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- In this comedy-satire on conformity, Dick Van Dyke plays a Manhattan bank teller who grows a beard when he develops a rash from a bee sting. He is promptly fired from his job while his co-workers stand behind him. Angie Dickinson plays his wife. Written and directed by Garson Kanin ("Born Yesterday").
- An engineer, a psychologist and several other disparate types take part in an experiment to see if people can live for extended periods of time in a city built under the ocean.
- 1954–19971hUnrated5.0 (11)TV EpisodeThe professor's work impresses President Lincoln who founds the Aeronautic Corps, the country's first air force.
- An executive, unhappy with his daughter's choice for a future husband, accepts a transfer to his firm's Stockholm branch and takes her along, only to discover that Sweden is far more sexually liberal than the United States.
- When his son is abused, Joe Reynolds threatens to kill the man responsible. When that man is killed, Joe finds himself facing the electric chair.
- 1954–19971hUnrated5.4 (10)TV EpisodeEventually, the professor and his crew are captured by the Confederates and try to get away by stealing hydrogen from a Southern gas factory to fill their balloon.
- Based on the best-selling novel by Irving Wallace that was inspired by the Kinsey Report on the sexual mores of suburban women, the film follows the personal (read sexual) lives of four women (Claire Bloom, Jane Fonda, Shelley Winters and Glynis Johns) with four separate sexual hangups, ranging from frigidity to nymphomania. Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. plays a researcher who becomes entangled with Fonda, the young woman suffering from emotional frigidity.
- A young man helps a pretty girl search for her stolen horse.
- Tammy, a spunky young woman, has a series of adventures, including becoming a secretary, losing her house, regaining her house, and falling in love.
- Perry Ashwell is a self-satisfied child psychologist who takes his colleagues and wife somewhat for granted. So confident is he of his position that he introduces rich attractive painter Octavio Quaglini to his office and home. Quaglini is no respecter of convention, and April Ashwell is extremely attractive.
- Ohio widower Ben Pride moves to Kansas with his parents and children shortly after the Civil War. When they arrive in Lawrence they are harassed by Confederate marauders.
- Tommy Jones, a well-built plumber, is invited to join a troupe of professional wrestlers, but is surprised to learn that the sport of exhibition wrestling is not on the up-and-up.
- A Quaker colony tries to save the giant sequoias from a timber baron.
- Three women in three different situations report for induction at the Great Lakes Naval Training Station and end up roommates. What follows is a frothy and fun musical.
- During the 1700s, in the Great Lakes region the British troops have driven the French out and with help from the mercenary Hessian troops the British plan to annihilate the native tribes of the Ottawas.
- Brady Sutton returns from three years in prison and tries to go straight. Once a member of the Butch Cassidy gang, he is still suspected of being cahoots with them. After Cassidy and his men rob the bank, he is blamed. Escaping from the townspeople, he once again joins up with Cassidy to wait for a chance to help bring him in.
- Smith (James Dunn), a Brooklyn police detective, arrives on a Caribbean island chasing a murderer ... and wades his way through quicksand, swamps, alligators, corpses, clues, unusual suspects and a frisky femme fatale before nabbing the killer.
- Professor Dooley takes home a duck from his research laboratory as a pet for his son, but soon finds out that it lays golden eggs.
- A teenage girl who has a crush on an older, more sophisticated man tells all her friends that the man is her boyfriend. Soon that story starts making its way around the town.
- Lawmen infiltrate bandit gang to catch mining crooks.
- During the early days of the Korean War, U.S. Army colonel Steve Janowski is one of the military advisers training the South Korean army and he's tasked with evacuating American civilians from the war zone.
- From her hospital bed a woman recounts her life as a "plain Jane" while awaiting plastic surgeries for the injuries she has sustained in an automobile accident.
- 1968–197430mTV-PG5.8 (47)TV EpisodeLucy is still trying as hard as she can to get Craig into the Air Force Academy, and each result ends hilariously. This week she decides to camp out and gets the family captured as part of some war games.
