|
The Avenging (1982)
Character: Jacob Anderson
Gritty western telling the story of a family at war. One brother is out for vengeance after being kidnapped and wrongly imprisoned in Mexico.
|
|
|
The Tempest (1982)
Character: Prospero
Exiled Prospero lives on a desolate island with his daughter, Miranda. When Prospero's usurping brother sails by the island, Prospero conjures a storm that wrecks the ship and changes all of their lives.
|
|
|
|
|
Television: The First Fifty Years (1999)
Character: Stuart Bailey (archive footage)
Trace the history of television and its impact on American culture with clips, newsreels, and exclusive interviews from television greats like Walter Cronkite, Carol Burnett, and Jay Leno.
|
|
|
Jack L. Warner: The Last Mogul (1993)
Character: Self - Narrator (voice)
An insider's account of Jack Warner, a founding father of the American film industry. This feature length documentary provides the rags to riches story of the man whose studio - Warner Bros - created many of Hollywood's most classic films. Includes extensive interviews with family members and friends, film clips, rare home movies and unique location footage.
|
|
|
Season in Tyrol (1969)
Character: Narrator (voice)
A short look at various seasonal activities offered in the Tyrol region of Austria.
|
|
|
|
|
A Family Upside Down (1978)
Character: Mike Long
An elderly married couple find that as their physical and mental health deteriorates, they find themselves dependent more and more upon their grown children.
|
|
|
The Gathering, Part II (1979)
Character: Victor Wainwright
Two Christmases have passed and widow Kate Thornton has taken over Thornton Industries and is wooed by a courtly financier.
|
|
|
The Best Place to Be (1979)
Character: Bill Reardon
A widow's life is thrown into turmoil by her hippie daughter, her rebellious teenage son, and an ill-starred love affair she is having with a much younger man -- and then a former suitor comes back into the picture.
|
|
|
Charley's Aunt (1983)
Character: Colonel Francis Chesney
Charley's Aunt is a farce in three acts written by Brandon Thomas. The story centres on Lord Fancourt Babberley, an undergraduate whose friends Jack and Charley persuade him to impersonate the latter's aunt.
|
|
|
Shooting Stars (1983)
Character: Robert Cluso
Two television actors who play detectives are fired when the show's star gets upset that they are getting the better parts to play. So, they decide to try it for real.
|
|
|
Who Is the Black Dahlia? (1975)
Character: Sgt. Harry Hansen
In 1947 Los Angeles, a police detective tries to solve the shocking and grisly murder of 22-year-old aspiring actress Elizabeth Short.
|
|
|
|
|
Home Before Dark (1958)
Character: Jacob 'Jake' Diamond
A young woman returns home after being institutionalized in a mental hospital.
|
|
|
By Love Possessed (1961)
Character: Arthur Winner
An unhappily married woman engages in an affair with her husband's law partner.
|
|
|
Batman: Mystery of the Batwoman (2003)
Character: Alfred (voice)
As if the Penguin wasn't enough to contend with, a new vigilante has surfaced in Gotham City, and her strong-arm tactics give Batman cause for concern. Being the World's Greatest Detective and The Dark Knight, he sets out to uncover her identity while stopping a dangerous criminal plot.
|
|
|
Girl on the Run (1958)
Character: Stuart Bailey
A Hollywood private eye (Efrem Zimbalist Jr.) seeks a singer being stalked by a hired killer.
|
|
|
Airport 1975 (1974)
Character: Captain Stacy
When an in-flight collision incapacitates the pilots of an airplane bound for Los Angeles, stewardess Nancy Pryor is forced to take over the controls. From the ground, her boyfriend Alan Murdock, a retired test pilot, tries to talk her through piloting and landing the 747 aircraft. Worse yet, the anxious passengers — among which are a noisy nun and a cranky man — are aggravating the already tense atmosphere.
|
|
|
The Reward (1965)
Character: Frank Bryant
A crash-landed crop-duster betrays a fugitive and his girlfriend to Mexican bounty hunters.
|
|
|
|
|
Bombers B-52 (1957)
Character: Col. Jim Herlihy
Sgt. Chuch Brennan always disliked playboy and hotshot, Col. Jim Herlihy. Now Chuck has even more reason to, Jim is dating his daughter, Lois.
|
|
|
Batman: Mask of the Phantasm (1993)
Character: Alfred (voice)
Andrea Beaumont leaves her father to return to Gotham, rekindling an old romance with Bruce Wayne. At the same time, a mysterious figure begins to hunt down Gotham's criminals, wrongly implicating Batman in the murders. Now on the run from the law, Batman must find and stop the culprit, while also navigating his relationship with Andrea.
|
|
|
|
|
A Fever in the Blood (1961)
Character: Judge Leland Hoffman
A judge, a district attorney and a U.S. senator, each hoping to be elected the next governor, attempt to manipulate a murder trial to advance their own political ambitions.
|
|
|
Band of Angels (1957)
Character: Lt. Ethan Sears
Living in Kentucky prior to the Civil War, Amantha Starr is a privileged young woman. Her widowed father, a wealthy plantation owner, dotes on her and sends her to the best schools. When he dies suddenly Amantha's world is turned upside down. She learns that her father had been living on borrowed money and that her mother was actually a slave and her father's mistress.
