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- British hunter Thorndike vacationing in Bavaria has Hitler in his gun sight. He is captured, beaten, left for dead, and escapes back to London where he is hounded by German agents and aided by a young woman.
- Two female friends and their very different lives. One witnesses the brutal rape of her sister while the other has to deal with a troubled relationship with an African-American soldier.
- The suspect in a 12-year-old murder case is finally caught and tried, but the witnesses are a bit hard to track down...
- The Soviet Union plans to replace David Foster, who is to take up a job with NATO intelligence, with a double.
- The Crime Doctor comes up against a criminal with a dual personality.
- A teenage schoolgirl is kidnapped and taken to a cabin in the woods. Her unknown captor plays a sadistic game of cat-and-mouse with her, stalking her with a crossbow.
- 2 films MAN HUNT & Stripper with a Shotgun. One cartoon and a set of trailers that can only belong to the retro world of 70's grindhouse cinema This is a walk back in time
- A young amateur detective follows clues to a diamond thief.
- It's World War II and German agent Otto Reuther has organized local gangs to sabotage the beef supply at the source. Marshal Lee Clark arrives to investigate and joins up with local cowboys Art Davis and Bill Boyd. Lee has a typewritten note from the gang and hopes it can be traced to its source.
- Schoolteacher Jane thinks that life in Coasterville is dull, so she tells her pupils about the days of the Daltons Boys and the James Gang. When bank robber Kingman escapes and hides out in the schoolhouse, Jane helps him escape from town. To Hank, her intended, this is the biggest story to hit the "Clarion" in a long time. Even old Sheriff Hoggins wants to join the G-Men looking for Kingman. Jane soon finds that there is no truth to the stories of the gallant misunderstood outlaws.
- Peter Parker continues to balance his high school life with being the amazing Spider-Man. His efforts to be with MJ are halted when he is faced against Kraven The Hunter.
- By a daring ruse and inside help, Pete Rennick, a noted criminal behind bars on federal charges, escapes from the prison, and all of the law-agencies and local police are out to catch him with roadblocks and every car searched, but the escapee gets away. Bill Hasford, a private detective investigating a racket, finds that it leads to the wanted man, and has the biggest adventure of his career.
- Outlines how and how not to conduct interviews. Shows where and how the three principal faults occur -failing to prepare for the interview, failing to draw the candidate out and get him talking freely and relevantly, and failing to come out with the direct, probing questions. John Cleese plays the three managerial types who exemplify these faults, Ethelred the Unready, Ivan the Terrible and William the Silent. Norman Bowler shows the proper interview techniques.
- An escaped rustler is captured single handed by Tempest following a fight in which the rustler falls over an embankment after she has lassoed him and hangs dangling in the air until the posse arrives and she climbs up the rope to safety.
- A universal story with Latino characters told in an unconventional way (like Forrest Gump and Amadeus) about a man who's trying to keep his hot-headed younger brother from carrying out revenge.
- Some cute forest animals get their revenge by fighting a war on some racist hunters.
- Early in Spider-Man's career a threat, unlike any other he has faced alerts his spider sense. Peter Parker's door will be opened to a whole other world. The hunt is on.
- The world was stunned in June 2010 when a 51 year old, unemployed construction worker from Greeley, Colorado turned up in the violent tribal area of Pakistan on a one man hunt for Osama Bin Laden. It turns out this was the 7th trip Gary Brooks Faulkner had made on his quest for Bin Laden. 'Binny Boy' is an intimate portrait of this American and his daring mission. Motivated by his faith in God, his patriotism, and seeking redemption from his decades long life as a thief in Northern Colorado, the documentary covers Faulkner's life, shows how close he actually got to Bin Laden, and raises troubling questions about the way Washington has conducted the 'War on Terror.'
- A documentary that takes an unflinching and humorous look at a year in the life of three very different women in search of husbands.
- Scary Full Feature Horror Movie! Jake and The paranormal team are on their way to help a family in need and to help them deal with some paranormal issues, But the Team never make it to their destination! It is abruptly interrupted by other worldly terrifying beings. Who will survive?
