LYCOS RETRIEVER
Cary Grant: Lonely Heart
built 635 days ago
Cary Grant made over seventy movies from 1932 to 1966. In 1944, he acted in four films: "None But The Lonely Heart," "Arsenic and Old Lace," "Once Upon a Time" and the "Road to Victory."
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This three-disc set shines with five films starring the ever-suave Cary Grant. Newspaper publisher Porter Madison II (Grant) falls for a lookalike impersonating the "Thirty Day Princess" (1934), unaware that she's not royal...and not available! Silvia Sidney, Edward Arnold co-star. Grant plays a Paris beauty shop doctor more than pleased with the results of his work on Genevieve Tobin, in "Kiss and Make Up" (1934). Helen Mack, Edward Everett Horton ... star. Blinded in a chemical accident, pilot Grant causes aviatrix Myrna Loy's heart to take flight, in "Wings in the Dark" (1935), with Roscoe Karns and Dean Jagger.
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Miller tells Osborne, "[Cary Grant] has such drama in this - he'll break your heart," in his introduction of Mr. Lucky (1943). He picks Ride the High Country (1962), a Western about the friendship between two aging cowboys, because despite its director's reputation for violence, "No one understands love better than Sam Peckinpah." Miller goes on to say, "If you haven't seen Errol Flynn's The Adventures of Robin Hood, you have no business saying you love movies." And he says he chose The Big Sleep because he admires the sexy camaraderie of Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall.
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