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Lee Millar Movies

1964  
 
Saunders (Vic Morrow) and his men are assigned to capture an important Nazi officer during a "welcome home" reception at German field headquarters. It soon develops that Saunders has less to worry about from the Germans than he does from his own ranks. The fly in the ointment is technical sergeant Meider (Gary Lockwood), a born malingerer and malcontent whose whining ineptitute threatens to snafu the entire mission. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1964  
 
Ever on the lookout for extra money, Lucy (Lucille Ball lands a temp job as a process server. Her first assignment is to serve a subpoena to a prominent local banker--Mr. Mooney (Gale Gordon), of course. Through a series of mishaps, Lucy is unable to hand over the subpoena at Mooney's home, forcing her to trail him to the train station, which is the first leg of his summer vacation. Finally, Lucy catches up with Mooney in the stateroom of an ocean liner--whereupon Mooney graciously accepts the summons, laughing over the fact that he's going to spend a glorious summer far, far away from the troublesome Mrs. Carmichael...or is he? Watch for Richard Keith, the former "Little Ricky" on I Love Lucy, in the train-station scene. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Gale GordonLee Millar, (more)
 
1960  
 
Everett Sloane, who previously starred in Rod Serling's award-winning TV play Patterns, was reunited with Serling for this January 29, 1960, Twilight Zone installment. Having won an all-expense-paid trip to Las Vegas, parsimonious Franklin Gibbs (Everett Sloane) refuses to enter into the spirit of things by gambling. Alas, Franklin is not strong enough to resist the lure of a strange-looking slot machine -- and thus begins Franklin's slow but inevitable descent into poverty and madness, as his wife Flora (Vivia Janiss) looks on in helpless horror. This may well have been the first TV program in which a slot machine ever "spoke." ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Everett SloaneVivi Janiss, (more)
 
1957  
 
The story you are about to see would probably be more at home on a contemporary "procedural" series like CSI or Bones. While playing in the hills just outside LA, two kids stumble upon a human skeleton. When it turns out the bones or those of a man who was killed 25 years earlier, Friday (Jack Webb) and Smith (Ben Alexander) try to determine what happened to the poor fellow. Evidently, however, there are only two people in town who care about the outcome of the case: the dead man's former sweetheart--and the person who murdered him. This is one of a handful of black and white Dragnet episodes written especially for television, with no prior radio version. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1955  
 
When Ricky (Desi Arnaz) takes a pass on performing at an MGM studio party, Lucy (Lucille Ball) cooks up a scheme to attend the affair herself, using a life-size rubber dummy ("Raggedy Ricky") as her partner in a dance act. Unfortunately, the dummy gets stuck on Lucy's Spanish dress, and refuses to "leave" when she wants it to. As a result of this public spectacle, Lucy is offered a one-year contract to star in MGM comedies -- but is she psychologically ready for all of her showbiz dreams to come true? ~ Rovi