- While Madge King and her father are entertaining Hal Dawson, a mining promoter, at their San Remo Ranch, one of the ranch cowpunchers, "Maverick" Charley, surprises King by requesting a loan of a hundred dollars. King refuses to give him the money when "Maverick" will not tell him the cause of the sudden necessity. "Old Ben" Carter, a prospector who has "struck it rich," calls at the ranch. When he is introduced to Dawson, he refuses to shake hands. Carter requests King to keen the gold he has just acquired until he returns from town, as he realizes his weakness for poker and fears he will lose his newly-gained fortune. King consents. From outside "Maverick" watches King put the money in the safe, and learns the combination. Later King finds that his safe has been robbed. The alarm is sounded, and the man hunt begins. "Maverick" makes for Dave Bender's place, a rendezvous in the hills. There he obtains food, and asks to be left alone in a room while he writes a letter. When Bender later returns to the room he finds "Maverick" with two saddle bags, one containing the money box and the other a small bag and the letter. "Maverick" gives the latter bag to one of the men at Bender's and pays him to deliver it to Mr. King at San Remo Ranch. News of the reward for "Maverick's" capture reaches Bender's, but "Maverick" makes a getaway. He is captured, however, the money box is taken from him and given to Carter, who, upon opening it finds, it filled with sandwiches. An explanation is offered as King rides up with the stolen money and a letter from "Maverick" which had been delivered to him. In the letter "Maverick" writes that "he is returning the money which Dawson made him steal." "Old Ben" Carter's refusal to shake hands with Dawson when he was introduced is here explained when it turns out that Carter knew Dawson in a mining town and was the cause of Dawson being driven from the town when caught cheating at cards. The reason of Dawson's visit to San Remo Ranch was to interest King in a fake mining deal, but when Carter showed up and recognized him he was afraid to go through. When he heard of "Maverick's" need for money, he saw an opportunity for revenge on Carter. He persuaded "Maverick" to steal Carter's money, promising to split with him. When King asks "Maverick" what was his real motive in taking the money and then returning it, "Maverick" shows him a Personal clipping from a newspaper, which reads: "Charley Mason. One more in family now. Destitute. All forgiven if you will only return home. Jane." King realizes why "Maverick" wanted to borrow a hundred dollars from him. As it turns out that "Maverick," instead of stealing the money, has saved it from Dawson. King makes him a present of enough to bring him to his home and family, while Dawson is placed in the custody of the sheriff.
- When a group of influencers meet up for a game of man hunt in Central Park and the game is taken over by a guest player.
- The bloopers for the fan film Spider-Man: The Hunt.
- This new tale of suspense continues following Peter Heading, the cop from "The Kidnapping" who swore to take down The Hit Man. In the final of three films by writer/director Ryan Konig, it has been three months since Officer Peter Heading watched The Hit Man drive away after escaping capture. The Hit Man, played now for the third time by Andrew Lembeck-Edens, has been staying off the grid with the hope that Officer Heading might give up the man-hunt. Unfortunately for The Hit Man, Heading is stubborn, and will go to any lengths to track him down. Still, as much as The Hit Man wants to stop hiding, he hasn't quite shaken the rush of facing off against Heading, one of the few adversaries who's given him a run for his money. Knowing he won the first round, The Hit Man stalks Heading in a sick hope that one day Heading WILL find him, and they can go for round two. But as Heading and The Hit Man trade blows once again, their lives may not be the only ones at risk.
- Pursued by the sheriff's posse, the outlaw seeks refuge at the home of a young ranchman. The Ranchman's wife conceals him from his pursuers, and when they are gone she makes him promise to lead an honest life. A year later we see him leading an exemplary life and is a member of the rangers' organization. The woman's life at the ranch becomes more and more lonely as her husband's duties takes him away for weeks at a time and she hungers for romance. A stranger comes to her home and in her troubled state of mind it is easy for him to convince her that she is abused and neglected and that her husband no longer loves her. He persuades her to elope and they make hurried - preparation for departure. In the meantime the ranger receives a warrant for the arrest of an outlaw and the trail leads to the woman's home. He finds his man in the person of the woman's tempter, and places him under arrest. He recalls to the woman what part she played in his own reformation, and when the husband returns he forgives his frivolous wife and a close understanding is reached after years of misunderstanding.
