The best Marion Marshall’s movies

Marion Marshall

Marion Marshall

08/06/1930- 24/09/2018
If you love cinema, you will share this ranking of the best Marion Marshall’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 Marion Marshall.
Genre:

Sailor Beware

Sailor Beware
6.2/10
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release: 08/02/1952
  • Character: Hilda Jones
Meeting in a navy recruiting line, Al Crowthers and Melvin Jones become friends. Al has tried to enlist before, but was always rejected. He keeps trying so that he can impress women. Melvin, is allergic to women's cosmetics and his doctor prescribed ocean travel, so he decided to join the navy.

I Was a Male War Bride

I Was a Male War Bride
7/10
Captain Henri Rochard is a French officer assigned to work with Lieut. Catherine Gates. Through a wacky series of misadventures, they fall in love and marry. When the war ends, Capt. Rochard tries to return to America with the other female war brides. Zany gender-confusing antics follow.

The Stooge

The Stooge
6.7/10
Bill Miller is an unsuccessful Broadway performer until his handlers convince him to enhance his act with a stooge—Ted Rogers, a guy positioned in the audience to be the butt of Bill's jokes. After Ted begins to steal the show, Bill's girlfriend and his pals advise him to make Ted an equal partner.

Run with the Devil

Run with the Devil
7/10
Stefano is a talented painter, devoted to his art but not interested in promoting himself, while many of his fellow artists are far more adept at selling their persona than creating art.

That's My Boy

That's My Boy
6.1/10
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release: 31/05/1951
  • Character: Terry Howard
Jack Jackson, the greatest football player in Ridgefield College history, is disappointed that his only son Junior is an uncoordinated, allergy-ridden bookworm. He uses his athletic reputation and standing as #1 alumni contributor to pressure the coach to take Junior onto the team. In addition, he pays the tuition of Junior's financially needy classmate Bill Baker, a potential all-American, with the understanding that he will room with Junior and mentor him athletically and socially. Junior's initial efforts as quarterback prove disastrous and further complications arise when the room mates both fall in love with the same co-ed.

Stella

Stella
6.5/10
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release: 20/07/1950
  • Character: Mary
Screwball black comedy about a wacky family that forgets where they've buried a corpse.

Apartment for Peggy

Apartment for Peggy
7.3/10
  • Genre: Drama
  • Release: 30/09/1948
  • Character: Ruth
Professor Henry Barnes decides he's lived long enough and contemplates suicide. His attitude is changed by Peggy Taylor, a chipper young mother-to-be who charms him into renting out his attic as an apartment for her and her husband Jason, a former GI struggling to finish college.

Dancing in the Dark

Dancing in the Dark
5.4/10
Emery Slade was one of the brightest stars in Hollywood in 1932, but by 1949 his career has hit the skids. Fortunately, he is able to convince studio head Melville Crossman to cast him in the adaptation of a hit Broadway show. Crossman has one condition: Slade must travel to New York and convince the female star of the stage production to join the film. Slade goes, but, when he eyes the winsome Julie Clarke, he hatches a different scheme.

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