Sam Levene
10 titles
Filmography
10 results

The True Glory
(1945)Utilizing footage filmed by military photographers, this documentary recounts the historic events from the D-Day invasion to the end of World War II.

Three Sailors and a Girl
(1953)Three guys join the leading lady (Jane Powell) in a Broadway show bankrolled by their submarine buddies.
Act One
(1963)The time is 1929. The place is Broadway. Moss Hart, one of the greatest playwrights of the American theater, struggles until he begins a lifelong collaboration with Samuel Kaufman, raising the curtain on one of the theater's most prolific teams: For Moss Hart, success begins--Act One. Hart (George Hamilton) writes dark, unproduced dramas and directs local theater comedies. But only when he writes a comedy and a producer teams him with Samuel S. Kaufman (Academy Award winner Jason Robards) does Hart find commercial success with Once in a Lifetime and a lifelong collaborative partnership destined to produce a string of hits.

Last Embrace
(1979)After a psychopath starts sending him death threats, Harry hires a private investigator to help him find the stalker and unravel the intricate puzzle.

Guilty Bystander
(1950)In New York City, ex-cop Max Thursday, now the house detective at a scuzzy hotel in an even scuzzier part of town, exists in an alcoholic haze until his ex-wife appears with news of his son’s disappearance. So, Thursday stumbles through the city’s sleazy underworld searching for his kidnapped son.

Gung Ho!
(1943)Un coronel de la Marina lidera un batallón en una incursión en la isla Makin, fuertemente fortificada y controlada por los japoneses.

Action in the North Atlantic
(1943)Oscar® winner Humphrey Bogart stars in this exciting drama about a Merchant Marine vessel's fight against German attacks at the start of World War II.

Sweet Smell of Success
(1957)An influential Broadway columnist recruits a publicist to break up his daughter’s romance with a jazz guitarist in an ugly game of power and survival.

Crossfire
(1947)This gritty film noir made history as the first Hollywood film to confront antisemitism. Three of the era’s most celebrated Roberts—Young, Mitchum, and Ryan—star in the hard-hitting tale of a police detective and an army sergeant whose investigation into the murder of a Jewish veteran leads them to a psychotic soldier consumed by hatred and bigotry. The first B movie to be nominated for the Academy Award for best picture, CROSSFIRE also netted a best supporting actor nomination for Robert Ryan, whose breakthrough performance as the vicious killer established his edgy, tightly wound screen persona.