'Baby Face' is featured as a movie character in the following productions:
Kill to Live (2013)
Actors:
Shane Schoeppner (miscellaneous crew),
Marco Khan (producer),
Douglas Olsson (actor),
Varant Carletti (producer),
Varant Carletti (actor),
Jessica Mayorga (actress),
Arshag Carletti (writer),
Arshag Carletti (producer),
Miles Chumley (actor),
Stephanie Waters (miscellaneous crew),
Van Dickranian (producer),
Van Dickranian (writer),
Van Dickranian (director),
Arsenius LaFontaine (actor),
Arsenius LaFontaine (producer),
Genres:
Action,
Crime,
Short,
One Horse Town (2012)
Actors:
Matt Snead (writer),
Matt Snead (editor),
Matt Snead (director),
Matt Snead (producer),
Edward C. Gillow (actor),
Darren Kendrick (actor),
Caitlin Rose Williams (actress),
Madeline Blue (actress),
Dane Bowman (actor),
Gabrielle Salinger (actress),
Armando DuBon Jr. (actor),
Randy Wade Kelley (actor),
Francis Skinner (actor),
Angela Loewendorf (actress),
Genres:
Comedy,
Short,
The Interrogator (2008)
Actors:
Richard Ramsey (editor),
John Ramsey (actor),
Richard Ramsey (actor),
John Ramsey (producer),
John Ramsey (writer),
Richard Ramsey (director),
Richard Bowling (composer),
Seth Ramsey (actor),
Anna Ramsey (actress),
Stephen Hebert (actor),
Bob Arnold (writer),
Genres:
Comedy,
Short,
House of D (2004)
Actors:
David Duchovny (writer),
David Duchovny (director),
Bob Yari (producer),
Robin Williams (actor),
Andrée Damant (actress),
Willie Garson (actor),
Alice Drummond (actress),
Etienne Draber (actor),
Orlando Jones (actor),
David Duchovny (actor),
Frank Langella (actor),
Adam LeFevre (actor),
Mark Margolis (actor),
Wendy Cutler (miscellaneous crew),
Cassandra Barbour (miscellaneous crew),
Plot: On their son Odell's 13the birthday, graphic artist Tom Warszaw finally confesses to his wife why he fled Greenwich Village, NYC at that age to Paris. As a schoolboy, naturally sensitive, considerate Tommy was best buddy with 'adult' half-wit Pappass, father Duncan's Catholic school's assistant janitor. Smothered by his dependent mother, a dumb orderly, Tommy got 'parental advice' from a women's prison inmate. Together with Pappas, he saves up tips from their butchery delivery rounds. One night, Pappas steals the bike they were saving for. Tommy tries to take the blame, but ends up expelled as if the instigator. Even more tragic consequences follow.
Keywords: 1970s, adolescence, african-american, airport, animated-sequence, artist, balcony, baseball, basketball, bathroom
Genres:
Comedy,
Drama,
Taglines: See the world a little differently. You never know who your angel's gonna be.
Quotes:
Tommy Warshaw: Solid according to you, lady, girls like fools and small balls. So I'm pretty much covered.
Pappass: If you make a wish and don't tell nobody, it could come true.
Reverend Duncan: [while dancing with a student at a school dance] You better leave room for Jesusthere, Miss Johnson.
Reverend Duncan: Because of some bureaucratic shenanigans and some nonsense in the U.S. constitution called the seperation of church and state, this class will no longer be called Bible Study. It will be called Ethics. Well, that's my civic duty done. Now open you bibles, boys, to Genesis 19:4.
Pappass: I'm not retarded anymore.::Tom Warshaw: Oh really?::Pappass: Really.::Tom Warshaw: When did that happen?::Pappass: 1984. Sometime in the spring. I went from retard to mentally handicapped. And then in 1987-88, I went from handicapped to challenged. I changed again. I'm probably changing right now. Who knows what I'll be next?
Melissa: Your outfit is... um...::Tommy Warshaw: Orange?::Melissa: Really orange.
