The best Victor Harrington’s romance movies

Victor Harrington

Victor Harrington

Today we present the best Victor Harrington’s movies. If you are a great movie fan, you will surely know most of them, but we hope to discover a movie that you have not yet seen … and that you love! Let’s go there with the best Victor Harrington’s movies.

Darling

Darling
7/10
  • Genre: DramaRomance
  • Release: 03/08/1965
  • Character: Functionary at Charity Event (uncredited)
The swinging London, early sixties. Beautiful but shallow, Diana Scott is a professional advertising model, a failed actress, a vocationally bored woman, who toys with the affections of several men while gaining fame and fortune.

An Alligator Named Daisy

An Alligator Named Daisy
5.2/10
  • Genre: ComedyRomance
  • Release: 13/12/1955
  • Character: Man in Music Shop (uncredited)
Returning from a cricket match in Ireland, Peter Weston gains a pet alligator from another passenger who abandons it with him. He is horrified and while his first instinct is to get rid of it he develops a relationship with a young Irishwoman who appears to be entwined with the reptile. He soon discovers that Daisy is tame and seems to be the way to Moira's heart.

A Day to Remember

A Day to Remember
6.7/10
  • Genre: ComedyRomance
  • Release: 10/11/1953
  • Character: Gent on Hampton Court Trip (uncredited)
Based on The Hand and the Flower, a novel by Jerrard Tickell, A Day to Remember stars Stanley Holloway as Charley Porter, captain of London darts team. When the team travels to the French town of Boulogne for the annual darts tournament, a good time is had by all--and more besides. Jim Carver one of the team's members, is reunited with a little French girl he'd befriended during the war, who has now developed into a beautiful young woman. And Fred Collins makes a poignant journey to the hotel where he'd honeymooned with his late wife. The film works best as a low-key comedy-drama; it is least successful when it ventures into O. Henry territory and strains for "surprise" story twists. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

It's Trad, Dad!

It's Trad, Dad!
5.9/10
The hero and heroine want to popularize a trad jazz in their town. Some older people feel displeased about a trad jazz, and prevent their trying. The hero and heroine go to London television studio to ask trad jazz musician to support their trial.

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