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Starring:
Lee Millar
 
1955  
G  
Add Lady and the Tramp to Queue Add Lady and the Tramp to top of Queue  
Lady and the Tramp represented two "firsts" for Disney: It was the studio's first Cinemascope animated feature, and it was their first full-length cartoon based on an original story rather than an established "classic". Lady is the pampered female dog belonging to Jim Dear and Darling. When her human masters bring a baby into the house, Lady feels she's being eased out; and when Darling's insufferable Aunt Sarah introduces her nasty twin Siamese cats into the fold, Lady is certain that she's no longer welcome. The cats wreak all manner of havoc, for which Lady is blamed. After the poor dog is fitted with a muzzle, Lady escapes from the house, only to run across the path of the Tramp, a raffish male dog from the "wrong" side of town. The Tramp helps Lady remove her muzzle, then takes her out on a night on the town, culminating in a romantic spaghetti dinner, courtesy of a pair of dog-loving Italian waiters. After their idyllic evening together, Lady decides that it's her duty to protect Darling's baby from those duplicitous Siamese felines. On her way home, Lady is captured and thrown in the dog pound. Here she learns from a loose-living mutt named Peg that The Tramp is a canine rake. Disillusioned, Lady is more than happy to be returned to her humans, even though it means that she'll be chained up at the insistence of Aunt Sarah. Tramp comes into Lady's yard to apologize, but she wants no part of him. Suddenly, a huge, vicious rat breaks into the house, threatening the baby. Lady breaks loose, and together with Tramp, runs into the house to protect the infant. When the dust settles, it appears to Aunt Sarah that Tramp has tried to attack the child. That's when Lady's faithful friends Jock the bloodhound and Trusty the scottie swing into action, rescuing Tramp from the dogcatcher. Once Jim Dear and Darling are convinced that Tramp is a hero, he is invited to stay...and come next Christmas, there's a whole flock of little Ladies and Tramps gathered around the family. Beyond the usual excellent animation and visual effects, the principal selling card of Lady and the Tramp is its music. Many of the songs were performed and co-written by Peggy Lee, who years after the film's 1955 theatrical issue, successfully sued Disney for her fair share of residuals from the videocassette release. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Peggy LeeBarbara Luddy, (more)
 
1953  
 
Ricky (Desi Arnaz) has always wanted to star in his own TV show, but he is less than enthused when an important department-store sponsor insists upon a "husband and wife" show, with Lucy (Lucille Ball) as part of the package. When Lucy finds out that Ricky hadn't wanted her to appear on "Breakfast With Lucy and Ricky," she does everything in her power to sabotage the dress rehearsal. Little does she realize that the so-called rehearsal is actually the premiere telecast, with her obstreperous antics being beamed out to the entire city of New York, plus the outlying suburbs! ~ Rovi

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Starring:
John LitelLee Millar, (more)
 
1953  
 
Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Ethel (Vivian Vance) are none too thrilled that Ricky (Desi Arnaz) and Fred (William Frawley) insist upon wearing their oldest and rattiest clothes in public. Without the boys' knowledge, the girls sell the raggedy old duds to a secondhand store owned by Zeb Allen (Oliver Blake) -- who promptly calls Ricky, offering to sell back his clothes. Deciding to teach the girls a lesson for sneaking around behind their backs, Ricky and Fred stuff their old clothes into Brooks Brothers boxes, then announce that they have purchased expensive new clothing, and intend to wear their new outfits at the Tropicana Club. Need we add that the scheme backfires in the most embarrassing manner possible? ~ Rovi

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Starring:
Jerry HausnerOliver Blake, (more)
 
1951  
 
Ever on the lookout for some quick and easy money, Lucy (Lucille Ball) becomes a contestant on the popular radio quiz show "Females Are Fabulous" (a spoof of Art Linkletter's People Are Funny). Host Freddie Fillmore (Frank Nelson in the first of many I Love Lucy appearances) offers to pay Lucy 1,000 dollars if she can convince Ricky (Desi Arnaz) that she was married before him, with the help of paid actor who will show up at the Ricardo doorstep claiming to be Lucy's "long-lost first husband." Predictably, Lucy mistakes a hobo (John Emery) for her phony hubby, and confusion reigns supreme. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Frank NelsonJohn Emery, (more)
 
1940  
 
Edith Fellows and Billy Lee, two of Hollywood's most talented second-echelon child stars, are teamed in the Columbia tearjerker Nobody's Children. The film was inspired by Walter White Jr.'s popular human-interest radio series, which ran from 1939 to 1941. The radio version of Nobody's Children was dedicated to finding loving homes for the orphaned and abandoned kids under the care of the Children's Home Society of Los Angeles. White himself appears in the film in the "framing" scenes, ostensibly taking place during one of his broadcasts. The story proper deals with the plight of orphaned siblings Pat (Fellows) and Tommy (Lee), whose efforts at finding adoptive parents have been thwarted by the fact that Pat is crippled. Many adults have offered to adopt Tommy alone, but he loyally refuses to be separated from his sister?and the plot wends its sentimental way from there. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Edith FellowsBilly Lee, (more)