The Girl on the Bridge (1951 film)
The Girl on the Bridge is a 1951 American film shot in black and white cowritten and directed by Hugo Haas. It stars Hugo Haas, Beverly Michaels and Robert Dane.[1]
The Girl on the Bridge | |
---|---|
![]() Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Hugo Haas |
Produced by | Hugo Haas |
Written by | Hugo Haas Arnold Phillips |
Starring | Hugo Haas Beverly Michaels |
Music by | Harold Byrns |
Cinematography | Paul Ivano |
Production company | Hugo Hass Productions |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date |
|
Running time | 76 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Synopsis
A kindly elderly watchmaker, who lost his family in the holocaust, sees a beautiful young blonde on a bridge and prevents her from committing suicide. They marry and live happily until a man from her past attempts to blackmail her.
Cast
- Hugo Haas as David
- Beverly Michaels as Clara
- Robert Dane as Mario
- Anthony Jochim as Mr. Cooper (as Tony Jochim)
- John Close as Harry (as Johnny Close)
- Darr Smith as Councilman
- Judy Clark
- Maria Bibikov
- Al Hill as Bartender
- Dick Pinner
- Rose Marie Valenzuela
- Jose Duvall
- Allan Ray
- William Kahn
- Jimmy Moss
gollark: The room is (depending on formulation) either a weirdly structured computer running a program which obviously does understand Chinese, or a similar program expressed as a lookup table.
gollark: I don't really agree with Chinese room arguments.
gollark: Photonic ML hardware is apparently beginning to exist and is very efficient, so that could help in a few years.
gollark: There is apparently work on accursed optics things for the displays, and batteries... are harder, but maybe minimising power use with more efficient hardware can be done.
gollark: Enough minor conveniences stacked together gives a useful product. And you can fit smartphone SoCs into slightly bulky glasses - there are already AR devkits doing this. The main limitation is that the displays aren't very good and it is hard to fit sufficient batteries.
References
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.