Tim Rooney Movies

1974  
PG  
This drama is set in New Orleans during the early 1900s and chronicles the often tragic lives of people struggling to survive in the early jazz age. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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1972  
R  
Three teens--a half Navajo (Dean Stockwell), a rebellious girl (Pat Stich) and a retarded boy (Todd Susman)--hit the road after they're accused of killing a policeman. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide

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1970  
 
The third season of Adam-12 begins as mobile police officers Pete Malloy (Martin Milner) and Jim Reed (Kent McCord) set their sights on breaking up a gang of loan sharks. Each time the cops think they have the gang dead to rights, they are stymied by intimidated witnesses. Finally, one teenager (played by Tim Rooney, son of film star Mickey Rooney) agrees to provide evidence against the criminals--only to be promptly kidnapped. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1967  
 
In this drama set during the real life riots of the mid-1960s, an LA police sergeant attempts to service the Strip businessmen who object to the hippie youths that hang out, by setting a curfew. Unfortunately, the cop also believes that the kids have a right to be there, until he discovers that his estranged daughter, whom his drunken ex-wife took away from him, has come back to LA and has joined the counter-culture crowd. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Aldo RayMimsy Farmer, (more)
1966  
 
Gidget (Sally Field) is up in arms (again!) when she finds out that her gang's favorite hamburger shack, the Shaggy Dog, is about to be torn down. Never mind that the shack is a seedy eyesore: Gidget organizes a protest against the cartel of businessmen who have the audacity to want to improve the property! Featured as "Socrates" is Lew Parker, still several months away from his more familiar role as Marlo Thomas' father on That Girl; also, that's Tim Rooney, son of Mickey Rooney, as Tommy. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1966  
 
In the first episode of a two-part story arc, Aunt Clara tries to magically summon an electrician to fix Samantha's lamp. As usual, however, Clara gets her wires crossed, and as a result the Stephenses play host to the spirit of Benjamin Franklin. Actor Fredd Wayne, then touring the country in his one-man show Benjamin Franklin, Citizen, is cast as old Ben. Written by James Henerson, "My Friend Ben" first aired on December 8, 1966. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Elizabeth MontgomeryDick York, (more)
1966  
 
With her dad elsewhere on business, Gidget (Sally Field) spends the weekend with her sister Anne (Betty Conner) and brother-in-law John (Peter Deuel). Reasoning that this set-up should not interfere with her social life, Gidget asks for and receives permission to go out of town with her friends. Little does our heroine know that her trail is being dogged every inch of the way by a secret chaperone. Watch for a young Barbara Hershey as Ellen. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1965  
 
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Based on the same H.G. Wells story as his later Food of the Gods, this silly but good-looking fantasy from Bert I. Gordon is among his more entertaining films. The young Ron Howard plays Genius, who develops a substance which causes animals to grow to monstrous size. After eight kids (led by Beau Bridges and Tisha Sterling) crash their car in the mud, they dance and get drunk, then steal some food containing the growth-gunk, causing them to attain huge physical size as well. It's up to the good teens of the town (including Tommy Kirk, Johnny Crawford from The Rifleman, and "Mickey" crooner Toni Basil) to set things right. That involves a gas-like antidote and a lot of subpar musical numbers from the likes of Freddy Cannon and the Beau Brummels. Joseph Turkel and Rance Howard are also in the cast, and a jokey ending features a number of midgets including Felix Silla, best known as Cousin Itt on TV's The Addams Family. The first in a projected 13-picture production deal with Joseph E. Levine, Gordon followed this with the William Castle-inspired Picture Mommy Dead. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Tommy KirkJohnny Crawford, (more)
1962  
 
Mickey Shaughnessy guest stars as Mr. Muldoon, a self-proclaimed (and somewhat oversized) Irish leprechaun. Hoping to convince a skeptical Bart Maverick (Jack Kelly) of his magical powers, Muldoon offers to grant Bart five wishes, the first one being for money. Unfortunately, the cash that Muldoon hands over to our hero is exactly the same amount that was recently lifted in a payroll robbery. Originally slated to air on January 14, 1962, this episode was rescheduled to February 11 before its ultimate network debut on April 15. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1961  
 
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David Janssen is hardly perfect casting for the role of 1920s gambling king Arnold Rothstein (Rod Steiger or Gene Barry may have been better choices), but the sure-handed direction of Joseph Newman smooths over all the rough spots in this fanciful biopic. Set up in the gambling business by crooked politico Jack Carson, Rothstein cheats his partner Mickey Shaughnessy, cheats on his lovely wife Dianne Foster, and does his best to discredit his bitterest enemy, on-the-take police detective Dan O'Herlihy. When O'Herlihy engineers the death of Rothstein's pal Mickey Rooney, Rothstein pulls strings in the New York judicial system, assuring the conviction and execution of the rogue cop. As quickly as he rises to the top of the dung-heap, Rothstein falls with equal rapidity, and ends up riddled with mob bullets. Curiously, King of the Roaring Twenties bypasses Rothstein's involvement in the "Black Sox" baseball scandal of 1919, perhaps because too many participants in that debacle were still alive in 1960 (this incident would later be covered in toto in the 1988 film Eight Men Out, which co-starred Michael Lerner as Rothstein). While King of the Roaring Twenties ignores the facts, for the most part the film is to be treasured if for no other reason than the fact that director Newman managed to draw uncharacteristically subtle performances from Mickey Rooney and Jack Carson. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
David JanssenDianne Foster, (more)

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