- The Norths go to a training camp so Jerry can interview the up-and-coming prizefighter, Vince McKay, for a future book project. Unfortunately, the boxer collapses in the ring and dies. It turns out that McKay was hard to get along with and made promises to women that he didn't intend to keep. Many people had it in for McKay, but which one fed him the rat poison?
- Good luck with horses and women pushes Sam Bass toward outlawry.
- Dexter Riley and his friends accidently discover a new chemical mixed with a cereal seems to give anyone temporary superhuman strength
- A young cavalry doctor, against orders, treats very sick Indians who are forced to stay on unhealthy land, which could lead to a war.
- Faced with heavy opposition from local ranchers, a white Indian woman desperately seeks help for her tribe struggling to survive on a reservation.
- Mobster Vic Spalato's girlfriend Claire is in hiding in Mexico and she's willing to testify for a US Senate investigation committee, if she can make it back to the US alive.
- During the Korean War, an American unit of combat engineers must work with Greek troops in order to perform a reconnaissance mission behind Communist lines.
- In 1940, Colonel Will Seaborn Effingham (Charles Coburn), a retired Army officer, returns to his home town of Fredericksville, Georgia, and is disturbed at the lack of civic pride. He writes a letter to the editor in the local newspaper and attacks those who would do away with with traditions, especially those moving to tear down the old city hall and those who wish to rename Confederate Square after a local politician.
- After his brother's mysterious murder, Webb Dunham takes over his ranch but runs into conflict with strongman rancher Matt Quigg who covets all local lands in a region infested with Yaqui Mexican bandits.
- 1954–19971hUnrated5.9 (14)TV EpisodeDuring the Civil War, Prof. Thaddeus Lowe uses a balloon to spy for the Union forces and hires a young telegrapher to join him and send messages to the ground.
- 1968–197430mTV-PG5.9 (50)TV EpisodeUncle Harry is hired to drive a motor home from Los Angeles to San Francisco, and foolishly agrees to take Lucy and the kids along for the ride. Lucy takes over driving so Harry can take a nap, and decides to take a detour, ending up visiting the United States Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, CO which Craig wants to apply to after high school. Chaos ensues.
- "Operation Redhead" is a result of Lucy helping Harry, who is photographing the splash down as part of the naval reserve. Space nut Lucy must go through decontamination with Astronauts when she makes physical contact with them after a landing.
- Rather than allow his partner to marry the woman he loves, a man fakes his own murder and frames his partner for the supposed crime. When the partner is released from prison ten years later, he plots revenge.
- Pilot Dan Crowley is grounded by his doctor for his intense behavior. A delusional man who's constantly trying to prove himself, he believes the doctor's daughter should be his, even though she is happily engaged to his boss. When the couple and the doctor go for a hunting trip in the woods, Dan follows and, at night, begins firing on their cabin using a rifle with an infrared scope.
- A group of outlaws posing as Southern sympathizers and led secretly by freight-line owner Jim Maroon are raiding stagecoaches, and this is a threat to the Union communications. Grif Holbrook (Rod Cameron), a trouble-shooter for the Butterfield Stage Line, and Union man Barney Broderick (Wayne Morris) team up to try and put a stop to the activity, when they aren't fighting over the charms of Kate Crocker (Kay Buckley).
- Two undercover agents infiltrate a drug-smuggling ring in Mexico, but neither is aware of the other's identity.
- An undercover government agent battles insurrectionists whose want Southern California to secede and become a slave state.
- After WW2, ex-mobster war hero Joe Gray goes straight, to the dismay of his New York mob boss uncle who's afraid that his nephew will testify against his outfit before a Grand Jury.
- Rob McLaughlin decides to see the Goose Bar Ranch and Flicka with it, when his entire herd of horses disappears without a trace.
- A college professor accidentally comes across a formula that can reduce the size of anything.