|
|
|
Terror Out of the Sky (1978)
Character: David Martin
TV sequel to "The Savage Bees" featuring more rampaging insects. This time a marching band and a school bus get in the path of the bees.
|
|
|
|
|
Hot Shots! (1991)
Character: Wilson
The gang that created Airplane! and The Naked Gun sets its sights on Top Gun in this spoof. Topper Harley is a talented but unstable fighter pilot with an axe to grind: clearing the family name. His mission is to avenge his father and save a mission sabotaged by greedy weapons manufacturers. He also gets involved in a relationship with Ramada Thompson, a woman with an unusually talented stomach. Hot Shots! makes fun of a variety of other films, from Dances with Wolves to The Fabulous Baker Boys.
|
|
|
The Deep Six (1958)
Character: Lt. Blanchard
The conflict between duty and conscience is explored in the WWII drama The Deep Six. Alan Ladd stars as Naval gunnery officer Alec Austin, a Quaker whose sincere pacifist sentiments do not sit well with his crew members. When he refuses to fire upon an unidentified plane, the word spreads that Austin cannot be relied upon in battle (never mind that the plane turns out to be one of ours). To prove that he's worthy of command, Austin volunteers for a dangerous mission: the rescue of a group of US pilots on a Japanese-held island. The ubiquitous William Bendix costars as Frenchy Shapiro (!), Austin's Jewish petty officer and severest critic. If the film has a villain, it is Keenan Wynn as ambitious Lt. Commander Edge, who seems to despise anyone who isn't a mainline WASP.
|
|
|
Beyond Witch Mountain (1982)
Character: Aristotle
After news of the boy's amazing abilities surfaces, Tony and Tia are sent to go find him knowing that the boy must be from their world. They are joined by an old friend Jason O'Day and a black cat named Winky. Together, they race to find the prodigy before their old nemesis Aristotle Bolt does.
|
|
|
Violent Road (1958)
Character: George Lawrence
Following the crash and explosion of a test rocket, which killed several people, six men volunteer to take explosive rocket-fuel chemical components, in three trucks, over back roads in rugged terrain to a remote missile base. Uncredited "remake" of The Wages of Fear.
|
|
|
House of Strangers (1949)
Character: Tony Monetti
Ruthless Italian-American banker Gino Monetti is engaged in a number of criminal activities. Three of his four grown sons refuse to help their father stay out of prison after he's arrested for his questionable business practices. Three of them take over the business but kick their father out. Max, a lawyer, is the only son that remains loyal.
|
|
|
Batman: The Animated Series - The Legend Begins (2002)
Character: Alfred Pennyworth (voice) (archive footage)
In the original five episodes of the Emmy-winning Batman: The Animated Series, Batman must battle The Joker, The Scarecrow, Poison Ivy and more to protect Gotham City.
|
|
|
Cab to Canada (1998)
Character: Vice Chancellor
Fact-based story about a Pasadena cab driver who picks up what he believes is a routine fare, an elderly woman on her way to a funeral. However, the wealthy woman is soon is insisting that the cabbie drive her on a cross-country trip that ends up entailing 3100 miles and ending in Vancouver. Initially contentious, the two eventually find a reluctant friendship growing.
|
|
|
Baby Sister (1983)
Character: Tom Burroughs
Sultry college dropout Annie Burroughs moves in with her older sister Marsha and proceeds to break up the relationship between Marsha and her live-in boyfriend David Mitchell so Annie can begin a sensuous love affair and have David all for herself.
|
|
|
Wait Until Dark (1967)
Character: Sam Hendrix
After a flight back home, Sam Hendrix returns with a doll he innocently acquired along the way. As it turns out, the doll is actually stuffed with heroin, and a group of criminals led by the ruthless Roat has followed Hendrix back to his place to retrieve it. When Hendrix leaves for business, the crooks make their move -- and find his blind wife, Susy, alone in the apartment. Soon, a life-threatening game begins between Susy and the thugs.
|
|
|
Batman & Mr. Freeze: SubZero (1998)
Character: Alfred Pennyworth (voice)
When Mr. Freeze kidnaps Barbara Gordon, as an involuntary organ donor to save his dying wife, Batman and Robin must find her before the operation can begin.
|
|
|
The Crowded Sky (1960)
Character: Dale Heath
When Navy pilot Dale Heath takes off, he doesn't expect his navigational equipment to fail and must adapt when it goes out along with his radio. Heading straight for a commercial jet piloted by Dick Barnett, whose plane is full of passengers, Heath can't tell which way to turn in order to avoid a catastrophe.
|
|
|
Too Much, Too Soon (1958)
Character: Vincent Bryant
The daughter of iconic actor John Barrymore is reunited with her father after a ten year estrangement and engages in his self-destructive lifestyle.
|
|
|
Harlow (1965)
Character: William Mansfield
Loosely based biography of 1930s star Jean Harlow as she begins her climb to stardom. One of two "Harlow" film biographies that appeared in 1965, this one stars Carol Lynley in the title role that begins as Jean Harlow, a bit player in Laurel and Hardy comedies, is invited to test for director Jonathan Martin for the lead in Howard Hughes's "Hell's Angels." She is an instantaneous sensation, and in a series of films devoted more to her body than her talent, she becomes Hollywood's "Platinum Blonde."
|
|