Product Tag - nightclub

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    Tonight for Sure (1962)

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    Tonight for Sure (1962)

    On the Las Vegas strip, two unlikely men rendezvous: Samuel Hill, an ill-kempt desert miner, and Benjamin Jabowski, a John Birch Society dandy from the city. Intent on some sort of mayhem, they enter the Herald Club before the burlesque show starts, and they wire something to the electrical box, set to blow at midnight. They sit at the back of the club to get to know each other. As they drink and glance at the stage, Sam tells of a partner driven mad by visions of naked women in the sagebrush; Ben tells a tale of trying to rid his neighborhood of a pin-up studio. As they get drunker and the clock ticks toward midnight, they pull their chairs closer to the women on stage.

    $15.00
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    Pal Joey (1957)

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    Pal Joey (1957)

    Frank Sinatra, at the zenith of his cocky, world-on-a-string popularity, glides through the film with breezy nonchalance, romancing showgirl Kim Novak (Columbia Pictures’ new sex symbol) and wealthy widow Rita Hayworth (Columbia Pictures’ former sex symbol). The film also benefits from location shooting in San Francisco, caught in the moonlight-and-supper-club glow of the late ’50s. Sinatra does beautifully with the Rodgers and Hart classics “I Didn’t Know What Time It Was” and “I Could Write a Book,” and his performance of “The Lady Is a Tramp” (evocatively shot by director George Sidney) is flat-out genius. Sinatra’s ease with hep-cat lingo nearly outdoes Bing Crosby at his best, and included in the DVD is a trailer in which Sinatra instructs the audience in “Joey’s Jargon,” a collection of hip slang words such as “gasser” and “mouse.” If not one of Sinatra’s very best movies, Pal Joey is nevertheless a classy vehicle that fits like a glove

    $15.00
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    This Could Be the Night (1957)

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    This Could Be the Night (1957)

    To earn extra money, a prim schoolteacher takes a second job as secretary to the uncouth owner of a boisterous nightclub. Released in 1957, starring Jean Simmons, Paul Douglas, Anthony Franciosa, Joan Blondell, Julie Wilson, Rafael Campos, Neile Adams, ZaSu Pitts and J. Carrol Naish.

    $15.00
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    The Opposite Sex (1956)

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    The Opposite Sex (1956)

    The story concerns Kay Hilliard (played by June Allyson), a former nightclub singer who discovers her husband Steven (played by Leslie Nielsen) is having an affair with showgirl Crystal Allen (played by Joan Collins). Kay is the last to find out among her circle of gossiping girlfriends. Kay travels to Reno to divorce from Steve who then marries Crystal, but when Kay finds out that Crystal isn’t true to Steve she starts fighting to win her ex-husband back. From Wikipedia, licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

    $15.00
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    Destination Murder (1950)

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    Destination Murder (1950)

    A woman infiltrates the mob to find her father’s killer.

    $15.00
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    The Bribe (1949)

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    The Bribe (1949)

    United States Federal agent Rigby (Robert Taylor) travels to the Central American island Carlotta to investigate a stolen aircraft engines smuggling racket.

    $15.00
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    Race Street (1948)

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    Race Street (1948)

    A night-club owner takes on the crooks who killed his best friend.

    $15.00
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    Copacabana (1947)

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    Copacabana (1947)

    Groucho Marx plays a talent agent that sells his girlfriend to a nightclub — as two separate acts. The deception and constant costume changes are too much for his girl.

    $15.00
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    Perilous Holiday (1946)

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    Perilous Holiday (1946)

    Pat O’Brien makes the casual acquaintance of fellow American Ruth Warrick while on vacation in Mexico City. What Warrick doesn’t know is that O’Brien is a treasury agent, out to get expatriate counterfeiters Alan Hale and Edgar Buchanan. What O’Brien doesn’t know is that Warrick is also out to get Hale, whom she holds responsible for her father’s death.

    $15.00
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    Escort Girl (1941)

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    Escort Girl (1941)

    A pair of nightclub owners run a string of escort bureaus where men pay for the “companionship” of young women. The district attorney sends an undercover agent to infiltrate the bureaus.

    $15.00
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    Tear Gas Squad (1940)

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    Tear Gas Squad (1940)

    A brave young policeman single-handedly takes on a vicious criminal gang.

    $15.00
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    Billy Rose's Casa Mañana Revue (1938)

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    Billy Rose’s Casa Mañana Revue (1938)

    The scene is set at Billy Rose’s Casa Manana Revue, filmed at the Fort Worth Frontier Fiesta (1937), an enormous production created as part of the Texas Centennial civic celebrations. The opening song, “The Night Is Young And You’re So Beautiful” emanated from the first edition of the Revue and became a hit song on two continents in 1936.

    $15.00
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