- After completing his military service, Walter Gulick takes a job as a sparring partner at a gym, the owner of which sees potential in Walter as a professional fighter and takes him under his wing.
- Opportunistic con man Dan Kehoe ingratiates himself with the cantankerous mother of four outlaws and their beautiful widows in order to find their hidden gold.
- Eastern lawyer Sam Houston moves to Texas. At the request of President Jackson, he leads the Texan independence movement and wins the decisive battle against the Mexican army to gain Texas independence.
- Former World War II flying ace Matt Brennan takes a position as a test pilot for a commercial aircraft corporation and bumps into his old girlfriend, Jo Holloway, who now works as a receptionist for the company.
- In Pittsburgh, PA, an F.B.I. agent works to undermine the Communist party, but his brothers and his teenage son think he's a real Red.
- An American tank crew fights its way into Germany in World War II.
- In 1869, when the railroad mail service is threatened by frequent bandit attacks, the government hires Steve Davis to infiltrate a gang in order to destroy it from inside.
- A Texas cowboy is in-love with the fiancee of a despicable Confederate officer whose life he must save after the Civil War when the officer, fighting as a mercenary in Mexico, is captured by Mexican revolutionaries.
- Michael Howland, a stern hanging judge, is assigned to take over a chaotic prison. There, Michael imposes a strict regime of discipline on the inmates. He is similarly rigid and harsh with his own two children Tommie and Anne. However, his son eventually ends up incarcerated in his father's prison.
- A priest is about to see his twin brother, whom he hasn't seen in a long time--because his brother, a gang leader, has been serving a stretch in prison.
- 1954–19971hUnrated6.1 (12)TV EpisodeThose Calloways (1965) re-edited into a three-part television presentation. New England trapper Cam Calloway, a poor provider for his wife and son, dreams of the day he can build a sanctuary for migrating geese.
- Binghamton pressures a young new member of the 73 Crew into spying on McHale and the guys, to try to gather evidence of any shady activities. But The Captain's plan is foiled by another new member of the crew, who proves to be not only very intelligent, but an excellent Sailor, as well.
- After their service in the Civil War, four brothers go their separate ways, but later find themselves on opposite sides of a final showdown.
- Rear Adm. John M. Hoskins (Sterling Hayden) fights to stay on after losing a leg on an aircraft carrier in World War II.
- A bank district supervisor relates how he has been accused of a murder involving the bank's vice-president's brother and his mysterious wife, who has long police record, and to which he intends to plead guilty.
- The story of the Sand Creek massacre, an 1864 massacre of Cheyenne and Arapaho people by the U.S. Army.
- Charley hires a bumbling British waiter to work at his club.
- McHale and The Crew must scheme to stay out of trouble, when the lovely Daughter of a prominent French Businessman shows up on the 73, having stowed away, during an unauthorized stop at New Caledonia.
- Major Gaylord recounts an experience during World War II when he was obliged to fire on an American soldier in the dead of night on a Pacific island.
- Henrietta's know-it-all, sportsman cousin comes to visit. The Kerby's talk Topper into suggesting a camping trip during which they assist Topper in making cousin Willie look foolish.
- Moderate Jim Bowie leads rebellious Texicans--and Davy Crockett--in a last-ditch stand against his old friend, Santa Ana.
- On Chicago's South Side reporter Ed Adams finds the body of a dead girl. Her address book leads to a host of names of men frightened by her death but claiming never to have known her. Adams comes to know quite a lot, dangerously so.
- Unjustly accused of robbing the train he was riding home, Bill Doolin re-joins his old gang, participates in other robberies and becomes a wanted outlaw.
- During World War II, a female survivor of a German U-boat attack marries the skipper of the American merchant ship that saved her but is suspected of being a spy who sends secret data about Allied ship movements to the Germans.
