Lloyd Nolan
15 titles
Filmography
15 results

The House on 92nd Street
(1945)A stentorian narrator tells us that the USA was flooded with nazi spies in 1939-41. One such tries to recruit college grad bill dietrich, who becomes a double agent for the fbi. While bill trains in hamburg, a street-Accident victim proves to have been spying on atom-Bomb secrets; Conveniently, dietrich is assigned to the new york spy ring stealing these secrets. Can he track down the mysterious "Christopher" before his ruthless associates unmask and kill him?
The Sun Comes Up
(1949)
Guadalcanal Diary
(1943)In the summer of 1942, WWII battle-weary Marines hit the beach and dig in on a Japanese-held Pacific island Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands.

The Lemon Drop Kid
(1951)Racetrack tout down on his luck gets involved with gangster when he gives bad tip. He's got one month to pay up $10,000 - or else. Based on Damon Runyon's story. ***New York Daily News

The Last Hunt
(1956)Robert Taylor and Stewart Granger team up in this “grim, fierce, raw-boned outdoor fare” (Variety) filmed on location in rugged Custer State Park, North Dakota.

Two Smart People
(1946)Director Jules Dassin (Night and the City) combines the best of film noir, crime caper and romance in this little gem starring Lucille Ball, John Hodiak and Lloyd Nolan. Ace Connors (Hodiak) is a con man on the run, chased by determined cop Bob Simms (Nolan) who is trying to convince Ace to turn in the bonds he has stolen in exchange for a reduced sentence. When Simms catches up with Connors, the con man talks him into taking a train ride back east that will take them through the Southwest and into New Orleans. Entering into the fray is Ricki Woodner (Ball), who is looking to con the con man out of his bonds, while falling for him and Fly Feletti (Elisha Cook, Jr.), a snarling trigger man hot on Ace's trail. The tension builds to an exciting climax during Mardi Gras.

The Golden Fleecing
(1940)A $50,000 life-insurance sale puts mild-mannered Henry Twinkle on the fast track at Ajax Insurance Company. Now he can marry his girl and climb the corporate ladder -- just as long as the insured party, Gus Fender, enjoys a long life. Unfortunately, it turns out Gus is a racketeer with an army of gat-carrying rivals. So Henry gets an order from his apoplectic boss: keep Gus alive! Lew Ayres, the popular star of the Dr. Kildare films, hones his comedy skills as hapless Henry, plunged into a world of gangsters and molls. Lloyd Nolan, who enjoyed a 50-year career in film and television, portrays Gus with appropriate menace. Olympic wrestler-turned-actor Nat Pendleton (The Thin Man) stands out as one of Gus's dimwitted henchmen. And among the screenwriters is renowned American humorist S.J. Perelman (Monkey Business, Horse Feathers). "Sprightly little screwball yarn" (Leonard Maltin's Classic Movie Guide).
A Hatful of Rain
(1957)
Blues in the Night
(1941)The members of a traveling jazz band try to keep their leader from drinking himself to death.

The Texas Rangers
(1936)Unable to eliminate a gang of notorious outlaws, the Texas Rangers hire two former convicts to assist with tracking and destroying the Sam Bass gang.

Attack! The Battle for New Britain
(1944)This wartime documentary film depicts the 1943 Allied attack on Japanese strongholds in the South Pacific during the second World War.
An American Dream
(1966)
Hannah and Her Sisters
(1986)The loyal supporter of her two aimless sisters realizes she’ll have to choose between her own needs and those of the family she can’t live without.

'G' Men
(1935)A man raised by gangsters puts his knowledge of the underworld to use in the FBI's war on crime.
The Double Man
(1967)Complex thriller, with Yul Brynner as a CIA agent investigating his son's death in the Austrian Alps. Filmed on location. Gina: Britt Ekland. Wheatly: Clive Revill. Berthold: Anton Diffring. Mrs. Carrington: Moira Lister. Edwards: Lloyd Nolan. Gregori: Brandon Brady. Directed by Franklin Schaffner.