Big Time is a 1929 film starring Lee Tracy and Mae Clarke as a show business couple who break up over his infidelity. This was Clarke's film debut. Director Kenneth Hawks was Howard Hawks' brother.
There are 119 films with the same actors, 2 films with the same director, 61603 with the same cinematographic genres, to have finally 70 suggestions of similar films.
If you liked Big Time, you will probably like those similar films :
Set on the Maine coast, a young sloop skipper Bramdlet Dickery discovers a plot to smuggle alien Chinese into the United States. Bramdlet's younger brother Thad is enamored with daughter of the captain of the smuggling ship. A struggle over the smuggling ensues.
, 1h19 Directed byFred M. Wilcox, Edgar Selwyn OriginUSA GenresDrama, Comedy, Comedy-drama, Fantasy ThemesBuddy films ActorsLee Tracy, Mae Clarke, Otto Kruger, George Barbier, Peggy Shannon, C. Henry Gordon Rating67% On March 23, 1933, Joe Gimlet (Lee Tracy) is a middle-aged cigar store owner, runs into his childhood friend, banker Ted Wright. While having dinner, with Joe and his wife Mary, Ted requests that Joe and Mary invest $4,000 in savings in Ted's company. Joe is excited by the idea, but Mary refuses to part with their savings. Angered by her reluctance, Joe gets drunk and declares to Mary that he should have married the wealthy Elvina. After drunkenly leaving the apartment, he is hit by a car. He is brought to hospital, to have a surgery.
, 1h12 Directed byLew Ayres OriginUSA GenresDrama, War, Historical, Romance ThemesPolitical films ActorsJames Dunn, Mae Clarke, David Manners, Henry B. Walthall, Charlotte Henry, Fritz Leiber Rating56% This 1936 film is In black and white and is a drama based on events in the American Civil War and starts with citizens choosing loyalty to the Confederate States of America or to the Union in the first days of the crisis. Early scenes show the burning of the USS Merrimack by its Union crew to prevent it from falling into Confederate hands. However, the Merrimack, which had been burnt down to the waterline, was later rebuilt by the Confederacy, as an ironclad, and was renamed the CSS Virginia.