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  1. In the West, California was already quickly emerging as a major film production center. In Colorado, Denver was home to the Art-O-Graf film company, and Walt Disney 's early Laugh-O-Gram animation studio was based in Kansas City, Missouri.

  2. Since its inception, American film has marginalized the diversity of voices that make our nation and its stories strong – and these lists reflect that intolerable truth.

  3. IMDb's advanced search allows you to run extremely powerful queries over all people and titles in the database. Find exactly what you're looking for!

    • Glengarry Glen Ross (1992) Last on our list of real estate movies is Glengarry Glen Ross. This is a drama film directed by James Foley, and based off of a Pulitzer-prize winning play of the same name.
    • I Love You, Man (2009) Jason Segel and Rashida Jones star in this romantic comedy directed by John Hamburg. The film concerns a real estate agent who proposes to his girlfriend, only to realize he doesn’t have anyone to be his best man.
    • Catch Me If You Can (2002) While this isn’t specifically a real estate related film, it still has great sales tips that can be applied to real estate.
    • The Money Pit (1986) The Money Pit is a comedy-drama film directed by Richard Benjamin and featuring Tom Hanks and Shelley Long. It’s about an attorney and his girlfriend who are forced to vacate their apartment.
  4. Since its inception, American film has marginalized the diversity of voices that make our nation and its stories strong – and these lists reflect that intolerable truth. AFI acknowledges its responsibility in curating these lists that has reinforced this marginality and looks forward to releasing new lists that will embrace our modern day and ...

  5. AFI's 100 Greatest American Films of All Time. How many of these movies have your seen? Find the official AFI checklist here: https://www.afi.com/100 ...More.

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  7. The spectacle of property in Gone with the Wind (1939). A history of the house in American cinema might well begin with Gone with the Wind, a film that is, unsurprisingly, fascinated with the loss, acquisition, and consolidation of private property.