|
Partners (1976)
Character: John Grey
When a business competitor assassinates her father when the father refuses to sell his firm, young woman takes over her father's paper company and with the help of her gangster boyfriend learns how to fight back against competitors.
|
|
|
Crest of a Wave (1978)
Character: Jim
Recently made redundant, Jim takes his wife Bridget to meet his old scouting pal Nifty. As well as campfire memories to swop, there just might be the possibility of a job.
|
|
|
In Hiding (1980)
Character: Bernard
A teenager learns about life and death while staying with his aunt during the school holidays.
|
|
|
You're All Right, How Am I? (1981)
Character: Psychiatrist
' If you walked down Piccadilly naked and refused to put your clothes on when the police requested you to do so, even though you might not superficially be doing harm, you might be certified in the end.' A two-hander about a psychiatrist and his patient, starring Denholm Elliott and Michael Hordern.
|
|
|
Night Duty (1972)
Character: Swan
A night worker at a mental institution finds his job beginning to change.
|
|
|
Man and Mirror (1965)
Character: Geoffrey Manners
Mrs Isobel Manners lives a large Victorian house with her two grown up sons; Geoffrey and Edward. Mrs Manners is convinced that someone is trying to murder her.
|
|
|
The Wild Duck (1971)
Character: Hjalmar Ekdal, Hedvig's father
A devestating, yet bracing look at a family whose proximity to each other belies the decay of their relationships, The Wild Duck is just as modern today as it was when first staged. When Gregors Werle comes to stay with the Ekdals, his idealist nature refuses to tolerate the dreamworld of lies the family is living. However, in his bid to force the Ekdals to see the truth, the skeletons he unearths destroy the family that he wanted to redeem.
|
|
|
Keys to Freedom (1988)
Character: Inspector Basil Crisp
The keys to freedom for citizens of Hong Kong are U.S. passports, as their city quakes with the imminent transition to Chinese Communist rule. A deadly black market for passports is thriving, controlled by Hong Kong's warlords.
|
|
|
Sunday Pursuit (1990)
Character: Thomas Wilkins
Thomas Wilkins has faithfully worked his entire life on Saville Row. Suddenly he is fired by his boss Mr Gerald, who wants a younger man with new ideas. Thomas advertise under "Lonely Hearts" and receives an answer.
|
|
|
Killing Dad (Or How to Love Your Mother) (1989)
Character: Nathy
A man, always very devoted to his mother, decides to look for his father whom he never met. He meets a seducing older woman prone to drinking and her aged boyfriend whom she grew tired of.
|
|
|
Sir John Mills' Moving Memories (2000)
Character: Self (archive footage)
A film biography with a difference, Sir John Mills' Moving Memories charts the life of one of Britain's most distinguished actors. Compiled from interviews with the man himself and with his family and friends, it traces his career from humble beginnings to all-time great of British cinema. The many film clips reveal an electric screen presence and a willingness to undertake a range of difficult, challenging roles.
|
|
|
Tonight in Britain (1954)
Character: Self
A short survey of British entertainment and London attractions photographed at Edinburgh, Stratford and in London.
|
|
|
|
|
A Little Temptation (1965)
Character: Vincent
A writer is having an affair with a married woman and gets embroiled with the other women in her life.
|
|
|
Death Becomes Me (1979)
Character: Roland (archive footage)
Two episodes of the TV series "The Persuaders" joined into a movie. Two playboys, Brett Sinclair (Roger Moore) and Danny Wilde (Tony Curtis), investigate crimes.
|
|
|
Twelfth Night (1957)
Character: Sebastian
Twins Viola and Sebastian are separated by a shipwreck. Viola lands in Illyria, where she disguises herself as a man and enters the service of Duke Orsino. Orsino sends her to help woo the Lady Olivia, who doesn't want the Duke, but finds she likes the new messenger. When Sebastian reappears, with Viola now his exact double, merry hell breaks loose. Meanwhile, Olivia's uncle and his cohorts are trying to find some way to get back at Olivia's officious majordomo, Malvolio.
|
|
|
Hanna's War (1988)
Character: N/A
Hanna's War is the true story of Hanna Senesh, a Hungarian-Jewish WW2 resistance fighter, who would become Israel's "Joan of Arc". As a young person, she fled Nazi-occupied Hungary for Palestine, where she was recruited and trained by the British to serve as a commando. After completing her training in Britain, she parachutes into Yugoslavia with a commando team to establish escape routes across the Hungarian-Yugoslavian border for downed British pilots. Her attempts to save Hungarian Jews in Nazi-occupied Hungary, however, leads to her capture, torture and demise at the hands of the Gestapo and the Nazi-controlled Hungarian police.
