Lithe, dark-haired Fred Coby (born Frederick G. Beckner Jr.} turned into freakish Rondo Hatton in the 1946 horror melodrama The Brute Man, a chiller so tasteless and badly made that Universal sold it outright to Poverty Row company PRC. Coby stayed with PRC for Don Ricardo Returns (1946), a Zorro rip-off written by actor Duncan Renaldo and based on Johnston McCulley, the creator of the original. Although handsome -- Coby's slight resemblance to Tyrone Power may have won him the role in the first place -- Don Ricardo was too cheaply made to have any impact on the moviegoing audience. He spent the remainder of his career as a stunt performer and bit player.
| Title | Year | Editors' Rating | User Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Experiment in Terror
Actor |
1962 | |||
| 1961 | ||||
| 1960 | ||||
|
No Time for Sergeants
Actor |
1958 | |||
|
Jailhouse Rock
Actor |
1957 | |||
|
My Man Godfrey
Actor |
1957 | |||
| 1957 | ||||
|
Fury at Gunsight Pass
Actor |
1956 | |||
|
The Ten Commandments
Actor |
1956 | |||
|
Illegal
Actor |
1955 | |||
|
Crime Wave
Actor |
1954 | |||
|
Devil's Canyon
Actor |
1953 | |||
|
Horizons West
Actor |
1952 | |||
|
Pat and Mike
Actor |
1952 | |||
|
Scarlet Angel
Actor |
1952 | |||
| 1951 | ||||
|
The Mob
Actor |
1951 | |||
|
Halls of Montezuma
Actor |
1950 | |||
|
Jungle Goddess
Actor |
1949 | |||
| 1949 | ||||
|
The Man from Colorado
Actor |
1949 | |||
|
White Heat
Actor |
1949 | |||
|
The Counterfeiters
Actor |
1948 | |||
|
The Prairie
Actor |
1948 | |||
|
The Three Musketeers
Actor |
1948 | |||
|
The Brute Man
Actor |
1946 | |||
|
The Scarlet Horseman
Actor |
1946 | |||
|
Without Reservations
Actor |
1946 | |||
|
They Were Expendable
Actor |
1945 | |||
|
A Guy Named Joe
Actor |
1944 | |||
|
Two Girls and a Sailor
Actor |
1944 | |||
|
Girl Crazy
Actor |
1943 |

