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  1. Nothing but a Man is a 1964 American independent drama film starring Ivan Dixon and Abbey Lincoln, and directed by Michael Roemer, who also co-wrote the film with Robert M. Young. The film tells the story of Duff Anderson, an African-American railroad worker in the early 1960s who tries to maintain his dignity in a small racist town ...

  2. 30 de jul. de 2017 · Terry's Collection. 6.41K subscribers. Subscribed. 2K. 124K views 6 years ago. This 1964 cinematic masterpiece presents the portrait of an imperfect man traversing the difficult terrain of his...

    • 91 min
    • 125.2K
    • Terry's Collection
  3. Nothing But a Man: Directed by Michael Roemer. With Ivan Dixon, Abbey Lincoln, Julius Harris, Gloria Foster. A black man and his school-teacher wife face discriminatory challenges in 1960s America.

    • (2K)
    • Drama, Romance
    • Michael Roemer
    • 1966-01-12
  4. Nothing But a Man (1964) History, Romance | Ivan Dixon, Abbey Lincoln | Movie, subtitles - YouTube. Cult Cinema Classics. 1.52M subscribers. 413. 15K views 9 months ago ATLANTIC CITY. A...

    • 91 min
    • 16.8K
    • Cult Cinema Classics
  5. Año: 1964. Título original: Nothing But a Man. Sinopsis: En plena agitación del movimiento de derechos civiles y una creciente ola de orgullo negro, "Nothing But a Man" cuenta la historia de Duff, un empleado del ferrocarril que se ve obligado a ...Puedes ver Nothing But a Man mediante en las plataformas:

    • (66)
    • Estados Unidos
    • Robert M. Young (B&W)
    • Michael Roemer
  6. Made at the height of the civil rights movement, Nothing but a Man reveals the toll of systemic racism through its honest portrait of a southern Black railroad worker (Ivan Dixon) confronting the daily challenges of discrimination and economic precarity, as he attempts to settle down with his new wife (jazz great Abbey Lincoln) and track down ...

  7. Directed by Michael Roemer • 1964 • United States. Starring Ivan Dixon, Abbey Lincoln, Julius Harris. Michael Roemer’s groundbreaking first feature, sensitively shot by his close collaborator Robert M. Young, is a still-resonant expression of humanity in the face of virulent prejudice.