Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. The Flash • s9e6 • The Good, the Bad and the Lucky 2014. With her ring removed and no longer inhibiting her powers, Becky's powers come back in fury as they reek hazard and havoc on those against her, Cecile and Allegra including Tony; Becky, Cecile and Allegra have drinks. 25.

  2. His work with Dorsey's band also led to appearances in the full-length films Las Vegas Nights (1941) and Ship Ahoy (1942). As Sinatra's singing career grew, he appeared in larger roles in feature films, several of which were musicals , including three alongside Gene Kelly : Anchors Aweigh (1945), On the Town (1949) and Take Me Out to the Ball Game (1949). [ 2 ]

    Title[14][15]
    Year
    Role
    1941
    Singer - Tommy Dorsey's Band
    1942
    Singer - Tommy Dorsey's Band
    1943
    Himself
    1943
    Himself
    • “South of The Border” in We’Re The Millers
    • “That’s Life” in Joker
    • “You’re Getting to Be A Habit with Me” in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
    • “The September of My Years” in Bringing Out The Dead
    • “High Hopes” in Rocky Balboa
    • “Come Fly with Me” in Catch Me If You Can
    • “Something Stupid” in Ratcatcher
    • “Summer Wind” in Blade Runner 2049
    • “It Had to Be You” in When Harry Met Sally
    • “My Way” in Goodfellas

    Jason Sudeikis stars in We’re the Millersas a cannabis dealer who’s tasked with crossing the border to pick up a marijuana shipment in Mexico. He hires a stripper and two abandoned youths to pose as his family to avoid looking suspicious. Frank Sinatra’s “South of the Border” is aptly paired with the fake Miller family’s journey across the border i...

    Todd Phillips’ Joker was heavily influenced by the work of Martin Scorsese — specifically Taxi Driver and The King of Comedy — so it’s appropriate that he featured one of Scorsese’s favorite singers on the soundtrack. Frank Sinatra’s “That’s Life” plays over Joker’s ambiguous final scene as Arthur runs through Arkham Asylum, pursued by orderlies. S...

    Terry Gilliam’s delightfully surreal film adaptation of Hunter S. Thompson’s Fear and Loathing in Las Vegashas a heck of a soundtrack, including hits by Bob Dylan, the Yardbirds, Buffalo Springfield, Jefferson Airplane, and Tom Jones. The movie also features a song by Frank Sinatra. It’s appropriate that a movie about two people taking a bunch of d...

    One of Scorsese’s most underrated psychological thrillers, Bringing Out the Deadstars Nicolas Cage as an ambulance driver. In one scene, paramedics are treating a man named Mr. Burke and when it becomes apparent he’s not going to make it, they tell the family to play a song he liked. RELATED: The 10 Best Uses Of Johnny Cash Songs In Movies So, they...

    Sinatra’s “High Hopes” is the song that the titular boxer plays to enter the ring in Rocky Balboa. The song was chosen by Paulie, and while Rocky was initially skeptical, he later warmed to it. When Balboa is about to enter the ring, the announcers blare Sinatra’s original 1959 recording of the song from the venue’s speakers.

    Steven Spielberg’s Catch Me If You Can is one of the funniest biopics ever made, starring Leonardo DiCaprio as conman Frank Abagnale Jr., who scammed his way into jobs like doctor and lawyer when he was a teenager. For the scene in which Abagnale poses as a pilot and lands a regular paycheck from an airline, Spielberg aptly played Frank Sinatra’s “...

    Lynne Ramsay’s directorial debut Ratcatcheris a phenomenal movie, but since it revolves around a child living with the guilt of accidentally killing another child, it’s pretty challenging. Throughout the movie, the boy’s mother plays records for the kids. One of them is “Something Stupid,” recorded by Frank and Nancy Sinatra.

    Before becoming a huge star with the lead role in Knives Out, Ana de Armas gave an unforgettable supporting turn as Officer K’s holographic girlfriend Joi in Denis Villeneuve’s surprisingly satisfying sequel Blade Runner 2049. In one scene, K plays Sinatra’s “Summer Wind” for Joi. RELATED: The 10 Best Uses Of Elton John Songs In Movies The movie al...

    Rob Reiner struggled to come up with a title for his rom-com masterpiece When Harry Met Sally. At one point, he considered naming it after “It Had to Be You,” which acts as a sort of a theme song for the movie. The director plays a few versions of the tune throughout the movie, including a rendition by Frank Sinatra. The song was originally written...

    At the end of Goodfellas, Henry Hill has turned on all his friends in the mafia and resigned to a mundane suburban existence as a federal witness. In the final scene, he comes out of his house to get the paper and Scorsese foreshadows his fate — and the fate of everyone who gets involved in organized crime — with a shot of Joe Pesci firing a pistol...

    • Ben Sherlock
  3. Oct 23, 2001 · 50 Famous Songs From the Movies by Frank Sinatra released in 2001. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.

    • (2)
    • From Here to Eternity. Burt Lancaster, Montgomery Clift, Deborah Kerr. 214 votes. A wartime drama filled with romance and tragedy, this film explores the experiences of a group of soldiers stationed in Hawaii before the attack on Pearl Harbor.
    • The Manchurian Candidate. Frank Sinatra, Laurence Harvey, Janet Leigh. 206 votes. This chilling political thriller follows the story of a former prisoner of war who is brainwashed into becoming an unwitting assassin for an international conspiracy.
    • The Man with the Golden Arm. Frank Sinatra, Eleanor Parker, Kim Novak. 180 votes. A gritty and unflinching look at the life of a drug addict struggling to reform, this film showcases Sinatra's dramatic acting chops as he portrays protagonist Frankie Machine.
    • High Society. Bing Crosby, Grace Kelly, Frank Sinatra. 166 votes. This romantic musical comedy takes place among the glitz and glamour of Newport high society, with Sinatra shining as jaded reporter Mike Connor.
  4. Sinatra: With Philip Casnoff, Olympia Dukakis, Joe Santos, Gina Gershon. An extensive biopic of one of the most famous entertainers of the 20th century - Frank Sinatra.

  5. People also ask

  6. Elmer Bernstein. 14. also charted by Elmer Bernstein US# 16, Dick Jacobs US#22, The McGuire Sisters (as “Delilah Jones", lyrics by Sylvia Fine) US#37 #24UK, Billy May UK #9, Jet Harris 1962 #12UK. May 15. Picnic. “ Theme from Picnic ”. The McGuire Sisters. music by George Duning, lyrics by Steve Allen.

  1. People also search for