About 87,100 results
Open links in new tab
  1. 1941 (1979) - IMDb

    1941: Directed by Steven Spielberg. With John Belushi, Dan Aykroyd, Treat Williams, Ned Beatty. Hysterical Californians prepare for a Japanese invasion in the days after Pearl Harbor.

  2. 1941 (1979) - Full cast & crew - IMDb

    1941 (1979) - Cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  3. 1941 (1979) - Plot - IMDb

    December 13, 1941. One week after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, and on a beach in northern California, a young woman, part of a 'Polar Bear' swim club, goes for a swim in the …

  4. Movie, Release date between 1941-01-01 and 1941-12-31 (Sorted …

    IMDb's advanced search allows you to run extremely powerful queries over all people and titles in the database. Find exactly what you're looking for!

  5. Top 25 Movies in 1941 - IMDb

    Hollywood director John L. Sullivan sets out to experience life as a homeless person in order to gain relevant life experience for his next movie.

  6. Texas (1941) - IMDb

    From a quite hilarious pugilist rules boxing match in the first quarter, to the number of machismo exchanges that drop in from time time, it's one of those film's that's hard to criticise.

  7. Blues in the Night (1941) - IMDb

    The film is beautifully directed in gorgeous black and white by Anatole Litvak--he makes good use of his low budget and has some very nice sequences using light and shadows.

  8. Meet John Doe (1941) - IMDb

    This film offers a standing rebuke to critics who use the term "Capracorn". None of Capra's films are as blindly optimistic as is often argued, but this one is a pitch-black jeremiad against …

  9. The Maltese Falcon (1941) - IMDb

    Primarily remembered as John Huston's directorial debut, the movie played a decisive role in giving Film-Noire its true identity as a genre. The Maltese Falcon also gave Humphrey Bogart …

  10. Johnny Eager (1941) - IMDb

    The film takes allot of twists and turns, which defines it as 'film noir'. This was the film that altered the career of Robert Taylor, transforming him from a 'pretty boy' film star to a credible actor.