Mr. Pappass: You know why your mother died, son? She killed herself because she had a retarded son, isn't that right?::Tommy Warshaw: She got hit by a car.::Mr. Pappass: She walked in front of a car because she had a retarded son.::Tommy Warshaw: She was drunk.::Mr. Pappass: She was drunk because her son's retarded.::Tommy Warshaw: She was drunk because she was married to you, you loser.
Pappass: Do you ever miss your dad?::Tommy Warshaw: All the time.::Pappass: Want mine?::Tommy Warshaw: No thanks.
Tom Warshaw: My story starts where ever man's story starts: with mom.
Tommy Warshaw: If I want to exercise my god given freedom to experience people getting cut up by chainsaws and hung on meat hooks, I think I have the constitutional right to do so, don't you?
Racing with the Moon (1984)
Actors:
Carol Kane (actress),
Patricia Norris (costume designer),
Max Showalter (actor),
John Karlen (actor),
Michael Madsen (actor),
Dave Grusin (composer),
Rutanya Alda (actress),
Jan Rabson (actor),
Nicolas Cage (actor),
Crispin Glover (actor),
Sean Penn (actor),
Nicolas Cage (actor),
Dana Carvey (actor),
Dan Curry (miscellaneous crew),
Richard Benjamin (director),
Plot: Henry and Nicky are small town pals from blue collar families with only a short time before they ship off to World War II. Henry begins romancing new-to-town Caddie Winger, believing her to be wealthy. Mischievious and irresponsible, Nicky gets into trouble which forces the other two to become involved, testing their relationship, as well as the friendship between the boys.
Keywords: 1940s, abortion, bar, billiard-game, bowling, boyfriend-girlfriend-relationship, cemetery, christmas-eve, cigarette-smoking, female-nudity
Genres:
Comedy,
Drama,
Romance,
Taglines: It was 1943...There was so little time left to learn about life! IT'S 1943 and they're trying to fit it all in before they have to leave it all behind [Australia Theatrical] It was 1943. And young men were counting the days before they went off to war.
Quotes:
Henry 'Hopper' Nash/Lou: Tyrone Power never said fuck 'em.
Bugsy Malone (1976)
Actors:
Jodie Foster (actress),
Scott Baio (actor),
Alan Parker (writer),
Alan Parker (director),
David Puttnam (producer),
Gerry Hambling (editor),
Julie K. Smith (actress),
Dexter Fletcher (actor),
Paul Williams (composer),
Phil Daniels (actor),
Robert Stigwood (producer),
Bonnie Langford (actress),
Kay Fenton (miscellaneous crew),
Alan Marshall (producer),
Monica Howe (costume designer),
Plot: A gangster movie where all the gangsters are played by children. Instead of real bullets they use "splurge guns" that cover the victim in cream. The story tells of the rise of "Bugsy Malone" and the battle for power between "Fat Sam" and "Dandy Dan".
Keywords: 1930s, all-child-cast, audition, backstage, barber-shop, barbershop, bootlegging, boxing, boxing-gym, car-accident
Genres:
Comedy,
Crime,
Family,
Musical,
Taglines: Every year brings a great movie. Every decade a great movie musical!
Quotes:
Tallulah: I like my men at my feet.
Dandy Dan: Okay fellas, this is our moment. Keep a cool head and keep those fingers pumpin', 'cause remember, it's history you'll be writin'.
Bugsy Malone: Have you eaten?::Blousey Brown: Ever since I was a kid.::Bugsy Malone: Then how come you're so skinny, wisey?::Blousey Brown: Because I watch my weight.::Bugsy Malone: Yeah, I do that when I'm broke too.
Bronx Charlie: Your name Robinson?::Roxy Robinson: [nods nervously]::Shoulders: Roxy Robinson?::Roxy Robinson: [nods nervously again]::Benny Lee: You work for Fat Sam?::Roxy Robinson: [nods once final time before being splurged to death]
[first lines]::Fat Sam: Someone once said, "If it was raining brains, Roxy Robinson wouldn't even get wet." Roxy had spent his whole life making two and two into five, but he could smell trouble like other people could smell gas. But believe you's me, he should've never taken that blind alley by the side of Parido's Bakery. Whatever game it was everybody was playing, sure as eggs is eggs, Roxy the Weasel had been scrambled.
