The best Woody Strode’s comedy movies

Woody Strode

Woody Strode

25/07/1914- 31/12/1994
If you love cinema, you will share this ranking of the best Woody Strode’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 Woody Strode.

Boot Hill

Boot Hill
5.5/10
Victims of oppressive town boss Honey are offered help by an unusual alliance of gunmen and circus performers

Jaguar Lives!

Jaguar Lives!
4.2/10
The world's newest kung fu legend, Joe Lewis, takes on evil gangsters and saves the world.

No Time for Love

No Time for Love
6.8/10
  • Genre: ComedyRomance
  • Release: 10/11/1943
  • Character: Black Sandhog
Upper-class female reporter is (despite herself) attracted to hulking laborer digging a tunnel under the Hudson river.

Star Spangled Rhythm

Star Spangled Rhythm
6.6/10
  • Genre: ComedyMusic
  • Release: 05/03/1942
  • Character: Rochester's Chauffeur (uncredited)
Pop, a security guard at Paramount has told his son that he's the head of the studio. When his son arrives in Hollywood on shore leave with his buddies, Pop enlists the aid of the studio's dizzy switchboard operator in pulling off the charade. Things get more complicated when Pop agrees to put together a show for the Navy starring Paramount's top contract players.

Loaded Guns

Loaded Guns
4.7/10
An air hostess gets involved in Naples, against her will, in the in-fighting amongst rival gangs.

Jungle Gents

Jungle Gents
5.8/10
The boys get sent to Africa by a diamond firm when they find out that one of them can locate the stones by smell.

Lust in the Dust

Lust in the Dust
5.9/10
A group of unscrupulous characters seek buried treasure in the old west.

Androcles and the Lion

Androcles and the Lion
6/10
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release: 01/12/1952
  • Character: The Lion
George Bernard Shaw’s breezy, delightful dramatization of this classic fable—about a Christian slave who pulls a thorn from a lion’s paw and is spared from death in the Colosseum as a result of his kind act—was written as a meditation on modern Christian values. Pascal’s final Shaw production is played broadly, with comic character actor Alan Young as the titular naïf. He’s ably supported by Jean Simmons, Victor Mature, Robert Newton, and Elsa Lanchester.

Scipio the African

Scipio the African
6.7/10
Years after the Second Punic War, Scipio Africanus finds himself generally unliked, despite his defeat of Hannibal Barca. He and his brother, Scipio Asiaticus, are accused by Marcus Porcius Cato of the theft of 500 talents intended for Rome.

We Are No Angels

We Are No Angels
5.8/10

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