Elizabeth Patterson
11 titles
Filmography
11 results

Intruder in the Dust
(1949)Who shot Vinson Gowrie in the back? The jailhouse at Jefferson, Mississippi, may not hold the actual killer, but it does have the suspect an angry lynch mob wants: Lucas Beauchamp, who has long refused to exhibit the obsequious attitude expected of black people in Jefferson. Based on William Faulkner's novel and filmed in his hometown of Oxford, Intruder in the Dust is both a gripping whodunit and a milestone of social-conscience filmmaking. Claude Jarman, Jr. (reunited with director Clarence Brown of The Yearling) plays the youth whose troubled sense of right makes him a catalyst in solving the mystery. And Juano Hernandez is memorable as Lucas: proud, perceptive, strong words that also describe this superb film named one of 1949's 10 Best by the National Board of Review.

Tobacco Road
(1941)
Miss Pinkerton
(1932)This crackling mystery thriller stars Joan Blondell as a private duty nurse who gets herself mixed up in a murder investigation. Miss Adams has an unusual eye for detail, so when a police detective sends her undercover to solve a puzzling murder case, she unravels a complex plot, risking her life while she's at it.

Belle Starr
(1941)At the end of the Civil War, a Southern belle is turned into a rebel outlaw after she’s caught harboring a wanted Confederate guerrilla fighter.

Hail the Conquering Hero
(1944)While back home on a medical discharge for hay fever, a would-be Marine receives an unexpected hero's welcome.

Bulldog Drummond's Secret Police
(1939)A legendary investigator is wrapped up in a murder case when news of a secret hidden treasure gets out and leads to a man's untimely demise.
The Shocking Miss Pilgrim
(1947)In the 1870s, Cynthia Pilgrim (Betty Grable) graduates at the top of her New York City typewriting class. When she moves to Boston to work for a shipping company, she finds that her office is an old boys club run by an outspoken sexist, Mr. Saxon (Gene Lockhart). At first, company co-owner John Pritchard (Dick Haymes) is unsure if Cynthia will be able to cut it, but she proves to be a valuable worker. However, John is bothered by Cynthia's involvement in the women's suffrage movement.

Bulldog Drummond's Bride
(1939)Crime fighter and contented bachelor Bulldog Drummond once again is prevented from marrying his girlfriend when a bank robbery in London pops off.

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.

Pal Joey
(1957)A womanizing nightclub singer must choose between a rich widow and a new chorus girl. Based on the Rodgers and Hart musical of the same name.

Bulldog Drummond's Peril
(1938)Captain Bulldog Drummond finds himself searching for a serial killer who has chosen his targets based on a priceless diamond in high demand.