Top cast:William West,Alice Washburn,Marion Brooks
Director:Auguste Lumière&Louis Lumière
Genre:Sport
Region:Hungary
Year:2024
Storyline:") Ben gave Luke something his father wanted passed down o him, a small sword-handle: his father""s elegant weapon -- a light-saber ("the weapon of a Jedi Knight").With a single turn of a nut on the motor, the entire engine immediately drops out onto the ground.With a half-hearted apology, a sheepish Egbert departs and continues his walk to the bar.(Hours later, when Egbert happens to pass that way again, the chauffeur is still working o repair the damage...and the girl who made him a man!Give this cowboy enough rope and he""ll land MARILYN MONROE in BUS STOPThere was only one Academy Award nomination for the film - Don Murray for Best Supporting Actor as an over-acting sexist hick, although he was tauted as hunky (irrespective of his depiction of an uncultured rube) on one of the film""s posters: "Introducing Hollywood""s newest hunk of man."Guffy" McGovern (Paul Douglas), the brash and loud-mouthed manager of the hapless Pittsburgh Pirates, was confronted in Forbes Field one night by the voice of the Archangel Gabriel (James Whitmore), a representative of a celestial ballclub known as the Heavenly Choir Nine; in exchange for winning ballgames with helpful but invisible angelic player-ghosts, the belligerent Guffy was required o become a changed man and cut back on his swearing and fighting; it was revealed that orphaned girl Bridget White (Donna Corcoran) had prayed for the winning miracles, and the story broke nationwide by news-columnist Jennifer Page (Janet Leigh); the film was remade and modernized by Disney in 1994Rhubarb (1951), a family screwball comedy with the subtitle "The Millionaire Tom-Cat" - starring Ray Milland and Jan Sterling; it was about a feral but loveable cat named Rhubarb who inherited a pro-baseball team - the Brooklyn LoonsThe Winning Team (1952),Warner Bros"" fanciful story of the big-league "Alex the Great" - a farmer-turned-pitcher named Grover Cleveland Alexander (Ronald Reagan), who pitched for the Philadelphia Nationals (Phillies), the Chicago Cubs, and the St.