- The Twelfth Regiment is to leave for the front in the morning at seven, and Captain Steadwell, who has been missing for three days, has not yet appeared. Unless he is found and returned to the head of his company by 7AM, disgrace will fall on him and his fiancée Ellen Ferguson. Ellen is also loved by the new assistant secretary of war, Richard Ralston, who does not know of her engagement, Worried by Steadwell's continued absence, Ellen appeals to Dick to find him. Dick sets out to locate him, and the trail leads to Gladys, an actress whose photo was on Steadwell's table. Gladys agrees to assist in the search. They go into a swell restaurant, and Ellen, seeing them, thinks Dick is not searching for Steadwell. In the restaurant they meet Sullivan, the last man seen with Steadwell, but he refuses to give any information. A fight follows in which Dick delivers a crushing blow to the other's chin and knocks him unconscious. They pack Sullivan into a cab, where they try to revive him, but thinking he has killed him, Dick asks Gladys to telegraph the President his resignation, but she refuses and the search continues. At Sullivan's home they finally revive him and force him to tell that Steadwell is in the room above. As they go up, Sullivan signals to his friends above by tapping on the wall. When they get up, they are shot at from the inside, and Dick falls as if wounded. When the two gamblers in the room come over, he jumps up, and covering them with his gun, locks them in a closet. Inside the room they find Steadwell, stupefied from drink. They finally get him out and he joins his regiment in time for the departure. Steadwell on meeting Ellen agrees to release her from their engagement, and Ellen, learning that Dick was responsible for Steadwell's return, allows him to see that the lovelight in her eyes is for him alone.
- TV SeriesUnder development
- Betty Hammond, who has just inherited a great deal of money from her father, decides to share her riches with the husband of her choice, but her search produces only fortune hunters. Fondly remembering her childhood sweetheart, James Ogden, Betty travels to California, where Jim has become the superintendent of her mining properties. Betty tries to conceal her identity while working as Jim's stenographer, but he discovers who she is and discharges her. Next, she proposes to him outright, but when she admits that she does not yet love him, he refuses. Consequently, the frustrated heiress hires several men to abduct Jim and Parson Brown to a lonely cabin, but this, too, proves fruitless until lumberman Bigfoot Ben kidnaps Betty. Jim rescues her, and although he learns that she hired Ben to play the villain, he admits that he loves her and proposes.
- A boy must hunt an ancient beast in order to become a man.
- In a high stakes drama the boss is distraught after he finds out someone has betrayed him.
