he Blood of Jesus (1941) is a classic example of the "race film" genre of films by African-American directors and casts, geared exclusively for an African-American audience. This film, written and directed by Spencer William Jr. of the TV show Amos & Andy Show (who also played Razz Williams in the film), is a morality tale about a woman (Cathryn Caviness) who is accidentally shot to death by her husband. Facing death, she must choose between Hell, represented as urban life, and Zion, represented as pastoral America, and between Satan and God. The climax comes when she makes her decision at the foot of the cross and wakes up to singing of her church choir. Intended to promote a Black Southern Baptist ideal of a virtuous rural life, the film was a major success and the most popular hit in its genre.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MtWo-SFQtQI
Betty Boop, annoyed by 'public pests' like backslappers, gum parkers, and mud splashers, imagines what she'd do to them if she were a judge.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tUE7bD_RbFk
On her honeymoon a bride is possessed by a murdered woman, who reveals her murderer and the murder weapon.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLYULw3iwvE
This film covers Nazi geopolitics and the conquest of Austria, Czechoslovakia and Poland. Film director Frank Capra's description: "Hitler rises. Imposes Nazi dictatorship on Germany. Goose-steps into Rhineland and Austria. Threatens war unless given Czechoslovakia. Appeasers oblige. Hitler invades Poland. Curtain rises on the tragedy of the century, World War II.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=As9Szjf0Uzk