James Stewart is taken to the woodshed by Abraham Lincoln (John Carradine) in Of Human Hearts (1938), which also starred Walter Huston, Gene Reynolds, Beulah Bondi, Gene Lockhart, Ann Rutherford, Charles Coburn, Guy Kibbee, and Sterling Holloway.
Sam Donaldson in Atlanta before the Democratic convention in 1988. Earlier that year Donaldson, in a similar satellite feed from Iowa, had said something very insulting about Reagan, but we didn't catch that one.
Penrod and Sam punished for hazing / initiating another boy in Penrod and Sam (1931).
Penrod: Leon Janney
Sam: Frank Coghlan Jr.
Mr. Schofield: Matt Moore
Mr. Bitts: Charles Sellon
20 years later Billy Gray played Penrod (aka Wesley) in On Moonlight Bay.
All Mine to Give (1957) starring Glynis Johns, one of the saddest movies I've ever seen, certainly the saddest Christmas movie. This is the first half of a sequence from the middle of the movie that gives the basic plot idea. You have to watch the second half, posted separately later, to get the idea.
In That's The Spirit (1945) Jack Oakie as a ghost uses his flute to influence mortals Gene Lockhart (Miracle on 34th Street) and Andy Devine (Island in the Sky). In the 2nd half of the clip other cast are identified. In addition to those, the film starred Buster Keaton (who appears in another clip I posted) and Johnny Coy.
Give Me The Simple Life sung by John Payne to Connie Marshall in Wake Up And Dream (1946) with June Haver, John Ireland, Charlotte Greenwood, and Clem Bevens.
Ronald Reagan and Raymond Massey in Desperate Journey (1942) with Errol Flynn & Alan Hale. Didn't Hogan do something like this to Col. Klink a couple decades later?
In Josh and S.A.M. (1993) Josh (Jacob Tierney) tells Sam (Noah Fleiss) about his special powers. Also starred Martha Plimpton, Joan Allen, Maury Chaykin, Udo Kier.
The Cobweb (1955) Trailer & End Credits with Richard Widmark Lauren Bacall, Charles Boyer, Lilian Gish, Gloria Grahame, Fay Wray, Oscar Levant, Tommy Rettig
Opening credits and excerpt from Riders To The Stars (1954), with Herbert Marshall, Richard Carlson, Martha Hyer and William Lundigan. Perhaps the 2nd most serious sf film of the 1950s, next to Destination Moon.