Filmography from : Fred Stromsoe
Actor :
Batman: The Movie, Leslie H Martinson, 1966The Dynamic Duo faces four super-villains who plan to hold the world for ransom with the help of a secret invention that instantly dehydrates people....
Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine, Norman Taurog, Ishirô Honda (earlier film clips) (uncredited), 1965
Dr. Goldfoot plans on taking over the world with his beautiful female robots, who seduce rich and powerful men. Robot #11/Diane is sent after millionaire Todd Armstrong. Secret agent Craig Gamble tries to stop the plot but ends up in the torture chamber with Armstrong. The parody of "The Pit and the Pendulium" is the highlight of the film which also includes bits by Annette Funicello, Harvey Lembeck and Deborah Walley....
The Slime People, Robert Hutton, 1963
After Los Angeles is invaded by an army of subterranean monsters, a small group of people must fight for survival in the deserted metropolis....
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, Justus Addiss (16 episodes, 1966-1968), Jerry Hopper (15 episodes, 1965-1968), Sobey Martin (14 episodes, 1964-1966), Harry Harris (12 episodes, 1965-1967), Leonard J Horn (9 episodes, 1964-1966), Felix E Feist (6 episodes, 1964-1965), Robert Sparr (5 episodes, 1967-1968), James Goldstone (4 episodes, 1964-1965), Gerald Mayer (4 episodes, 1966-1967), Nathan Juran (3 episodes, 1965-1966), Sutton Roley (3 episodes, 1966), Charles R Rondeau (3 episodes, 1968), Laslo Benedek (2 episodes, 1964-1965), Irwin Allen (2 episodes, 1964), John Brahm (2 episodes, 1964), Alex March (2 episodes, 1965-1966), Alan Crosland Jr (1 episode, 1964), Joseph Lejtes (1 episode, 1964), Gerd Oswald (1 episode, 1964), James B Clark (1 episode, 1965), Leo Penn (1 episode, 1965), Abner Biberman (1 episode, 1966), Tom Gries (1 episode, 1966), Harmon Jones (1 episode, 1967), 0
Voyage chronicled the adventures of the world's first privately owned nuclear submarine, the SSRN Seaview. Designed by Admiral Harriman Nelson, she was a tool of oceanographic research for the Nelson Institute of Marine Research. Though the show is known for its "monster" episodes, many plots were veiled commentaries of what was happening in the news. Such plotlines as nuclear doomsday, pollution of natural resources, foreign threat, and theft...