- The central figure is a French poacher named Blucher, one of the powerful physical type that was illumined by one great passion during the French Revolution. The play opens with a view of Blucher him disguised in the clothes of the old fagot-picker, trudging painfully through the forest and picking up game from his traps. Under the feudal system he would have run less risk than now. Under the promulgation of forest laws many privileges of the poor were taken away that constitute a hardship. The poor creatures who count upon the gathering of fagots and dead leaves to keep themselves warm in winter are now liable under the law, though the administration closes its eyes to minor offenses. The poacher is regarded as the most dangerous of all those who live on the border of great forests. His familiarity with the haunts of game and his remarkable snares of wire or horse-hair serve to make it nearly impossible to catch him, but Blucher is one of the bolder type. He carries a gun and loves the sport. He is suspected, but positive evidence is so difficult to obtain that he pursues his vocation unhindered and laughs at those who try to arrest him. On this occasion one of his traps is found, and he is so closely followed by the police that he makes a perilous escape over a wall near the spot where he knows that Clara and her mother are picking up and binding twigs. He scales the wall, throws off his disguise, hides it in the barrow-load of branches and makes off before the officers arrive. When they appear upon the scene, the women misdirect them. Blucher's straight road to trouble lies in his sudden fancy for Rose, the farmer's daughter. She is bespoken by a young tiller of the soil named Jack, of honest intentions and suspicious temperament. He dislikes Blucher from instinct and so does the papa of Rose. These four come together at the great gate of a veritable French farmyard, a sort of enclosure of all the important buildings that made it of utility as a temporary fortification in war time. As papa's preference is obviously not for the bold poacher, the interest of the girl is thereby aroused. The next gathering of all the elements is at a country ball given at the Inn of the Red Lion. The "ball" is given out of doors; the dancing is on the green sward. Blucher roughs it with the young farmer and steals Rose from Jack in most approved Bowery style. He carries her away from arbor of the inn, after baiting the very officers who are trying to catch him poaching, and joins the dancers for a while. Clara and her mother appear among the dancers to sell a few flowers they have gathered in the forest, and Blucher makes a diversion by inducing Clara to perform a fancy dance for the assemblage; this dance is admirably done. He then steals away with Rose to the inn arbor and makes an ardent profession of love. He is caught at this by her father and approved suitor and by the unhappy Clara. A general clash of antagonistic elements ensues with disaster to no one but the unfortunate daughter of the fagot-gatherer. The one who loves most truly is the biggest sufferer. Blucher's methods become bolder and bolder. As a lover he invades the farmhouse and induces Rose to meet him outside in secret. As a poacher he shoots game like a true sportsman. A larger force is sent on his trail, some four officers, and he is caught with the goods in the forest. A remarkable struggle with the police follows in which one after the other is overcome by Blucher after he has been disarmed. He escapes, but he leaves one of his would-be captors badly injured, and his character is unveiled to the farmer's daughter. Rose decides to accept the suitor favored by her father in a scene that is as amazingly comical as it is true to life. The father stands by while the lover is declaring himself and spurs on the young man's ardor. Now a reward is offered for the apprehension of the poacher. He has injured an officer, and he is surrounded by a small army of important-looking gendarmes on horse and afoot. Again he escapes, but he encounters Rose and Jack in their new relation of engaged lovers and he can not resist a temptation to lick the successful suitor. He will have that satisfaction anyway. He gives the farmer boy a mild beating, and the latter retaliates by playing spy. He stealthily follows the poacher until he discovers his hiding place in the hovel of Clara's mother. He leads the small military force to this hiding place, but they are outwitted when Blucher escapes in the old woman's clothes. Pursuit now becomes so hot that capture is inevitable, but the poacher dares again to enter the farm house. Clara guesses his destination and flies to warn him that the police are hot upon his trail, but she is too late. There is a swift and dramatic scene between the two women in the farmhouse kitchen, then the entire place is surrounded. In the melee that follows a shot is fired at Blucher which Clara receives in her bosom while interposing to save him.
- Gilder, a clerk, is charged with embezzlement, and put in jail. He manages to escape and returns to see his wife and child. He finds a note from her saying that she has gone with another man. He is leaving with vengeance in his heart, when stopped by the detective. He tells him that he can go free, if he will reveal the hiding place of the money. He does so. His wife then rushes into the room, telling Gilder that it is all a trick, and that the detectives have forced her to write the note. He goes into the bedroom with her, and breaks down beside the child's crib. The phone rings, and the detective learns that they have found the money and with it the president of the bank, who has used Gilder as his tool. The detective informs Gilder, and advises him to tell the State all he knows, and that he will probably be freed.
- Vigilante C is a bounty hunter who travels from town to town looking for creatures to hunt down and kill, when he arrives in a small town in Ohio he finds out that they have a werewolf problem that he must take care of, but can this goofy hero save the day or will he be just another victim.
- Frank Preston is released from prison with only one thing on his mind - the recovery of 100,000 pounds that he hid after his final robbery. Frank isn't the only one after his ill-gotten gains - he's trailed by two thugs, a scheming wife and John Steed.