Philip Dorn
8 titles
Filmography
8 results

I've Always Loved You
(1946)Martin Scorsese Presents REPUBLIC REDISCOVERED—over 20 rarely seen films from the storied Republic Pictures library, restored and remastered by Paramount and personally curated by Martin Scorsese. In I’ve Always Loved You an orchestral conductor engages in a merciless professional rivalry with a piano student who adores him. Republic made a rare foray into high-budget filmmaking with this 1946 prestige production containing color by Technicolor, piano solos by Arthur Rubinstein, and direction by A-lister Frank Borzage.

Underground
(1941)When a Nazi discovers the evil ways of the party he's aligned with, he tells his brother the truth and tries to convince him to ditch the swastika.

Random Harvest
(1942)A car accident erases the memory of a shell-shocked World War I veteran's blissful marriage to a chorus girl and sends him home to his family.

Reunion in France
(1942)Parisian fashion executive Michele de la Becque feels crushed when her lover's Nazi ties emerge. Her heart wavers after helping a downed U.S. pilot, and she plans for their escape. But a startling discovery reunites her with her former lover.

The Fighting Kentuckian
(1949)Leading a regiment of Kentucky riflemen during the War of 1812, John Wayne is the frontiersman who battles to save his love, a French general's daughter, and his homeland from speculators, after the Battle of New Orleans. A colorized version of this film was released on home video in 1990.

I Remember Mama
(1948)Barbara Bel Geddes and Irene Dunn star in this reminiscence of a daughter for the mother holding their family together with love and discipline in the heartwarming I Remember Mama. Mama (Dunn--The Awful Truth, Life with Father) emigrated from Norway to early 20th century San Francisco, where she has devoted her life to her children, including Katrin (Bel Geddes--"Dallas," Vertigo), keeping her ...

Passage to Marseille
(1944)Devil's Island escapees join up with the Allies during World War II.