|
|
|
The Lady from the Sea (1974)
Character: Dr. Wangel
A lighthouse keeper's daughter, lives her opportunist marital life, until her past lover appears in her life.
|
|
|
Hotel du Lac (1986)
Character: Philip Neville
Romantic novelist Edith Hope so horrifies her friends that they banish her to the solitude of a Swiss hotel. She decides to work out her exile by observing her fellow guests.
|
|
|
Follow the Yellow Brick Road (1972)
Character: Jack Black
Jack Black is a disturbed commercial actor who believes himself to be trapped in a television play, followed around by an invisible camera.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shooting the Chandelier (1977)
Character: Semyon
During the closing days of the Second World War, a young Czechoslovakian woman, Blanka, is caught between ideologies of the Soviet regime. Part of BBC2 Play of the Week.
|
|
|
The Holy Terror (1965)
Character: Herbert
A television dramatization based on the life and work of Florence Nightingale. The story, set in 1856, relates the incidents in her life following the war in the Crimea, where she had gained such fame that her name was virtually a household word.
|
|
|
Gentle Folk (1980)
Character: F J Dobbs
An Edwardian house party given by a Fabian woman, her business-man husband and assorted guests from politics and the Arts - including a young man prone to disturbing premonitions.
|
|
|
School Play (1979)
Character: Jeffrey Treasure
Life in an English public school - with all the parts played by adults.
|
|
|
Anywhere but England (1972)
Character: Miles
Jennifer visiting her Dad living on a Mediterranean Island, finds his way of life is now being threatened by local politics.
|
|
|
The Fall of the House of Usher (1966)
Character: Roderick Usher
A young man seeks the woman he has fallen in love with at an isolated old house, and comes into conflict with her neurotic brother.
|
|
|
|
|
Brimstone and Treacle (1987)
Character: Tom Bates
A mysterious stranger inserts himself into a troubled family's life, blurring the lines between good and evil as he cares for their disabled daughter.
|
|
|
Codename: Kyril (1988)
Character: Povin
At the height of the cold war, a known Russian spy ("Kyril") is sent to the UK under falsely reported pretenses in order to hopefully indirectly spark an unknown mole in the KGB to reveal himself; the endeavor eventually has repercussions which none of the initial players could have predicted.
|
|
|
A Child's Christmas in Wales (1987)
Character: Old Geraint
It's Christmas Eve in Wales. A young boy named Thomas is excited about the holiday, but he's also disappointed because it's raining instead of snowing. His grandfather gives him an old snow globe as an early Christmas present and starts telling colorful, amusing stories about his childhood Christmases that are shown in flashback. Thomas keeps asking his grandfather more questions because he likes the stories and because he doesn't want to go to bed. His parents finally insist that he go to bed, and his grandfather tells him one last story about going to bed on Christmas night while listening to his family singing carols downstairs. After Thomas falls asleep at last, his grandfather opens the bedroom window and sees falling snowflakes.
|
|
|
Blade on the Feather (1980)
Character: Jack Hill
A reclusive author is visited by a young admirer - but both men are more than they claim to be.
|
|
|
The Winslow Boy (1958)
Character: Sir Robert Morton
In pre-WW1 England, a youngster is expelled from a naval academy over a petty theft, but his parents raise a political furor by demanding a trial.
|
|
|
The Lark (1957)
Character: Warwick
Adaptation of Jean Anouilh's 1952 play about Joan of Arc, the young girl who led the French to victory against the English in the Hundred Years' War.
|
|
|
The Strange Case of the End of Civilization as We Know It (1977)
Character: English Delegate
John Cleese is hilarious as the descendant of Sherlock Holmes in this modern detective drama of international power politics and intrigue. Unlike his illustrious grandfather however, he only succeeds in bungling every job he organizes. Also stars Arthur Lowe as the "bionic" grandson of Dr. Watson, Stratford Johns as the Commissioner of Police, and Connie Booth as Mrs. Hudson.
|
|
|
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)
Character: Marcus Brody
In 1938, an art collector appeals to eminent archaeologist Dr. Indiana Jones to embark on a search for the Holy Grail. Indy learns that a medieval historian has vanished while searching for it, and the missing man is his own father, Dr. Henry Jones Sr.. He sets out to rescue his father by following clues in the old man's notebook, which his father had mailed to him before he went missing. Indy arrives in Venice, where he enlists the help of a beautiful academic, Dr. Elsa Schneider, along with Marcus Brody and Sallah. Together they must stop the Nazis from recovering the power of eternal life and taking over the world!
