
Of Human Bondage (1934) with Bette Davis and Leslie Howard. Howard is an aspiring doctor with a club foot. He falls in love with cockney waitress Bette Davis. Davis treats him terribly, but Howard keeps pursuing her at the cost of new relationships and his job. Every time he seems to recover, she shows up in his life again. This film was Davis' breakout role that made her a star. It was a loan-out to RKO -- Warner Brothers didn't know what to do with her. Public Domain. 83 minutes on two 1600-foot reels. This was probably a former TV print, as there are splices at fade-outs during the film. It has sharp focus, but has medium-to-light wear all throughout and heavy wear and a few splices at the end of the first reel. 17 splices in the first 1600 feet, and 10 splices in the second 1600 feet. 1979 3M film stock. 10 pounds for shipping. $50
The Bells of Rosarita (1945) with Roy Rogers, Dale Evans, "Gabby" Hayes, Trigger and Sons of the Pioneers. Dale's father dies, and leaves her a circus. Unfortunately, she knows nothing about running a circus, and her father's old business partner is trying to steal the circus away from her. Roy is filming a movie nearby, and decides to enlist a bunch of Republic cowboys to help her raise some money. Wild Bill Elliott, Allan Lane, Don 'Red' Barry, Robert Livingston and Sunset Carson make cameo appearances. Besides some behind-the-scenes sequences of movies being made, there are also some great performances by the Bob Mitchell Boys Choir. Public Domain. This is a 1956 Kodak TV print with splices for commercial breaks. 17 splices, many at commercial breaks. 5 pounds for shipping. 2000-foot reel. $50