consent Resolution
Mayor Stephen C.N. Kepley Letter of Consent – Kentwood, MI
Las Vegas, NV – Article on Consent
Henderson, NV – Article on Consent
Reno, NV – Article on Consent
Wake County NC – Letter of Consent
Buncombe County NC – Letter of Consent
Onondaga County, NY – Article on Consent
Cook County, MN – Article on Consent
Cumberland County, PA – Article on Consent
Ramsey County, MN – Article on Consent
Minnehaha County, SD – Article on Consent
Boulder County, CO – Article on Consent
Grand Traverse County, MI – Article on Consent
New Castle County, DE – Article on Consent
Utah County, UT – Article on Consent
Otter Tail County, MN – Article on Consent
Twin Falls County, ID – Article on Consent
Spokane County, WA – Article on Consent
Dane County, WI – Press Release on Consent
Boone County, MO – Article on Consent
Mecklenburg County, NC – Article on Consent
Ann Corcoran of RRW blog notes:
I continue to argue that these nine contractors are the heart of America’s Open Borders movement and thus there can never be long-lasting reform of US immigration policy when these nine un-elected phony non-profits are paid by the taxpayers to work as community organizers pushing an open borders agenda.
Church World Service (CWS)
Ethiopian Community Development Council (ECDC) (secular)
Episcopal Migration Ministries (EMM)
Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS)
International Rescue Committee (IRC) (secular)
US Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI) (secular)
Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services (LIRS)
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB)
World Relief Corporation (WR)
120 notes
·
View notes
Text
You Gotta Lose? Hell, Some Of Us Ain’t Dead Yet by Mary Leary
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f0fz3FVBlOE
NRBQ has done so many amazing songs. I never thought much about “Roll Call,” from Tiddlywinks - for one thing, it has a lighter, almost Billy Joel sound that’s more about latter day Terry Adams style than what I think of as the classic Q. Yet just as Adams’ work has grown on me, this track has made its way into my consciousness. The lyrics speak to me more in 2020 than they did when Tiddlywinks was released in 1980, before the D.C.-area music scene had lost Robert Goldstein (Urban Verbs), Kevin MacDonald (brilliant visual artist and scene stalwart who helped me design and layout [The] Infiltrator), Danny Gatton disciple/guitar maverick Evan Johns, bassist Michael Maye from the original H-Bombs, Rick Dreyfuss (Half Japanese/Chumps/Shakemore), Libby Hatch and Michael Mariotte (Tru Fax and the Insaniacs), Sally Be/Berg - REM/Egoslavia/SHE/Robert Palmer), Nurses member Marc Halpern (heroin, 1982), Lorenzo (Pee- Wee) Jones (Tiny Desk Unit) and hybrid rocker Jim Altman (HIV, 1990s). Goldstein, Dreyfuss, Maye and MacDonald succumbed to cancer, while Evan Johns’ deterioration followed years of touring, hard drinking and pushing himself past the limit.
(Top to bottom: Tommy Keene, Kevin MacDonald, Susan Mumford)
Those named above have been joined by Tommy Keene (the Rage/the Razz/solo/Paul Westerberg/Matthew Sweet - cardiac arrest at the age of 59; 2017), TDU’s Susan Mumford (cancer, 2018), David Byers (Psychotics/H.R./Bad Brains), and Skip Groff (Yesterday and Today/ Limp Records/Dischord - seizure, 2019). This is just an imperfect/incomplete naming of D.C.-area losses - I’m sure journalists from other cities could make lists. A horde of New Wave and early alternative musicians have died within the past few years. Whether through the stress of hard living/poverty, substance abuse, cancer or Covid-19, we’re seeing artists pass much earlier than I, anyway, expected them to.
(Top to bottom: Fred "Freak” Smith, Michael Maye with Evan Johns, Tru Fax and the Insaniacs)
We’re already past the loss of all the original Ramones. All the Cramps less Poison Ivy. Joe Strummer. Robert Quine. Hilly Kristal. Lou Reed. As of July, 2020, since 2018 we’ve also lost Andy Gill, Ivan Kral, Genesis P-Orridge, Adam Schlesinger, Danny Mihm, Ric Ocasek, Daniel Johnston, Kim Shattuck, Lorna Doom, Mark Hollis, Keith Flint, Ranking Roger, Mark E. Smith, Glenn Branca, Randy Rampage, Hardy Fox, Pete Shelley, Matthew Seligman, Bill Rieflin, Dave Greenfield, Florian Schneider, Ian Dury, Benjamin Orr, Kirsty McColl and David Roback.
