The best Karl 'Karchy' Kosiczky’s movies

Karl 'Karchy' Kosiczky

Karl 'Karchy' Kosiczky

If you love cinema, you will share this ranking of the best Karl 'Karchy' Kosiczky’s movies, although you may have ordered them differently. In any case, we hope you love it and with a little luck discovering a movie that you still don’t know about Karl 'Karchy' Kosiczky.

Bringing Up Baby

Bringing Up Baby
7.8/10
  • Genre: ComedyRomance
  • Release: 18/02/1938
  • Character: Midget (uncredited)
David Huxley is waiting to get a bone he needs for his museum collection. Through a series of strange circumstances, he meets Susan Vance, and the duo have a series of misadventures which include a leopard called Baby.

The Lost Weekend

The Lost Weekend
7.9/10
  • Genre: Drama
  • Release: 29/11/1945
  • Character: Baby (uncredited)
Don Birnam, a long-time alcoholic, has been sober for ten days and appears to be over the worst... but his craving has just become more insidious. Evading a country weekend planned by his brother and girlfriend, he begins a four-day bender that just might be his last - one way or another.

The Terror of Tiny Town

The Terror of Tiny Town
4/10
  • Genre: ComedyWestern
  • Release: 01/12/1938
  • Character: The Barber (Sammy) (as Karl Casitzky)
Using a conventional Western story with an all dwarf cast, the filmmakers were able to showcase gags such as cowboys entering the local saloon by walking under the swinging doors, and pint-sized cowboys galloping around on Shetland ponies while roping calves.

They Gave Him a Gun

They Gave Him a Gun
6.3/10
  • Genre: CrimeDramaWar
  • Release: 07/05/1937
  • Character: Bit Part (uncredited)
With no other prospects, a World War I veteran puts the skills they taught him in the War to use.

I Married a Munchkin

I Married a Munchkin
6.3/10
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 01/01/1994
  • Character: Himself
Chesterton, Indiana's annual WIZARD OF OZ parade (as well as their many Oz-themed festivities) provides the backdrop for I MARRIED A MUNCHKIN, Tom Palazzolo's study of the life and career of Mary Ellen St. Aubin. Self-described as "normal, but little," Mary Ellen details her early start in show business as a performer in an all-dwarf vaudeville act, her brief appearance in 1946's THREE WISE FOOLS, her 1948 marriage to former Munchkin Parnell St. Aubin and their subsequent retirement from entertainment to run a bar (called the Midget Club) in the South Side of Chicago. Two other former Munchkins (Margaret Pellegrini and Clarence Swensen) briefly appear among the day's revelry. Also included is a postscript (shot some time after the initial film) featuring Mary Ellen briefly describing the original size of her role in THREE WISE FOOLS, which originally featured a line and an ill-fated "flying" effect. - Tom Fritsche

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