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Dangerous Moonlight Movie on DVD (1941)
Original price was: $17.99.$9.99Current price is: $9.99.Anton Walbrook and Sally Gray in this wartime romantic drama — a Polish pianist and fighter pilot falls in love with an American journalist before the war separates them and he loses his memory in combat resulting in the composition of the iconic Warsaw Concerto.
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Hellzapoppin Movie on DVD (1941)
Original price was: $17.99.$9.99Current price is: $9.99.Ole Olsen and Chic Johnson in this brilliantly surreal and anarchic Universal comedy — a vaudeville double act’s Broadway revue spills off the stage and into the cinema itself as the film constantly breaks the fourth wall lampoons Hollywood and refuses to obey any convention whatsoever.
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How Green Was My Valley Movie on DVD (1941)
Original price was: $17.99.$9.99Current price is: $9.99.John Ford’s timeless Oscar-winning masterpiece — the story of the Morgan family a Welsh mining community and a way of life that is passing away told through the memory of the youngest son in one of Hollywood’s most beautiful and moving films.
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Lydia Movie on DVD (1941)
Original price was: $17.99.$9.99Current price is: $9.99.Merle Oberon in this luminously romantic drama — an elderly woman looks back across a lifetime to the four men who loved her and the one love that defined everything she was and everything she became in this achingly beautiful and overlooked gem.
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Swamp Water Movie on DVD (1941)
Original price was: $17.99.$9.99Current price is: $9.99.Walter Brennan and Dana Andrews in Jean Renoir’s atmospheric American debut — a young Georgia man searching for his lost dog deep in the Okefenokee swamp discovers a fugitive living in hiding there and begins a friendship that will threaten the entire community.
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Tobacco Road Movie on DVD (1941)
Original price was: $17.99.$9.99Current price is: $9.99.John Ford’s deeply human adaptation of Erskine Caldwell’s scandalous novel — the shiftless Jeeter Lester clan clings to their depleted Georgia tobacco land as poverty hunger and the forces of modernity close in on their irreducible way of life.







