Frederic Ullman Jr. Trailers
The Window TrailerForgotten Island TrailerThe Big Party Trailer
Total trailers found: 14
19 July 1939
Cécile, Annette, Yvonne, Émilie and Marie, the Dionne Quintuplets, turn five years old and have a private birthday party in their garden.
01 January 1947
1947 short film that was nominated for an Oscar in the category "Best Documentary, Short Subjects"
09 May 1939
Promotes television sets and the broadcast of New York's first regularly scheduled programs by providing a clinical look at the inner workings of television, including the manufacture of the tubes, lab experiments, and an actual telecast.
01 June 1943
A collection of old-time silent movies, re-scored and narrated, featuring the most popular silent film stars.
12 February 1940
Siege is a 1940 documentary short about the Siege of Warsaw by the Wehrmacht at the start of World War II.
20 September 1940
Hollywood stuntman falls in love with a big name actress but still wants to pursue his risky career. The women gives him a choice-the stunts or her.
01 January 1944
Part of RKO's "This is America" series, this is an Oscar nominated short documentary from 1944 that follows the plight of European immigrants arriving in the USA looking for hope and safety.
10 May 1949
An imaginative boy who frequently makes things up witnesses a murder, but can't get his parents or the police to believe him.
04 September 1942
Helen Young sings, and Johnny Long leads his orchestra as they perform a song.
01 January 1947
A short film about Mardi Gras in New Orleans from the point of view of those who make Carnival happen.
27 October 1942
Conquer by the Clock was a short dramatic propaganda film produced by the RKO Pathé in 1942 to encourage wartime industrial production.
01 January 1943
Letter to a Hero is a 1943 American short documentary film produced by Frederic Ullman Jr. A school teacher in Monroe, NY writes a letter to her former student who is fighting in WWII.
01 September 1943
Arctic Passage (RKO "This Is America" series) is a documentary showing the construction of the highway from British Columbia to Alaska: the seemingly insurmountable barriers to be overcome, the boom towns that ro se up on the way, the mud, the mosquitoes, the cold-and, finally, a trip with the first truck convoy to cover the route.