Were “letters of transit” issued in World War II-era Casablanca?
No.
“Letters of transit,” authorizing people to travel without question, were a fiction used in the movie Casablanca (1942).
Five people directed Casino Royale (1967). John Huston, Ken Hughes, Robert Parrish, Joe McGrath, and Val Guest.
Two Women (1961) was the movie that made Sophia Loren famous, for which she won an Oscar. She was also awarded a special Oscar in 1990.
Robert Redford and director Sydney Pollack made seven movies together: This Property Is Condemned (1966); Jeremiah Johnson (1972); The Way We Were (1973); Three Days of the Condor (1975); The Electric Horseman (1979); Out of Africa (1987); and Havana (1990).
A 1910 version of Frankenstein by the Edison Company featuring Charles Ogle as the monster was the first movie version.
Rudolph Valentino’s real name was Rodolfo Alfonzo Raffaele Pierre Philibert Guglielmi d’Antonguolla, born on May 6, 1895, in Castellaneta, Italy.
The cinematographer on Jonathan Demme’s movies was usually Tak Fujimoto. He was the cinematographer on the following Demme films: Caged Heat (1974) Crazy Mama (1975) Last Embrace (1979) Melvin and Howard (1980) Swing Shift (1984) Something Wild (1986) Married to the Mob (1988) The Silence of the Lambs (1991)