Robert Webb Movies

1978  
PG  
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When Fenton (Keenan Wynn), the preeminent citizen of Granger speaks, the town listens. The town's high-school boys' basketball team has had a losing season, and he wants the coach fired. What's more, he wants to select his replacement. After a computer search, he discovers that the Olympic track star Randy Rawlings has just the right qualifications. When Randy arrives, he discovers that this star athlete is a woman (Cathy Lee Crosby). However, she insists on her right to try and coach the boys, and she not only succeeds at that, but inspires the boys in other ways as well. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Cathy Lee CrosbyMichael Biehn, (more)
1972  
R  
In this erotic drama, a young woman tries to overcome her intense physical aversion to sexual intercourse. She does, and by the story's end participates in a wildly sensuous (and almost pornographic) sex orgy. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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1970  
 
In this sex-oriented movie, described as "okay for skin houses where anything goes," Carole is a virgin who wants to overcome her resistance to being "normal." To that end, she employs the services of a psychiatrist who goes in for what were then (1970) the latest fads: psychodrama, encounter groups, etc. A lot of "sophisticated" psychological jargon adds "socially redeeming value" to this skinflick in which the "virgin" (as usual) soon overcomes her resistance to sex and becomes a love-making athlete who explores lesbianism as well as hetero sex. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Barbara DouglasMorgan Evans, (more)
1942  
 
The Harlem Tuff Kids, African-American counterparts to Monogram's East Side Kids, star in the morale-boosting comedy-drama Take My Life. It all begins when the Kids-Johnny (Freddie Jackson), Bill (Eugene Jackson), Icky (Paul White), Stinky (Eddie Lynn) and Shadow (Monte Hawley)-disdainfully disregard their patriotic responsibilities as America enters WW2. Our hoodlum heroes are brought into line by tough-but-kindly Sergeant Holmes (Jack Carr), who gives them a crash course in what it means to be a "Real American". Before they've been completely won over, however,the Tuff Kids are sucked into a murder-mystery subplot. Curiously, the fact that most black American citizens in 1942 were routinely denied the very freedoms they were expected to fight for is sidestepped in this cheap but lively programmer. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Freddie JacksonEugene Jackson, (more)
1938  
 
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In Old Chicago was 20th Century-Fox's spin on MGM's San Francisco--a personal saga played out against the backdrop of a famous 19th Century disaster. Alice Brady plays Mrs. O'Leary, a widow who brings her two young boys to the sleepy village of Chicago. As the city grows in prominence and prestige, so do the boys: One son (Tyrone Power) becomes a rascal who dreams of creating his own entertainment empire, while the other son (Don Ameche) matures into an honest, straight-laced lawyer. Both boys woo a beautiful singer (Alice Faye), who favors the more reckless of the two. As the headstrong son gains control of the more disreputable forms of Chicago entertainment, the serious son becomes the city's Mayor. The requisite rivalry between the two reaches a fever pitch just before their mother's cow knocks over a lantern and sets off the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. The O'Leary boys unite in trying to fight the conflagration and rescue the populace; the mayor dies, and the wastrel son vows to mend his ways and help build a "new" Chicago. In Old Chicago is climaxed spectacularly by the famous fire, a masterwork of special effects courtesy of 20th Century-Fox's Fred Sersen. The film, which originally ran 115 minutes, is currently available only in its shorter (and better paced) reissue version. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Tyrone PowerAlice Faye, (more)
1937  
 
The Fighting Playboy is a "Northern": a western plotline set in the Canadian woods. Nick Stuart plays the ne'er-do-well son of a wealthy man, who cuts Stuart off without a dime because the boy refuses to make something of himself. Thus, Stuart heads northward to prove his mettle. In short order (very short, inasmuch as the film is only 50 minutes long) Stuart makes a fortune and wins the girl (Lucille Browne). Filmed entirely on location, The Fighting Playboy was based on a short story by Alex Phillip. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Nick StuartLucille Browne, (more)
1936  
 
Lloyds of London traces the rise to prominence of the venerable British insurance company, as seen through the eyes of fictional 19th-century Londoner Jonathan Blake (Tyrone Power, in his first starring role). A lifelong friend of naval hero Lord Nelson, Blake puts his job (and the future existence of Lloyds) on the line when he announces Nelson's victory at Trafalgar -- before it takes place. For those not interested in policies and premiums, the script serves up a romance between Blake and the lovely Lady Elizabeth (Madeleine Carroll), the unhappily married spouse of snotty aristocrat Lord Everett Stacy (George Sanders). Among the few real-life historical personages depicted in the film is Lloyds founder John Julius Angerstein, played by Sir Guy Standing. A box-office bonanza, Lloyds of London proved that 23-year-old Tyrone Power could carry a picture -- and that the recently-formed 20th Century-Fox was truly a major Hollywood studio. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Freddie BartholomewMadeleine Carroll, (more)

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