Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Meet John Doe is a 1941 American comedy-drama film directed and produced by Frank Capra, written by Robert Riskin, and starring Gary Cooper and Barbara Stanwyck. The film is about a "grassroots" political campaign created unwittingly by a newspaper columnist with the involvement of a hired homeless man and pursued by the paper's wealthy owner. [2]

    • Frank Capra
  2. Meet John Doe (en Argentina y en España, Juan Nadie; en Venezuela, ¿Conocen a John Doe?) es una película estadounidense de 1941 dirigida y producida por Frank Capra, y con Gary Cooper y Barbara Stanwyck como actores principales.

    • Robert Riskin
    • Juan Nadie, (Argentina y España), ¿Conocen a John Doe?, (Venezuela)
  3. Meet John Doe: Directed by Frank Capra. With Gary Cooper, Barbara Stanwyck, Edward Arnold, Walter Brennan. A penniless drifter is recruited by an ambitious columnist to impersonate a non-existent person who said he'd be committing suicide as a protest, and a social movement begins.

    • Ceals
    • 3 min
    • Frank Capra
    • 118
  4. A reporter writes a fictitious column about a man named "John Doe," who claims to despair at America's neglect of the little people and plans to kill himself. The newspaper then hires a...

    • (24)
    • Gary Cooper
    • Frank Capra
    • Frank Capra Productions
  5. Año: 1941. Título original: Meet John Doe. Sinopsis: Cuando un magnate compra un periódico y despide a casi todo el personal, una intrépida periodista decide publicar una falsa e incendiaria carta que lleva la firma de Juan Nadie.

    • George Barnes (B&W)
    • 1941: Nominada al Oscar: Mejor historia
    • Estados Unidos
  6. Meet John Doe -- (Original Trailer) A reporter's fraudulent story turns a tramp into a national hero and makes him a pawn of big business in Meet John Doe (1941), directed by Frank Capra and starring Gary Cooper.

  7. Meet John Doe, American comedy drama film, released in 1941, that was director Frank Capra’s exploration of ambition, greed, and the U.S. political system. After being fired, opportunistic newspaper columnist Anne Mitchell (played by Barbara Stanwyck) pens a fake letter by “John Doe,” who threatens.