|
|
|
Mrs. Delafield Wants to Marry (1986)
Character: George Parker
A rich widow shocks her snobbish WASP family when she decides to marry her Jewish, divorced, doctor. His family is equally shocked.
|
|
|
The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz (1974)
Character: Friar
The younger son of a working-class Jewish family in Montreal, Duddy Kravitz yearns to make a name for himself in society. This film chronicles his short and dubious rise to power, as well as his changing relationships with family and friends. Along the way the film explores the themes of anti-semitism and the responsibilities which come with adulthood.
|
|
|
A Bridge Too Far (1977)
Character: RAF meteorologist officer
The story of Operation Market Garden—a failed attempt by the allies in the latter stages of WWII to end the war quickly by securing three bridges in Holland allowing access over the Rhine into Germany. A combination of poor allied intelligence and the presence of two crack German panzer divisions meant that the final part of this operation (the bridge in Arnhem over the Rhine) was doomed to failure.
|
|
|
Quest for Love (1971)
Character: Tom Lewis
After a scientific experiment goes horribly wrong during a demonstration, a scientist finds himself trapped in an alternate reality that bears some similarities to our own, but also has some striking differences. In this other reality the Second World War had never occurred, mankind had not yet traveled into Space and Mt. Everest had not yet been conquered, just to name a few things. Also in this other reality he is no longer a scientist but rather a well known author. After a personal tragedy in this alternate world, he finds himself back in his own world and desperately trying to locate the woman he fell in love with in the other world. Little does she know, however, that her life depends on him finding her.
|
|
|
Dracula (1968)
Character: Count Dracula
A asylum patient intrudes upon a house party referring to the guest of honor—Count Dracula—as "Master." Moments later he insists he does not know the Count and is led back to his cell. Dr. Van Helsing is called to consult on the case. Hypnotized, the patient recounts events in Transylvania, including an attack by Dracula's brides…
|
|
|
Station Six-Sahara (1963)
Character: Macey
A beautiful blonde joins a small group of men running an oil station in the Sahara Desert and starts the emotions soaring.
|
|
|
The Night They Raided Minsky's (1968)
Character: Vance Fowler
Rachel arrives in New York from her Amish community intent on becoming a dancer. Unfortunately Billy Minsky's Burlesque is hardly the place for her Dances From The Bible. But the show's comedian Raymond sees a way of wrong-footing the local do-gooders by announcing the new Paris sensation "Mme Fifi" and putting on Rachel's performance as the place is raided. All too complicated, the more so since her father is scouring the town for her and both Raymond and his straight-man Chick are falling for Rachel.
|
|
|
Noises Off... (1992)
Character: Selsdon Mowbray / The Burglar
Hired to helm an Americanized take on a British play, director Lloyd Fellowes does his best to control an eccentric group of stage actors. With a star actress quickly passing her prime, a male lead with no confidence, and a bit actor that's rarely sober, chaos ensues in the lead up to a Broadway premiere.
|
|
|
Les Séducteurs (1980)
Character: Parker (segment "An Englishman's Home")
A sex comedy anthology containing four stories, each from a different country (England, France, USA and Italy). "An Englishman's Home" "The French Method" "Armando's Notebook" "Skippy"
|
|
|
The Razor's Edge (1984)
Character: Elliott Templeton
An American WWI veteran undertakes a spiritual quest that takes him from Paris to Nepal to the Himalayas and back to his hometown. Upon his return, he discovers he is not the only one who has changed.
|
|
|
Scoop (1987)
Character: Salter
Scoop is a 1987 TV film directed by Gavin Millar, adapted by William Boyd from the 1938 satirical novel Scoop by Evelyn Waugh. It was produced by Sue Birtwistle with executive producers Nick Elliott and Patrick Garland. Original music was made by Stanley Myers. The story is about a reporter sent to Ishmaelia (a fictional African state) by accident.
|
|
|
|
|
Rising Damp (1980)
Character: Charles Seymour
Stingy landlord Rigsby manages to scam his lodgers John, an art student, and Philip, an African medical student, making both pay for a room they must share. However Rigsby's favorite lodger, Miss Jones, flirts with Philip rather than him, despite his pitiful attempts at seduction.
