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Little Miss Broadway (1947)
$15.00Judy Gibson (Jean Porter), upon leaving finishing school, goes to meet her relatives, whom she believes to be wealthy and socially prominent. Actually, there are penniless Broadway characters and, in order to avoid Judy learning the truth, they take possession of a Long Island mansion owned by a thief presently doing time in Sing Sing. Judy arrives with her fiancé Dick Nichols (John Shelton) and his father, an industrialist who tries to sell worthless stock to Judy’s family in order to bolster his shaky financial status. They give him $200,000, part of the stashed loot they found belonging to the home-owner thief. The latter escapes from prison.
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Betty Co-Ed (1946)
$15.00The plot gets under way when Joanne, a carnival hootchy-kootchy dancer, is accepted into a snobbish college sorority when it is assumed that she hails from a blueblooded Virginia family.
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Bathing Beauty (1944)
$15.00A big splash in her first starring role: Esther Williams is a teacher at a women’s college — and wacky Red Skelton enrolls to be near her. An astonishing flames-and-fountains aquatic finale.
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Nazty Nuisance (1943)
$15.00Germany’s Adolf Hitler, with his Axis-stooges, Italy’s Mussolini and Japan’s Suki Yama, although he tried to avoid taking them, is on his way, via submarine, to a tropical country to negotiate a treaty with the High Chief Paj Mab. However, an American P.T-boat crew is already there and have some plans for schickenbit-grubber and his buddies.
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About Face (1942)
$15.00Two Army sergeants (William Tracy, Joe Sawyer) disrupt a bar, a party and an Army-Navy dance.
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San Fernando Valley (1944)
$25.00Directed by John English in 1944. A ranch owner fires his ranch hands and brings in women to replace them. The owner’s daughter wants the male hands back and comes up with a plan to do it. They will rustle the horses and when the women hands are unable to find them, they will bring them in and get their old jobs back. But the two hands that steal the horses sell them and then claim they were robbed.
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Bud Abbott and Lou Costello in Hollywood (1945)
$25.00When two bumbling barbers act as agents for a talented but unknown singer, they stage a phony murder in order to get him a plum role.
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