Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. TITLE: I Wake Up Screaming (1941) • NR • 1:22:11 Betty Grable, Victor Mature, Carole Landis, Laird Cregar, Alan Mowbray, Allyn Joslyn H. Bruce Humberstone (Director) A little known (and VASTLY underrated) little film noir gem from the early 1940s. I'm fairly certain that the primary reason that more people haven't heard of this wonderful ...

    • Blu-ray
  2. Find trailers, reviews, synopsis, awards and cast information for I Wake Up Screaming (1941) - H. Bruce Humberstone, Bruce Humberstone on AllMovie - Well-known New York sports promoter Frankie…

  3. I Wake Up Screaming. Directed by: H. Bruce Humberstone. Starring: Betty Grable, Victor Mature, Carole Landis, Laird Cregar. Genres: Film noir, Mystery. Rated the #38 best film of 1941, and #7690 in the greatest all-time movies (according to RYM users).

  4. In Nov 1941, in Milwaukee, the studio held a "test run" of the picture as I Wake Up Screaming, instead of Hot Spot, to judge the box office reaction. When the film performed well, Steve Fisher's original title was retained. Notes of a 10 Jun 1941 conference with executive producer Darryl Zanuck, contained in the Twentieth Century-Fox Produced Scripts Collection at the UCLA Arts--Special ...

  5. 11. Jan. 2017 · I Wake Up Screaming. Rating: 3 of 5. I Wake Up Screaming is a defining 1941 film in the shadowy crime genre that would later be called film noir. Victor Mature stars as Frankie Christopher, a sports promoter who is also the prime suspect in the murder of a beautiful model (Carole Landis) he helped to attain celebrity success.

  6. 3. Mai 2016 · I Wake Up Screaming (originally titled Hot Spot) is a 1941 film noir. It is based on the novel of the same name by Steve Fisher, who co-wrote the screenplay ...

    • 2 Min.
    • 3,9K
    • Film Noir
  7. 5. Aug. 2019 · I Wake Up Screaming was remade in 1953 as Vicki. Dwight Taylor bases his screenplay on the book by pulp writer Steve Fisher. In a jarring move that works in an odd way, ‘Somewhere over the Rainbow’ is the soundtrack that can be heard throughout. This early film noir, shot in a naturalistic style, showed how dark photography can increase a brooding mood and make the film more tense.