I'm From the City is a 1938 American western film directed by Ben Holmes who also wrote the story which was adapted into a screenplay by Nicholas T. Barrows, Robert St. Clair, and John Grey. William Sistrom produced the film for RKO Radio Pictures, which also distributed the picture, premiering on August 5, 1938. The film stars Joe Penner, Richard Lane, and Lorraine Krueger.
^ "Inside the Lines: Detail View". American Film Institute. Archived from the original on March 29, 2014. Retrieved September 11, 2014.
Suggestions de films similaires à I'm from the City
Il y a 99 films ayant les mêmes acteurs, 12 films avec le même réalisateur, 52096 ayant les mêmes genres cinématographiques (dont 100 ayant exactement les mêmes 3 genres que I'm from the City), pour avoir au final 70 suggestions de films similaires.
Si vous avez aimé I'm from the City, vous aimerez sûrement les films similaires suivants :
, 1h4 Réalisé parBen Holmes OrigineEtats-Unis GenresComédie, Comédie romantique ActeursJoan Fontaine, Allan Lane, Billy Gilbert, Cecil Kellaway, Hedda Hopper, George Irving Note60% Bill Norman (Allan Lane) wants to go on a six-month expedition to study tropical fish, but his wealthy businessman father (George Irving) wants him to buckle down and go to work. When Mr. Norman catches Bill trying to "borrow" his yacht, they make a wager. If Bill works for 30 days at the family dairy business without making a single mistake, Mr. Norman will finance his expedition. Norman assumes he will be an executive, but his father makes him deliver milk instead.
, 18minutes Réalisé parBen Holmes OrigineEtats-Unis GenresComédie ActeursPaul McCullough, Bud Jamison, Dorothy Granger, Tom Kennedy, Harrison Greene, Jack Rice Note62% Clark and McCullough are Flash and Blodgett, a pair of "alibi photographers" operating a studio in Atlantic City, New Jersey. The pair cater to a clientele who require fraudulent tourist photographs using fake backdrops, which can later be used as evidence that the person in the photograph was at any location in the country. One day, a married couple (Bud Jamison and Constance Bergen) turn up separately in need of alibi photographs: the man wants evidence of being on a Maine moose hunt while the woman needs photographic proof of being in Washington, D.C. The photographers, unaware that the man and woman are married, decide to play matchmaker with the pair. By coincidence, the man and woman have rooms opposite each other in the same hotel. The hotel’s manager and the staff detective become suspicious of what is transpiring when the photographers and the couple zigzag between the rooms. Eventually, the husband and wife discover the truth of their activities and leave the hotel together. The photographers, however, attempt to leave the hotel disguised as a moose, only to be chased amidst gunfire from the hotel manager.