Sharp Shooters Trailer

Sharp Shooters Trailer (1928)

"A Romance of Deep Seas, Strange Ports, a Sailor Boy and a Dancing Girl." 15 January 1928 Comedy 60 mins

A "love-'em-and-leave-'em" sailor hooks up with a dance-hall girl in Paris while waiting for his ship to sail. She falls in love with him, and when his ship leaves port she decides to show up at its next stop and reunite with her lover. However, when she arrives at the ship's next destination, she discovers that her "lover" has already found another local girl to spend his time with. Complications ensue.

Watch the official Sharp Shooters 1928 trailer in HD below.

Watch Full Movies Online

Sorry, we can't find the movie trailer you're looking for.

Either a trailer for this movie has not been released yet, or it was removed following a request from the copyright holder.

Find more trailers

Cast

Lois Moran

as Loretta

Tom Dugan

as Jerry

William Demarest

as 'Hi Jack' Murdock

Gwen Lee

as Flossy

Josef Swickard

as Grandpère

Stanley Blystone

as Bouncer (uncredited)

Richard Cramer

as Cafe Mug (uncredited)

Boris Karloff

as Cafe Proprietor (uncredited)

John Kelly

as Cafe Mug (uncredited)

Constantine Romanoff

as Swedish Captain (uncredited)

Jack Roper

as Hood (uncredited)

Randolph Scott

as Foreign Serviceman in Moroccan Cafe (uncredited)

Harry Tenbrook

as Hood (uncredited)

International Releases Dates

United States 15 January 1928

Production Companies

Popular movie trailers from 1928

These some of the most viewed trailers for movies released in 1928:

A Knight in London Trailer (1928)

17 December 1928

A prince makes a socialite think she spent the night in his room.

Court Martial Trailer (1928)

12 August 1928

During the American Civil War, A Union-Army officer is ordered by U. S. President Abraham Lincoln to bring in Belle Starr, the leader of a Missouri guerrilla band, dead or alive.

Panicky Pancakes Trailer (1928)

01 October 1928

An Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoon.

School Begins Trailer (1928)

16 September 1928

One of a handful of currently unavailable Hal Roach/MGM “Our Gang” silent films, School Begins was a series of gags built around the unenviable ritual of returning to school during the first week of September.

Fazil Trailer (1928)

04 June 1928

An Arab prince born and raised in the desert and a beautiful Frenchwoman from Paris fall in love and marry, but the tremendous differences in their backgrounds and the cultural differences between their two different societies put strains on their marriage that may well prove irreparable.

The Son of the Golden West Trailer (1928)

30 September 1928

Tom Hardy (Tom Mix), a pony express rider, is carrying government gold in a coach to Wassatch accompanied by Alice Calhoun (Sharon Lynn) , the daughter of the US telegraph survey station.

Marked Money Trailer (1928)

11 November 1928

Marked Money stars Junior Coghlan as the orphaned son of a seafaring man. His late father has left instructions that The Boy is to be delivered to the home of Captain Fairchild (Bert Woodruff) the father's old sailing master, along with $25,000 in cash to finance the boy's education.

Young Whirlwind Trailer (1928)

16 September 1928

Red foils a plan to steal the airmail and in one especially exciting scene takes to the air armed only with a (very effective) slingshot.

Beware of Married Men Trailer (1928)

14 January 1928

A press sheet printed in Exhibitors Herald and Moving Picture World in 1928 put forth the suggestion that “people in the need of a good hearty laugh should take this opportunity of getting it” by seeing a newly released comedy by Warner Bros.

Bahno Prahy Trailer (1928)

30 March 1928

Tenderloin Trailer (1928)

14 March 1928

Rose Shannon, a dancing girl at "Kelly's," in the 'Tenderloin' district of New York City, worships at a distance Chuck White, a younger member of the gang that uses the place as their hangout.

The Clue of the Second Goblet Trailer (1928)

01 May 1928

A private detective and his young assistant solve crimes.

Comments

Have you watched Sharp Shooters yet? What did you think about it?