(Top to bottom: Sally Be/Berg, Ranking Roger, Danny Mihm)
Talking about the deaths of talented, gifted creatives is a helluva way to start a column. But here we are. Older performers don’t always get the attention afforded newer, so the rest of this piece shares and celebrates artists from the original New Wave/punk scenes who are still around and active. Many are from the D.C.-area cornucopia I know best, while others have just come to my attention, or seem especially noteworthy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MED9_XK_JVQ
The Zeros’ Javier Escovedo has been steadily emitting tasty Americana-ish rock while occasionally dropping some Zeros sturm-’n’-drang - most recently with Munster Records single “In The Spotlight” and a track on Burger Records’ Quarantunes compilation. Quarantunes is a seven-album affair featuring 140 alternative/punk performers old and new, all of whom wrote songs between March-April 2020. A cursory listen to Volume 2 reveals the recorded version of a good night at a very wild bar, with Zeros still handily kicking ass of all ages.
https://velvetmonkeys.bandcamp.com/album/legacy-of-success?fbclid=IwAR0lJyS0YDE4e3o7LJiITEtw1lhBWMkUX47Vuag1Lf9fs2QozJJKD1lwkes
Velvet Monkeys/B.A.L.L. player and Sonic Youth/Teenage Fanclub producer Don Fleming reports, “We’ve put out new tracks ‘Theories of Rummanetics’ and ‘Legacy of Success.’ Jay has written a few ‘modules’ and Malcolm and I are having fun doing the music,” adding, “I play some electric six string on the new Rob Moss album - it’s fun to be on, with lots of guitar slingers from the DC daze.”
Yup, Rob Moss of Skin-Tight Skin has solicited contributions from Fleming and from Marshall Keith (Slickee Boys), along with a pile of talent including Stuart Casson (Psychotics/Dove/Meatmen), Franz Stahl (Foo Fighters/Scream), Billy Loosigian (Nervous Eaters, the Boom-Boom Band), Nels Cline (Wilco) and Saul Koll (the guy who made guitars for Henry Kaiser and Lee Ranaldo). The set is called We’ve Come Back To Rock ‘n’ Roll.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XdIB8a_0Q4c
Chumps/Workdogs/Jam Messengers player Rob Kennedy apparently has too much energy to throw in the towel - he’s kept recording, performing and making various sorts of lo-fi, DIY mischief that never loses that fresh, ‘70s feeling. Jam Messengers released Night And Day on vinyl in 2017. One of my fave Kennedy tracks, “A Low Down Dirty Shame” speaks to this moment as well as any.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-CRBEGVLE4
Former Tiny Desk Unit/Fuji’s Navy/Rhoda & the Bad Seeds members Bob Boilen, Kevin Lay, Michael Barron and Bob Harvey have released a new Danger Painters joint, Thank Speak Love This Record. Lay joked, “I have a voice made for Morse Code” before revealing his recent work with Rhoda and the Bad Seeds material, released June 30 as Live at Nightclub 9:30. Boilen continues to introduce artists both vital and obscure via Tiny Desk Concerts and All Songs Considered/NPR.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ejQ1GajwfB0
I’ve seen David Arnson play recently and can attest to his proclivity for unfettered growth via Insect Surfers, the instrumental group that originally had some trouble establishing cred. with younger D.C. punks. The Surfers’ most recent release was Living Fossils (2019). Arnson celebrated the band’s 40 years of existence with a European tour in 2019.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SkIuWIZVkM
Jad Fair says, “Half Japanese will have a new album released in November on Fire Records.” Jad’s art was recently featured at the Hiromart Gallery/Tokyo, while David has created a Facebook page where fans can pick up his colorful images for, well, mere bags o’ shells, as far as we can see - https://www.facebook.com/David-Fair-Painting-107055447700859/
Despite health issues for several members, Bad Brains has collaborated with Element to make BB themed skate wear https://www.elementbrand.com/mens-collection-bad-brains/ and added some killer live tracks to its YouTube channel.
Former WGTB programmers John Paige and Steve Lorber have been presenting Rock Continuum on WOWD-LP FM 94.3 since 2017.
