Complete Filmography
This filmography lists Florey's credits as director of feature films, and is believed to be complete.
- That Model from Paris, 1926 (uncredited)
- One Hour of Love, 1927
- The Romantic Age, 1927
- Face Value, 1927
- The Hole in the Wall, 1929
- The Cocoanuts, 1929
- The Battle of Paris, 1929
- The Road Is Fine (La Route est belle), 1930
- Love Songs (L'Amour chante), 1930
- El Profesor de mi SeƱora, 1930
- Komm zu Mir Zum Rendez-vous, 1930
- Black and White (Le Blanc et la noir) (co-director), 1931
- Murders in the Rue Morgue, 1932
- The Man Called Back, 1932
- Those We Love, 1932
- Girl Missing, 1933
- Ex-Lady, 1933
- The House on 56th Street, 1933
- Bedside, 1933
- Registered Nurse, 1934
- Smarty, 1934
- I Sell Anything, 1934
- I Am a Thief, 1934
- The Woman in Red, 1935
- The Florentine Dagger, 1935
- Go Into Your Dance (uncredited), 1935
- Going Highbrow, 1935
- Don't Bet on Blondes, 1935
- Ship Cafe, 1935
- The Payoff, 1935
- The Preview Murder Mystery, 1936
- Till We Meet Again, 1936
- Hollywood Boulevard, 1936
- Outcast, 1937
- King of Gamblers, 1937
- Mountain Music, 1937
- This Way Please, 1937
- Daughter of Shanghai, 1937
- Dangerous to Know, 1938
- King of Alcatraz, 1938
- Disbarred, 1939
- Hotel Imperial, 1939
- The Magnificent Fraud, 1939
- Death of a Champion, 1939
- Parole Fixer, 1940
- Women Without Names, 1940
- The Face Behind the Mask, 1941
- Meet Boston Blackie, 1941
- Two in a Taxi, 1941
- Dangerously They Live, 1941
- Lady Gangster (billed as Florian Roberts), 1941
- Bomber's Moon (second-unit director), 1943
- The Desert Song, 1943
- Roger Touhy, Gangster, 1944
- Man from Frisco, 1944
- God Is My Co-Pilot, 1945
- Danger Signal, 1945
- San Antonio, 1945
- The Beast with Five Fingers, 1946
- Tarzan and the Mermaids, 1948
- Rogues' Regiment, 1948
- Outpost in Morocco, 1949
- The Crooked Way, 1949
- The Vicious Years, 1950
- Johnny One-Eye, 1950
- Adventures of Captain Fabian (uncredited), 1951
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Famous quotes containing the word complete:
“Fate forces its way to the powerful and violent. With subservient obedience it will assume for years dependency on one individual: Caesar, Alexander, Napoleon, because it loves the elemental human being who grows to resemble it, the intangible element. Sometimes, and these are the most astonishing moments in world history, the thread of fate falls into the hands of a complete nobody but only for a twitching minute.”
—Stefan Zweig (18811942)