SfX
Nothing Sacred
Ripper......: VH-PROD Length.........: 75 min.
Source......: DVD Aspect Ratio...: 1.33:1
Type........: XviD Resolution.....: 512x384
Disks.......: [x]1CD [ ]2CD
Rars........: 50x15MB Video Bitrate..: 1319 kb/s
Video Framerate: 23.976
VH-PROD Rls.: 10-23-03 Audio Bitrate..: 83 kb/s
DVD Release.: 3-19-02 Audio Language.: English
Theater Date: 11-25-37 Stream Type....: [x]Mp3 [ ]Ac3
Channels.......: [ ]Stereo
IMDB Rating.: 7.4/10 [x]Mono
IMDB Votes..: 333
Genre.......: [ ] Action Subtitles......: [ ] English
[x] Comedy [ ] Drama [ ] French [ ] Spanish
[x] Romance [ ] Family [ ] Chinese [ ] Japanese
Sci-Fi [ ] Musical [ ] Thai [ ] Hindi
Horror [ ] Fantasy [ ] German [ ] Dutch
War [ ] Crime [ ] Portuguese [x] None
Documentary
IMDB Link: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0029322/
P L O T
To redeem himself after a hoax, reporter Wallace Cook
proposes a series of stories on doomed Hazel Flagg.
Hazel discovers she really doesn't have radium
poisoning, but still accepts the big fling in New York
that Cook offers her. At first, she has a great time,
but complications arise when she and Wally fall in
love, and a German specialist discovers that Hazel is
faking.
C A S T
Carole Lombard ........ Hazel Flagg
Fredric March .......... Wally Cook
Charles Winninger .... Dr. Enoch Downer
Walter Connolly ....... Oliver Stone
Sig Ruman .............. Dr. Emil Eggelhoffer
Frank Fay ............... Master of Ceremonies
Troy Brown Jr. ........ Ernest Walker (as Troy Brown)
Max 'Slapsie Maxie' Rosenbloom .... Max
Margaret Hamilton .... Drugstore lady
R E L E A S E N O T E S
You may recognize Margaret Hamilton ( Wicked Witch of the
West in The Wizard of Oz )
Carole Lombard offers up an ironic monologue about the
beauty of dying in what was to be one of her last films
prior to her real-life ending in a plane crash
"There are a few instances in this presentation where
shrinkage has caused the three primary colors of the
Technicolor element lose registration. Because of the
shrinkage the colors strobe in the effected areas of the
film. Still, this presentation is better than the
colorless fourth generation slop prints of NOTHING SACRED
that played late night television."
See http://www.thecinemalaser.com/dvd_reviews/nothing-sacred-dvd.htm