TV Schedule for ScreenPix: Action
Monday, July 20th TV listings for ScreenPix: Action
Crossplot (1969)
A London adman (Roger Moore) seeks a Hungarian model (Claudie Lange) and finds a plot to assassinate an African leader in Hyde Park.
Hannibal Brooks (1969)
A POW in Germany whose work detail is the zoo learns to take care of the elephants, which eventually aids in his escape.
The Square Peg (1958)
A World War II street laborer (Norman Wisdom) uses his resemblance to a Nazi officer when he is drafted into the British army and captured by German troops.
The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming (1966)
A Soviet officer (Alan Arkin) and crewmen go ashore for help after their submarine runs aground off Nantucket.
Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine (1965)
A secret agent intervenes when mad Goldfoot sends robots in bikinis to seduce the rich and famous.
Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs (1966)
A secret agent (Fabian) intervenes when crazed Goldfoot (Vincent Price) sends sexy robots to kill NATO generals.
Pork Chop Hill (1959)
A lieutenant (Gregory Peck) is ordered to take an inconsequential hill during the Korean War truce talks.
The One That Got Away (1957)
A captured German pilot (Hardy Kruger) aims to escape from the British; he gets his chance in Canada.
Kings Go Forth (1958)
An Army lieutenant (Frank Sinatra) and sergeant (Tony Curtis) become rivals for the daughter (Natalie Wood) of a mixed marriage in 1944 France.
Ten Seconds to Hell (1959)
Two rivals (Jeff Chandler, Jack Palance) from a German bomb squad are left to deactivate duds in postwar Berlin.
Beachhead (1954)
Marines (Tony Curtis, Frank Lovejoy) work with a planter's daughter (Mary Murphy) who knows about Japanese minefields in the Solomon Islands.
The Purple Plain (1954)
An RAF pilot (Gregory Peck) crash-lands with his navigator and another officer in World War II Burma.
Lost Battalion (1962)
A guerrilla (Leopold Salcedo) rescues a girl (Diane Jergens) from bandits in the World War II Philippines.
The Big Knife (1955)
A Hollywood movie star's battle with a studio chief leads to a downward spiral of alcohol, blackmail and death.
Pork Chop Hill (1959)
A lieutenant (Gregory Peck) is ordered to take an inconsequential hill during the Korean War truce talks.