Fat Sam: [as the speakeasy is closing down for the night and everyone is leaving] Tallulah! How much longer you want us to wait?::Tallulah: [sweetly yet slightly sarcastically] Coming honey, you don't want me to look a mess, do you sweetheart?::Fat Sam: Snap it up, will ya?::Tallulah: Put your flaps down tiger or else you'll take off.::Fat Sam: [annoyed] You spend more time prettying yourself up then there is time in the day!::Tallulah: [pointedly] Listen honey, if I didn't look this good, you wouldn't give me the time of day.::Fat Sam: [rejectedly] I'll see you in the car!
Fat Sam: [becoming aggravated as Knuckles is cracking his knuckles repeatedly] Don't do that, Knuckles!::Knuckles: It's how I got my name, boss.::Fat Sam: Well knock it off or else change your name!
Reporter 1: Have you located the splurge gun yet, sir?::O'Dreary: I'm afraid I can't answer that.::Reporter 1: You're not at liberty to say?::O'Dreary: [annoyed] No, I don't know the answer.::Reporter 2: Do you know where the guns are coming from, Lieutenant?::O'Dreary: Eh, I'm not at liberty to say. You'll have to ask Captain Smolsky that question.
Bugsy Malone: [noting the solemn look on Matt the Barman's face] You know what, you look like you put your face on backwards this morning.::Matt The Barman: You've got too much mouth, mack.::Bugsy Malone: So, tell my dentist.
Bugsy Malone: Me and Fat Sam, we're like this. [crosses fingers]::Blousey Brown: You mean you're real good friends?::Bugsy Malone: [shakes head] Nah, it's just that every time I see him, I cross my fingers, and hope he won't hit me.
New York chiama Superdrago (1966)
Actors:
Artemio Antonini (actor),
Pinkas Braun (actor),
Marco Guglielmi (actor),
Jess Hahn (actor),
Jacques Herlin (actor),
Carlo Hinterman (actor),
Angelo Infanti (actor),
Nello Pazzafini (actor),
Benito Stefanelli (actor),
Margaret Lee (actress),
Marisa Mell (actress),
Giorgio Ferroni (writer),
Giorgio Ferroni (director),
Antonietta Zita (editor),
Ray Danton (actor),
Plot: When an old colleague is killed, Secret Agent Super-Dragon comes out of retirement to investigate a case of poisoned chewing gum that leads inexplicably to an international crime syndicate planning to take over the world with psychotropic drugs smuggled in phony Ming vases.
Keywords: amsterdam-netherlands, auction, chewing-gum, coffin, germany, holland, james-bond-spoof, mask, presumed-dead, secret-agent
Genres:
Mystery,
Thriller,
Taglines: Blondes, brunettes, redheads, murderers, smugglers, or master criminals -- his fire could take them all. Beautiful Women! Silver-Masked Men! Deadly Windmills! Karate Killings! Lethal Oriental Vases!
Duell vor Sonnenuntergang (1965)
Actors:
Walter Barnes (actor),
Demeter Bitenc (actor),
Klaus Dahlen (actor),
Slobodan Dimitrijevic (actor),
Kurt Heintel (actor),
Jan Hendriks (actor),
Terence Hill (actor),
Wolfgang Kieling (actor),
Carl Lange (actor),
Giacomo Rossi-Stuart (actor),
Peter van Eyck (actor),
Wolfgang Wehrum (editor),
Todd Martin (actor),
Leopold Lahola (writer),
Leopold Lahola (director),
Genres:
Western,
The Rack (1956)
Actors:
Len Lesser (actor),
Paul Newlan (actor),
Frank Mills (actor),
James Best (actor),
Trevor Bardette (actor),
Ralph Montgomery (actor),
Lee Marvin (actor),
Dean Jones (actor),
Wendell Corey (actor),
James Anderson (actor),
Michael Dugan (actor),
Robert Blake (actor),
Charles Evans (actor),
Robert Burton (actor),
Paul Newman (actor),
Plot: Captain Edward Hall returns to the USA after two years in a prison camp in the Korean war. In the camp he was brainwashed and helped the Chinese convince the other prisoners that they were fighting an unjust war. When he comes back he is charged for collaboration with the enemy. Where does loyalty end in a prison camp, when the camp is a living hell?