- When elderly Bertha Polacheck offers to burn down arson investigator Oscar Hollingsworth's bar so that he can collect on the insurance, Hollingsworth informs the Los Angeles Fire Department's Capt. Taplinger. Taplinger has just called in Robby "Rollie" Rollins to work undercover on the investigation, when another bar burns down. At the scene, Taplinger discovers the source of the blaze: a rag soaked in phosphorozene, a chemical made combustible by air. The investigators soon learn that the producer of the chemical, Hanley Chemical Company of Albany of New York, sells only to the United States government. After further investigation, R. J. McManus, the President of Hanley, fires one of his employees, Ralph Wessman, for stealing samples of the chemical to send to his brother, pharmacist E. V. Wessman. Taplinger and another investigator, Berkeley, decide to use Hollingworth's bar as bait to trap Wessman and Bertha and convince Wessman's assistant to quit so that rookie investigator Russ Haines can take the job. Soon Wessman receives a bottle of phosphorozene, sent by Ralph before he was fired. He hides it in the back room, and then tells Russ that he is stepping out for a moment. Once in the street, Wessman notices Russ sneaking into the back room and rushes back to discover the bottle empty. He then mixes a drink for Russ, which knocks him out, and by the time Russ wakes up, Bertha's sons Sam and Tony have arrived. Russ informs them that their connection at Hanley has been fired, and Russ explains that if they want to continue using phosphorozene, they must go through his brother-in-law, Dutch. After Tony and Sam agree to do business with Russ, he takes them to Hollingworth's bar where he and Rollie, who is posing as Dutch, agree to burn down Hollingsworth's bar that evening. When Tony and Sam insist that Russ light the bar on fire while they hide nearby, the arson team ignites a hidden gas line to mimic flames. Convinced that Russ is for real, Tony and Sam reveal Bertha's plans to burn down another bar soon. In the next day's newspapers, however, Tony and Sam read that the bar's sprinkler system extinguished the flames. Later, Tony and Sam request a pint of phosphorozene from the pharmacy, so Russ asks the police department chemist to manufacture an inert substance with the look and smell of phosphorozene. That evening, at the Polacheck home, Bertha asks her pet canaries whether or not they should go through with the plan. When the birds chirp a warning only Bertha can understand, Wessman suggests they target San Carlos Textile Company instead of the bar. After he rushes to inform detectives of the changed plan, Russ accompanies the rest of the gang to the textile company. When the imitation phosphorozene fails to ignite the building, Wessman accuses Russ of being a detective and the gang attacks him. They tie him up, ignite the building and leave him trapped inside. Russ soon regains consciousness and kicks out the window, setting off the alarm. After Russ is rescued by firefighters, Bertha, Wessman and the rest of the gang are sent to prison. For his brave work, Russ is given a permanent assignment at the arson bureau.
- Angry that the new male child is not named after him, Maurice zaps Darrin into the mirror until the situation is corrected to his satisfaction. The child is finally named Adam.
- Mother Goose arrives courtesy of one of Esmeralda's goofs at the same time that Darrin's mother makes a surprised visit.
- While still in San Diego, the Wilsons receive a visit from their nephew, Ted, a young sailor. When Dennis and Mr. Wilson get stuck in back of a laundry truck returning to the Naval base, their attempt to escape leads to the confusion of Mr. Wilson's being mistaken for an expected demolitions expert.
- Ken is turned down by Mr. Mooney for a loan to open his dance studio. Lucy decides all he needs in a little publicity so she arranges for a bunch of truck drivers to sign up for lessons and wrangles some TV coverage.
- Binghamton is ordered to purchase one of Chief Urulu's islands, for the construction of a radar station. But, Urulu - Knowing that he's got The Navy 'over a barrel' - Inflates the price of his real estate to ridiculous levels. So, McHale and The Crew try to help The Captain out, with a scheme to de-value The Chief's land.
- Dodie has to have her tonsils taken out, and she tells her mother that she wants Steve to stay with her in the hospital overnight. Meanwhile, Robbie and Katie go on a vacation without the triplets.
