For the Love of Ida Lupino :: This Proto-Noir Definitely Worth a Another Look (February, 1943)
Other Points of Interest:
Film review of Moontide at the Brewery.
This post was one of my meager contributions to The Ida Lupino Blogathon (2011) hosted by The Miss Ida Lupino fan page, a well-worth-your-while shrine to one of my favorite actresses that is sadly no longer with us. Still, my Ida love knows no bounds, and I hope you will enjoy this humble retrospective. Thanks!
Moontide (1942) Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation / P: Mark Hellinger / D: Archie Mayo / W: Nunnally Johnson, John O’Hara, Willard Robertson (novel) / C: Charles G. Clarke, Lucien Ballard / E: William Reynolds / M: David Buttolph, Cyril J. Mockridge / S: Jean Gabin, Ida Lupino, Thomas Mitchell, Claude Rains, Victor Sen Yung
This entry was posted on June 29, 2012 at 9:00 pm and is filed under 1940-1949, Movie Ads with tags A Date with the Falcon, Almost Married, Archie Mayo, Claude Rains, Film Noir, For the Love of Ida Lupino, George Sanders, Ida Lupino, Jane Frazee, Jean Gabin, Mark Hellinger, Moontide, Nunnally Johnson, Romance, The Falcon, Thomas Mitchell, Thriller, Victor Sen Yung, Wendy Barrie. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
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