Mike Stax continues to give excellent motivation for hunting down a pair of Beatle boots - Munster released the Loons’ 7” EP, A Dream In Jade Green, last year. The latest issue of Ugly Things, said by Stax to be heavily focused on the Pretty Things’ Phil May, was reported in early July to be nearing publication.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6jSc7gEAv0
Razz (the) Documentary will tell the story of how an uncommonly combustible rock band - especially with the Bill Craig/Abaad Behram line-up - helped spread the Flamin’ Groovies gospel while throwing down oddly compelling originals and taking the two-guitar thing up several notches - the producers are purportedly seeing the light at the end of the tunnel. Whether anyone can ever recreate the experience of being in an altered state via obsessive, sometimes conversational repetition of certain chords, anchored by Ted Nicely rethinking just what can be done with a bass guitar, given girth by Doug Tull’s intuitive drumming; with Mike Reidy the heat-seeking missile somewhere near the center... well, I doubt it. ‘Cause at this point you’re feeling no pain and it’s not about drinking; there is no room for anything but water - the beer will be knocked over when you’re this busy matching David Arnson’s other-side-of-the-front-line’s leaps into joydum while PCP’d out yahoos from the sticks learn the hard way that hugging Marshall amps can lead to lifelong repercussions. There (in case nothing I want to say about [the] Razz makes it into the film) - I’ve said it.
Discussions among old friends have confirmed that I’m not alone in being happily surprised at this development - we never expected our actions - which led to the hardcore explosion that’s received a lot more attention... would ever make it into any history book. Yet coverage of many of the D.C.-area musicians featured in this piece also comes with Punk The Capitol, A History of D.C. Punk and Hardcore, 1976-1983. Spring 2021 is the projected date for streaming/DVD release.
Ivan Julian came back from a scary 2015 bout with cancer to do a show in New York in 2016. The cancer has returned. Friends have organized a GoFundMe to raise money for surgery and basic needs.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pDB_3by-xkI
The Shakemore fest also refuses to fade, promising “eight hours of streaming steaming video” on August 1. Sounds will be provided by R. Stevie Moore, Velvet Monkeys, Tav Falco’s Panther Burns, Half Japanese, Johnny Spampinato, Weird Paul and the Chumps, among many, many others.
Despite having played at CBGB and other alternative venues in 1979, at the height of the New Wave, Gary Wilson’s work is so distinctive, he’s rarely been included with any musical genre other than the oft-vague “experimental” category. Folks were too unmoored by his visceral performances to get behind him. Wilson’s 14th album, Tormented, was released by Cleopatra in February.
Paul Collins recently published a book that he wrote with Chuck Nolan; I Don’t Fit In: My Wild Ride Through the Punk and Power Pop Trenches with the Nerves and the Beat (Hozac Books).
As “Heath,” Michael Layne Heath, a journalist who contributed to (the) Infiltrator and many other ‘zines, published My Week Beats Your Year: Encounters with Lou Reed in May (Hat & Beard Press).
In April, X released its first album in 35 years; Alphabetland.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pZ1I-laItPI
As exciting for me as any of the above is Richard Hell with the Heartbreakers’ 2019 release of Yonkers Demo 1976. Hell’s “You Gotta Lose” is one of my picks for best punk/new wave singles of all time. The Heartbreakers version is, predictably, messier than the Robert Quine guitar-spiked classic. Its more excessive charms are growing on me...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=48QnsysCN_A
This piece could go on and on - compiling it has been exhausting. The best part has been the response to my social media call for any info I didn’t have re: the D.C.-centric scene I left for New York in 1983. Musicians anxious to keep their compadres’ names alive have hammered that post with 138 comments to date. Urban Verbs percussionist Danny Frankel, who’s played with a colorful spread of artists including Beck, Marianne Faithful, Lou Reed, John Cale and k.d. Lang, made a point of being sure I knew about the passing of Marc Halpern, a source of obvious pain. People were worried I wouldn’t mention John Stabb (Government Issue - 2016), rockabilly player Billy Hancock (2018), Fred “Freak” Smith (Strange Boutique/Beefeater - murdered in Los Angeles, 2017), John Hansen (Slickee Boys - 2010), record store owner/Wasp Records starter/music supporter Bill Asp, Jimmy Barnett of The Killer Bees, and David Byers.
One of the hardest for me to write about is Chris Morse, whose 1984 passing from a drug overdose wrenched so many - I managed to get an obituary into, I think, The New York Rocker (that physical trek was part of a long-ago blur; a very hot day of traipsing over steaming concrete in a narrow-skirted dress to deliver the copy). Chris popped up in my dreams for years - one “visitation” pushed me to write a poem about it in the ‘90s. Morse, who played in Rhoda & The Bad Seeds and worked as a doorman at The Pyramid after moving to NYC in the early ‘80s, was on one of the Urban Verbs’ early flyers. I’m on another.
