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The Blue Veil (1951)
$15.00Louise Mason is a young widow who fills her empty life with the task of becoming a children’s nurse. As the years pass, and the widow tries to find her own place in life, her young charges, the children of various employers, grow and soon find themselves ready to face the world. When it seems that she will be alone, the nurse finds that her ‘children’ have ideas of their own in regards to helping their beloved mentor.
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The Glass Menagerie (1950)
$15.00An aging Southern Belle makes life horrible for her ambitious son and crippled daughter because of her dreams of what life should be.
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Stage Fright (1950)
$15.00A struggling actress tries to help a friend prove his innocence when he’s accused of murdering the husband of a high society entertainer.
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Magic Town (1947)
$15.00Rip Smith’s opinion-poll business is a failure…until he discovers that the small town of Grandview is statistically identical to the entire country. He and his assistants go there to run polls cheaply and easily, in total secrecy (it would be fatal to let the townsfolk get self-conscious). And of course, civic crusader Mary Peterman must be kept from changing things too much. But romantic involvement with Mary complicates life for Rip; then suddenly everything changes.
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Cheyenne (1947)
$15.00A gambler is determined to capture the outlaw bandit responsible for a series of stagecoach robberies. Director Raoul Walsh’s 1947 western stars Dennis Morgan and Jane Wyman.
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The Yearling (1946)
$15.00Jody convinces his parents to allow him to adopt a young deer, but what will happen if the deer misbehaves?
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Night and Day (1946)
$15.00Swellegant and elegant. Delux and delovely. Cole Porter was the most sophisticated name in 20th-century songwriting. And to play him on screen, Hollywood chose debonair icon Cary Grant. Grant stars for the first time in color in this fanciful biopic. Alexis Smith plays Linda, whose serendipitous meetings with Cole lead to a meeting at the alter. More than 20 Porter songs grace this tail of triumph and tragedy, with Grand lending is amiable voice to “You’re the Top”, “Night and Day” and more. Monty Wooley, a Yale contemporary of Porter, portrays himself. And Jane Wyman, Mary Martin, Eve Arden and others provide vocals and verve. Lights down. Curtain up. Standards embraced by generations are yours to enjoy in “Night and Day.”
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The Doughgirls (1944)
$15.00Arthur and Vivian are just married, but when the get to their honeymoon suite in Washington D.C., they find it occupied. Arthur goes to meet Slade, his new boss, and when he comes back, he finds three girls in his suite. He orders Vivian to get rid of them, but they are friends of Vivian’s and as time goes by, it looks more like Grand Central Station than the quiet honeymoon suite Arthur expected. As long as there is anyone else in the suite, Arthur will not stay there and there will be no honeymoon.
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Princess O’Rourke (1943)
$15.00A down-to-earth pilot (Robert Cummings) charms a European princess (Olivia de Havilland) on vacation in the United States.
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Bad Men of Missouri (1941)
$15.00The Younger brothers return to Missouri after the Civil War with intent to avenge the misdeeds of William Merrick, a crooked banker who has been buying up warrants on back-taxes and dispossessing the farmers.
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