• Actors

    Marjorie Bonner

    Sort

    New IMDB Likes Tomatometer Audience Year A - Z

    View

    Galery List
    Cleopatra 1934 POSTER

    Cleopatra

    1934

    English

    6.8

    14

    83%

    68%

    1st century

    Action

    ancient rome

    Biography

    cleopatra

    Drama

    egypt

    epic

    History

    roman empire

    War

    Cecil B. DeMille Cecil B. DeMille Director Juanita Moore Juanita Moore as Dancer / Slave Girl Marjorie Bonner Marjorie Bonner as Roman Girl John Roy John Roy as Roman Soldier Kenneth Gibson Kenneth Gibson as Scribe
    The queen of Egypt barges the Nile and flirts with Mark Antony and Julius Caesar.
    The Sign of the Cross 1932 POSTER

    The Sign of the Cross

    1932

    English

    6.8

    5

    50%

    64%

    Action

    ancient rome

    arena

    Drama

    empress

    historical drama

    History

    pre-code

    roman army

    Cecil B. DeMille Cecil B. DeMille Director Angelo Rossitto Angelo Rossitto as Impaled Pygmy Fredric March Fredric March as Marcus Superbus, Prefect of Rome Marjorie Bonner Marjorie Bonner as Roman Woman Otto Lederer Otto Lederer as (uncredited)
    A Roman soldier becomes torn between his love for a Christian woman and his loyalty to Emperor Nero.
    The King of Kings 1927 POSTER

    The King of Kings

    1927

    English

    7.3

    8

    73%

    69%

    big budget

    Biography

    crucifixion

    Drama

    epic

    Family

    History

    messiah

    resurrection

    silent film

    Cecil B. DeMille Cecil B. DeMille Director Otto Lederer Otto Lederer as Eber - A Pharisee Ernest Torrence Ernest Torrence as Peter Sidney D'Albrook Sidney D'Albrook as Thomas - The Doubter Marjorie Bonner Marjorie Bonner as (uncredited)
    The King of Kings is the Greatest Story Ever Told as only Cecil B. DeMille could tell it. In 1927, working with one of the biggest budgets in Hollywood history, DeMille spun the life and Passion of Christ into a silent-era blockbuster. Featuring text drawn directly from the Bible, a cast of thousands, and the great showman’s singular cinematic bag of tricks, The King of Kings is at once spectacular and deeply reverent—part Gospel, part Technicolor epic.
    ×