Gene Lockhart
29 titles
Filmography
29 results

Madame Bovary
(1949)A romantic country girl sacrifices her marriage when she thinks she's found true love.

Algiers
(1938)Un ladrón de joyas fugitivo se oculta en la Casbah, donde conoce a una bella mujer que despierta su deseo de huir y empezar de nuevo.

Joan of Arc
(1948)Ingrid Bergman is spellbinding as the 15th century French peasant who rouses a nation and inspires the world with her faith and bravery. Fiercely believing that she’s directed by God, Joan triumphantly leads an army into battle against the British.

Earthworm Tractors
(1936)Despite knowing nothing about tractors, a self-described natural born salesman is on a mission to sell one to an old-fashioned lumberman.

Meet John Doe
(1941)A fired reporter’s screed about corporate corruption via a fictitious suicidal and unhomed man’s column turns into a publicity stunt for her employer.

Listen, Darling
(1938)Judy Garland and fellow teen idol Freddie Bartholomew play Cupid in thisdelightful musical romance. Pinkie Wingate (Garland) and her best friend, Buzz Mitchell (Bartholomew) kidnap Pinkie's widowed mother, Dottie (Mary Astor), to keep her from marrying a man she doesn't really love. But when two kids find just the right man for Dottie, all they have to do is get the adults to fall in love ... a...

Blondie
(1938)Based on Chic Young’s beloved comic strip characters, Dagwood loses his job on the eve of his and Blondie's fifth wedding anniversary.
The Devil Is a Sissy
(1936)No squealers, that's the rule. And Claude Pierce, a child of privilege eager to throw in with two rough-and-tumble lower East Siders, aims to live by it. But through their adventures the trio of would-be toughs discovers another rule. It's harder to go straight than to live a life of crime. That's why The Devil Is a Sissy. This full-hearted drama from the era of Dead End unites a trio of top 1930s child stars for the only time: Freddie Bartholomew (David Copperfield), Jackie Cooper (The Champ) and Mickey Rooney. All three shine. "But it is Mickey Rooney, the Puck of A Midsummer Night's Dream, who penetrates beyond the script and emerges as a living study of Gig, the son of a murderer" (Frank S. Nugent, The New York Times).

Jeanne Eagels
(1957)A look into the life of the celebrated Broadway actress who in 1922 made her name playing Sadie Thompson in Somerset Maugham's "Rain."