Keywords: 16mm-film, airport, army-colonel, based-on-tv-movie, brainwashing, brandy, breaking-point, brother-brother-relationship, captain, collaborator
Genres:
Drama,
War,
Taglines: All the drama, the suspense, the power of "The Caine Mutiny"! Paul Newman, a wonderful new star! NOTHING LIKE IT SINCE "THE CAINE MUTINY"! (original print ad - all caps)
Quotes:
Capt. Edward W. Hall Jr.: Do you know what's the matter with me?::Aggie Hall: No.::Capt. Edward W. Hall Jr.: My mother wasn't in the army, so I'm a half-breed.::Aggie Hall: I don't know you very well yet. Is that your way of being bitter or laughing at yourself, or...?::Capt. Edward W. Hall Jr.: Remember those things that were half horse and half man? Well, that's me... half my father [Looking at the sagging miniature American flag on the 'welcome home' cake]... half my father's disappointment and half my mother's hope.::Aggie Hall: He's not disappointed in you.::Capt. Edward W. Hall Jr.: You know what I did this afternoon? After I left the post, I went out to my mother's grave and stood there for a long time, and I said, 'Mom, I'm sorry. I turned out human like you wanted me, but I picked the wrong time. So... tha's the change you see. Isn't that a laugh?
Lt. Col. Frank Wasnick: [Addressing the jury, presenting the closing arguments for Capt. Hall's defense] Gentlemen, I have here a document which is not very pleasant to read. It's a communiqué written by the Communists describing shortcomings they observed among certain American prisoners of war.::Lt. Col. Frank Wasnick: [Quoting from the document] "One: Many of the prisoners reveal weak loyalties to their families, their communities, and their army. Two: When left alone, they tend to feel deserted, and they underestimate their ability to survive, because they underestimate themselves."::Lt. Col. Frank Wasnick: Now, the report goes on to say that even some of our university graduates have a very dim idea of American history and of the strengths and weaknesses of American democracy and that they are virtually ignorant of Communism, because we have never taken the trouble to inform them of its nature. The Communist program of indoctrination was based on this appraisal - and succeeded, because in many cases, the appraisal was true... And now we must judge Capt. Hall. Gentlemen, if there is guilt, where does it lie? In that small number who defected under pressure, as Capt. Hall did? Or do we not share it? At least those of us who created *part* of a generation which may collapse, because we have left it uninspired, uninformed, and - as in the case of Capt. Hall - unprepared to go the limit, because he had not been given the warmth to support him along the way... And now we must judge Capt. Hall. And let us make absolutely certain, that we have had no part in his collapse. This man has proven himself in the two wars of his youth, who has been exposed to conditions of captivity, against which we have never had to test ourselves.
Maj. Sam Moulton: [Addressing the jury, presenting the closing arguments for the prosecution] Gentlemen, in answer to Col Wasnick's moving plea, I should like to say that, while in some instances society may seem to be responsible for an individual criminal and his crime, this does not release society of the further responsibility of bringing the criminal to justice. For to collaborate with the enemy in time of war is a crime. It does to a country exactly what murder does to an individual. The defense has only one legal argument - an argument which attracts both the public and the press - the "breaking point." A point which most certainly exists. But gentlemen, in this case, the deeds are clear. The duress has been described. And by the accused's own admission, no breaking point was reached. Captain Hall, an officer responsible for command, collaborated with the enemy. He attempted to persuade his country's troops to surrender in the field. He was willing to inform on fellow prisoners. He tried to influence others to collaborate with him. He set aside the Army's simple rule for "name, rank, and serial number" - and in so doing, opened himself to the enemy. If you find Capt. Hall innocent of collaboration, then you find all those other Americans who refused to collaborate guilty of stupidity. You must find on the evidence that Capt. Hall committed the offenses as charged.
