
Neyle Morrow
Photoplayd Industry Rating
Not enough rated films yet to compute a weighted score.
Roles are weighted by involvement: director 1.0, screenwriter 0.7, lead 0.8, supporting 0.4, crew 0.1.
Known for
Credits

Julius Caesar (1953)
as Citizen of Rome (uncredited)

Shock Corridor (1963)
as Psycho

White Dog (1982)
as Soundman

Sirocco (1951)
as Syrian Lad (uncredited)

Forty Guns (1957)
as Wiley

The Naked Kiss (1964)
as Officer Sam

The Steel Helmet (1951)
as First GI

China Gate (1957)
as Leung

A Guy Named Joe (1944)
as Flier (uncredited)

House of Bamboo (1955)
as Cpl. Davis (uncredited)

Tarzan and the Leopard Woman (1946)
as Soldier (uncredited)

The Crimson Kimono (1959)
as Hansel

The Raiders (1952)
as Juan

Fixed Bayonets! (1951)
as Medic (uncredited)

Underworld U.S.A. (1961)
as Barney

Park Row (1952)
as Thomas Guest

Under Fire (1957)
as Lt. Conroy

Run of the Arrow (1957)
as Lt. Stockwell

Holiday for Lovers (1959)
as Hotel porter

Hi Diddle Diddle (1943)
as Newsboy (uncredited)

Dogface (1959)
as Private Gibson

Escape to Burma (1955)
Actor

Congo Bill (1948)
as Kahla

Meet the Wildcat (1940)
as Mexican Teenager

Pirates of the High Seas (1950)
as Kalana

Raiders of the Desert (1941)
as Moviow / Zeid (as Neyle Marx)

Ranger of Cherokee Strip (1949)
as Tokata

On the Isle of Samoa (1950)
as Mutu

The White Squaw (1956)
Actor

Three Men from Texas (1940)
as Juanito

Man-Eater of Kumaon (1948)
as Villager

Jungle Jim (1948)
as Native Killed by Leopard

King of the Congo (1952)
as Nahee

Pirates of Monterey (1947)
as Manuel de Roja

The Master Key (1945)
as Spike

The Phantom Cowboy (1941)
as Miguel Garcia (El Lobo) (as Neyle Marx)

Drums of the Desert (1940)
as Ben Ali

Mark of the Gorilla (1950)
as Head Ranger

Danger in the Pacific (1942)
as Lobo (as Neyle Marx)

Trail of the Arrow (1952)
as (archive footage)

Dangerous Venture (1947)
as Jose

Harbor of Missing Men (1950)
as Christopher Corcoris

Valley of Head Hunters (1953)
as Native

Goldtown Ghost Riders (1953)
as Chino

The Big Sombrero (1949)
as Tico





