Charles Kemper
10 titles
Filmography
10 results

Waiting for Baby
(1941)Cohen Film Collection introduces this classic comedy short starring Robert Benchley

Wagon Master
(1950)Western. A group of Mormons head west in search of the promised land, encountering fugitive gunfighters and Native Americans on the way. With Ben Johnson and Ward Bond.

Where Danger Lives
(1950)After falling for an emotionally disturbed patient, a young doctor flees to Mexico with her when he finds himself implicated in her husband's death.

Intruder in the Dust
(1949)Who shot Vinson Gowrie in the back? The jailhouse at Jefferson, Mississippi, may not hold the actual killer, but it does have the suspect an angry lynch mob wants: Lucas Beauchamp, who has long refused to exhibit the obsequious attitude expected of black people in Jefferson. Based on William Faulkner's novel and filmed in his hometown of Oxford, Intruder in the Dust is both a gripping whodunit and a milestone of social-conscience filmmaking. Claude Jarman, Jr. (reunited with director Clarence Brown of The Yearling) plays the youth whose troubled sense of right makes him a catalyst in solving the mystery. And Juano Hernandez is memorable as Lucas: proud, perceptive, strong words that also describe this superb film named one of 1949's 10 Best by the National Board of Review.

The Nevadan
(1950)Scott plays an undercover marshal trying to track down Tucker and his $250,000 in gold. Greedy rancher Macready also wants to get his hands on the loot, so Tucker and Scott team up to fight off Macready and his gang. The two then have to face each other.

The Southerner
(1945)Follow a poor sharecropper family in their quest to strike out on their own as they confront myriad obstacles on their way to self-sufficiency.
That Hagen Girl
(1947)Tom Bates (Ronald Reagan) has returned to Jordan, Ohio, after 18 years, rekindling the gossip that he fathered an illegitimate baby before he left. Mary Hagen (Shirley Temple), the now-grown subject of those rumors, soon finds herself an unwitting target for the town's malicious whispers and lies. So when her mother dies without explaining her past, a tormented Mary turns to Tom for the truth about a scandal that ruined her life before it ever began. Said to be Temple's favorite adult movie, That Hagen Girl also features 20-year-old Lois Maxwell as the former child star's on-screen teacher and friend. Winner of the 1948 Golden Globe as New Star of the Year, Maxwell would achieve screen immortality as Miss Moneypenny, a role she played in the first 14 James Bond films, from Dr. No (1962) to A View to a Kill (1985).

Scarlet Street
(1945)Un hombre se hace amigo de una mujer joven, a quien su prometido convence de estafarlo para quitarle la fortuna que erróneamente suponen que posee.

The Doolins of Oklahoma
(1949)When his former gang forces him to resume leadership, Bill Doolin, trying to go straight, walks into lawmen's guns rather than risk bring further unhappiness to his wife.

Fury at Furnace Creek
(1948)When a Union Army general dies following his court martial for allowing the Apache massacre of white settlers, his sons work to clear his name.