(Top to bottom: Me in an early Verbs flyer/photo shot at the Atlantis; Chris Morse on another Verbs flyer)
I ended up getting so burnt out on the responsibility of populating this sad roll call, I’ve started a memorial page for them all on Facebook. The nature of truly alternative music is such that many of its lights still fail to fill the pages of major publications. Many of these lights gave a great deal of their lives, if not everything, for the art they believed in. It’s good to remember them, and those heady early days. It’s good to enjoy what we still can.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cA3IfK76mmI
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
The Bigger They Come Part 8 (Godzilla: King of Monsters, 1956)
The Bigger They Come Part 8 (Godzilla: King of Monsters, 1956)
Filmmakers wanted to bring Godzilla to American audiences, and what they thought Godzilla needed was a white guy’s perspective. Godzilla: King of Monsters was not so much a remake as it was a revision of the original film. Adding footage of Raymond Burr, the film becomes a narrated flash black. Opening in the wake of Godzilla’s attack, Burr’s American journalist Steve Martin starts to recount…
View On WordPress
#Akihiko Hirata#Akira Takarada#Fuyuki Murakami#Godzilla#Godzilla: King of Monsters#Ishirô Honda#Momoko Kôchi#Raymond Burr#Ren Yamamoto#Sachio Sakai#Takashi Shimura#Terry O. Morse
0 notes
Video
British Intelligence | 1940 | Espiã Fascinadora
Durante a Segunda Guerra, a espiã Helene von Lerber chega a Londres para viver com a família de um oficial de alto escalão britânico. Lá, ela encontra o mordomo Valdar, também um espião, e o ajuda a descobrir os planos secretos britânicos.
Data de lançamento: 29 de janeiro de 1940 (mundial) Direção: Terry O. Morse Música composta por: Heinz Eric Roemheld Produção: Bryan Foy Produtora: Warner Bros. Entertainment
During World War I, Franz Strendler, a master German spy has cost the British dearly. In desperation, they send for their best agent, currently undercover in Germany. Pilot Frank Bennett (Bruce Lester) is sent to pick him up, but the Germans are forewarned and Bennett is shot down. Luckily, he survives and is rescued by friendly soldiers. While recovering in a hospital, Bennett is tended by a pretty nurse, Helene Von Lorbeer (Margaret Lindsay). He tells her he loves her, but she informs him she is leaving, and they will not see each other again. However, after Bennett falls asleep, she kisses him on the cheek.
Von Lorbeer turns out to be a spy herself. She is recalled to Germany to receive a high honor sent personally by the Kaiser and to undertake a new mission. Posing as a refugee named Frances Hautry, she infiltrates the London household of Arthur Bennett (Holmes Herbert), a cabinet minister, and, coincidentally, Frank's father. She takes her orders from Valdar (Boris Karloff), the butler. However, unbeknownst to her, he is a British double agent. Valdar later secretly reports to Colonel Yeats (Leonard Mudie), the head of British Intelligence.
When Bennett's secretary, also a German spy, taps out a secret message in code on her typewriter, Yeats is present and recognizes it. Since only Hautry is also in the office at the time, he sets a trap for her. A captured spy named Kurz seemingly escapes from the British and flees to Hautry's bedroom. She hides him in her closet, but then betrays him when Yeats and his men show up. Afterwards, she tells Valdar that she knew "Kurz" was an imposter.
Frank Bennett unexpectedly shows up, his squadron and others having been recalled to London for some reason. He is surprised to find his former nurse there and under a different name. Hautry is forced to reveal that she is loyal to the British. However, Valdar overhears their conversation.
That night, the British cabinet meets in Bennett's home. It is the moment Valdar has been waiting for. He forces Hautry at gunpoint down in the cellar, where he has set a bomb to blow the house up under cover of a Zeppelin bombing raid. Hautry tells Valdar that she had no choice but to make up a story to allay Frank's suspicions. Convinced when she shows him the award she was given, Valdar finally reveals that he is Strendler.
Fortunately, Valdar has been under surveillance. Yeats and his men rush to the cellar door. When Valdar escapes through the coal shute, Hautry unlocks the door and informs Yeats about the bomb. Valdar rushes to his hideout to transmit the stolen British plans for the spring offensive, pursued by the British, but, ironically, a Zeppelin bombs the location and kills him and his confederates before he can send his information.
Directed by Terry O. Morse Produced by Bryan Foy (uncredited) Written by Anthony Paul Kelly (play) Lee Katz (screenplay) Starring: Boris Karloff Margaret Lindsay Music by H. Roemheld Cinematography: Sid Hickox Edited by Thomas Pratt Production company : Warner Bros. Distributed by Warner Bros. Release date: January 29, 1940 Running time: 60 min. Language: English
1 note
·
View note