- Lanyard flies into Beverly Hills from Reno and checks into the Beverly Hills Hotel. The clerk informs him he's already checked in...by his wife. Mrs. Michael Lanyard is waiting in his room with a story that they married in Reno and a license to prove it. Lanyard plays along for awhile as he tries to figure out who is playing the joke on him. The game stops being amusing when one of his friends is furious with him and Lanyard has no idea why.
- The abbreviated life of the 15th-century French heroine.
- Police seek a smuggler while doctors, unaware she's the same person, desperately comb unprotected New York for a smallpox carrier.
- A tomboy frontier lawyer finds an outlaw and his son hiding out from a false murder charge.
- Police lieutenant Sam Carson investigates a political murder after the victim is dumped at the door of police headquarters.
- A chronicle of the political career of US President Woodrow Wilson.
- Political corruption is vividly depicted as a ruthless WWI veteran takes almost complete control of a state with the help of a crooked lawyer. The film is enhanced by John Payne's persuasive performance as "The Boss."
- In the late 1800s, Miss Pilgrim, a young typist, becomes the first female employee at a Boston shipping office. Although the men object to her at first, she soon charms them all, especially the handsome young head of the company. Their romance gets sidetracked when she becomes involved in the women's suffrage movement.
- Gunfighter Brett Wade, diagnosed with tuberculosis, tries to get out of his former life while helping a young woman.
- A rueful wife (circa 1910) recalls 20 years of her husband's financial fumbles, as she keeps a boarding house to support the family.
- Story of how the Coast Guard trained to help win World War II.
- The Cartwrights get more than they bargained for when they welcome snobbish and overbearing Eastern cousin Clarissa.
- The French thief and con-artist first talks Binghamton out of a load of Navy supplies, then cons Parker into helping him get them to New Caledonia. McHale and the guys must then follow, rescue Parker, and recover the supplies.
- After a day at the racetrack, the Norths find the body of jockey Eddie Mears in their car trunk. It's an unexpected coincidence that Mears owned the same make and model car as the Norths and kept it in the same city parking garage. Eddie's wife Zelma who had asked him for a divorce just the night before seems the obvious suspect, but Pam questions the garage owner.
- The ongoing saga of the Martin family and their beloved collie, Lassie.
- Detective Philip Marlowe encounters a variety of characters while checking on why Leslie Murdock stole a rare doubloon from his mother.
- A burlesque comic, who resembles an international spy, is recruited by the government and sent to Tangier to retrieve a sensitive microfilm before it's captured by hostile foreign agents.
- In pre-Civil War New Orleans, Louisiana, roguish Irish gambler Stephen Fox (Sir Rex Harrison) buys his way into society, something he couldn't do in his homeland because he is illegitimate.
- John and Maria are successful onstage but have marriage problems offstage. When they go to married psychiatrists Dr. Matson and Dr. Nash, they grow together as the doctors begin to fight.
- A young man wants a career in the music, but his uncle insists he learn the banking business. Lucy arranges for an impromptu audition with a record producer in the bank's lobby.
- When Lucy takes Mr. Mooney to buy a fur for his wife, they're made an incredible offer by a shady character. The stole they buy from him turns out to be "hot", getting the two of them arrested for possession of stolen goods. Lucy and Mooney's schemes to get his money back from the crook get them arrested again... and again.
- Mr. Mooney leaves the office for two weeks of training in the Naval Reserve, but forgets to sign some important papers. Lucy tracks him to the submarine on which he will sail on maneuvers and, dressing as a sailor boards the ship in an attempt to get him to sign the document. The submarine leaves for sea before Lucy can leave the vessel and she's forced to pretend that she's just another sailor.
- Mr. Mooney flirts innocently with a waitress when attending an out-of-town bank convention. But then the sexy server comes to L.A. insisting that Mooney has proposed to her. To scare her off, Lucy pretends to be Mrs. Mooney and shows the homewrecker how horrible it is to be married to a such a monster.