[last lines]::Capt. Edward W. Hall Jr.: [addressing the court martial one last time after the verdict has been read] This isn't going to be an extenuation, but I want to say it anyway. Capt. Miller came to my hotel this morning, just about dawn. He's the witness who was tortured. He said he'd read the papers and he'd seen my testimony there and he wanted to talk. So we sat down and we started talking about the men we knew who were prisoners over there... He said he thought that every man has a moment in his life when he has to choose. If he chooses right, then it's a moment of magnificence. If he chooses wrong, then it's a moment of regret that will stay with him for the rest of his life. I wish that every soldier... I wish that everybody could feel the way I feel now. Because if they did, they'd know what it is like to be a man who sold himself short... and who lost his moment of magnificence. I pray to God that they find theirs.
Captain Edward W. Hall Jr.: Pete never knew what got him.::Capt. Edward W. Hall Jr.: [Ironically] Lucky Pete!
Maj. Sam Moulton: What did you do?::Capt. John R. Miller: [Refering to his Chinese captors] Oh, I was mad. I called them things they didn't need an interpretor for.
Captain Edward W. Hall Jr.: [Coming into Ed's darkened bedroom in a very agitated state] Ed! Ed!::Capt. Edward W. Hall Jr.: [Drowsily] What time is it?::Captain Edward W. Hall Jr.: [Angrily] Get up!::Capt. Edward W. Hall Jr.: [Waking up] What's the matter?::Captain Edward W. Hall Jr.: [Angrily] Get up!::Captain Edward W. Hall Jr.: [Ed gets up] All right... I want to ask you a question. I want a simple, direct yes or no answer. Did you collaborate with the enemy?::Captain Edward W. Hall Jr.: [Ed appears stunned by the question] Did you collaborate with the enemy?::Capt. Edward W. Hall Jr.: [Deliberately] Yes, I did.::Captain Edward W. Hall Jr.: [Screaming emotionally] Why didn't yuh die? Why didn'y yuh die like your brother did? It would have been much better that way!::Capt. Edward W. Hall Jr.: [Hall, Sr. walks out and a distraught Hall Jr. limps hurriedly after him] Dad! Dad!::Capt. Edward W. Hall Jr.: [Stopping before the bottom of the stairs] I would have liked it better too... a nice, clean, acceptable death with dignity. Does that make sense to you?::Captain Edward W. Hall Jr.: Your excuses for treason must have been tremendous to make you crawl on your belly and break faith with your country and me!::Capt. Edward W. Hall Jr.: [Angrily shouting] With you? What about me? You know wht I got for that crawl on my belly? You know what I got, Dad? Well, I'll tell you. I sold my soul for a blanket that smells of fish and urine and three lousy hours of uninterrupted sleep, and you know what else, Colonel? At the time I thought I was getting one hell of a bargain!
Lt. Col. Frank Wasnick: Well, what are we going to do about you? We've got about two weeks to prepare.::Capt. Edward W. Hall Jr.: [Shrugging] I don't know.::Lt. Col. Frank Wasnick: [laughs] That's an interesting attitude.::Capt. Edward W. Hall Jr.: Oh, look, Colonel, uh, what axe are you grinding, or do you just have a penchant for lost causes?::Lt. Col. Frank Wasnick: I don't admire self-pity. I don't think it's constructive.::Capt. Edward W. Hall Jr.: Haven't you heard? I'm guilty.
Capt. John R. Miller: [on the witness stand] I remember Pak told them not to put out their cigarette butts on the floor because they were trying to keep the prison clean, so they put them out on me,::Maj. Sam Moulton: On your naked body.::Capt. John R. Miller: Yeah.::Maj. Sam Moulton: How many?::Capt. John R. Miller: They smoked a lot.