|
|
|
Madame Sin (1972)
Character: Malcolm De Vere
A CIA agent is used as a pawn in an insane woman's plan to steal a Polaris submarine.
|
|
|
Maroc 7 (1967)
Character: Inspector Barrada
The lady of a top fashion magazine doubles as a jewel thief and becomes involved in Moroccan intrigue.
|
|
|
Wuthering Heights (1958)
Character: Edgar Linton
Young orphan Heathcliff is adopted by the wealthy Earnshaw family and moves into their estate, Wuthering Heights. Soon, the new resident falls for his compassionate foster sister, Cathy. The two share a remarkable bond that seems unbreakable until Cathy, feeling the pressure of social convention, suppresses her feelings and marries Edgar Linton, a man of means who befits her stature. Heathcliff vows to win her back. [Originally aired on CBS's DuPont Show of the Month.]
|
|
|
A Room with a View (1986)
Character: Mr. Emerson
When Lucy Honeychurch and chaperon Charlotte Bartlett find themselves in Florence with rooms without views, fellow guests Mr Emerson and son George step in to remedy the situation. Meeting the Emersons could change Lucy's life forever but, once back in England, how will her experiences in Tuscany affect her marriage plans?
|
|
|
The High Bright Sun (1964)
Character: Baker
This story of love and espionage focuses on political turmoil as a small nation struggles to free itself from colonial rule, and one man tries to serve both justice and his own heart.
|
|
|
Stealing Heaven (1988)
Character: Fulbert
Abelard, a famous teacher of philosophy at the cathedral school of Notre Dame, falls in love with one of his students, Héloïse d'Argenteuil. A sixteen-year old girl raised in a convent, Héloïse has an intellectual curiosity and rebels against the status of women in 12th century Europe. When others begin to suspect their relationship, Heloise's uncle Fulbert and the bishop of Paris work together to put a stop to it. Héloïse becomes pregnant with Abelard's child, and they are married in secret. Abelard struggles for acting against the will of God, yet is unable to escape his love for Heloise.
|
|
|
The Last Chapter (1974)
Character: Robert Murray
A dark tale in which a successful novelist is unbalanced by an assured young female fan.
|
|
|
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1968)
Character: George Devlin
In this Dan Curtis production of the Robert Louis Stevenson classic, Jack Palance stars as Dr. Henry Jekyll, a scientist experimenting to reveal the hidden, dark side of man, who, in the process of his experiment, releases a murderer from within himself.
|
|
|
Trading Places (1983)
Character: Coleman
A snobbish investor and a wily street con-artist find their positions reversed as part of a bet by two callous millionaires.
|
|
|
One Against the Wind (1991)
Character: Father LeBlanc
Mary Linden works for the French Red Cross in Occupied France during World War II and helps allied soldiers who have been shot down to escape to the unoccupied side. Her activities are complicated by her high profile and her daughter's love affair with a German officer. Based on the true story.
|
|
|
Bad Timing (1980)
Character: Stefan Vognic
Alex Linden is a psychiatrist living in Vienna who meets Milena Flaherty though a mutual friend. Though Alex is quite a bit older than Milena, he's attracted to her young, carefree spirit. Despite the fact that Milena is already married, their friendship quickly turns into a deeply passionate love affair that threatens to overtake them both. When Milena ends up in the hospital from an overdose, Alex is taken into custody by Inspector Netusil.
|
|
|
Watership Down (1978)
Character: Cowslip (voice)
When the warren belonging to a community of rabbits is threatened, a brave group led by Fiver, Bigwig, Blackberry and Hazel leave their homeland in a search of a safe new haven.
|
|
|
Voyage of the Damned (1976)
Character: Admiral Canaris
A luxury liner carries Jewish refugees from Hitler's Germany in a desperate fight for survival.
|
|
|
The Heart of the Matter (1953)
Character: Wilson
Based on Graham Greene’s novel, a married colonial police chief struggles with his conscience when he has an affair with a younger woman.
|
|
|
September (1987)
Character: Howard
After a suicide attempt, Lane has moved into her country house to recuperate. Her best friend, Stephanie, has come to join her for the summer. Lane's mother, Diane, has recently arrived with her husband Lloyd, Lane's stepfather. Lane is close to two neighbors: Peter, and Howard. Howard is in love with Lane, Lane is in love with Peter, and Peter is in love with Stephanie.
|
|
|
Sweeney 2 (1978)
Character: Ex-Det. Chief Superintendent Jupp
The plot is set on a group of bank robbers, who are both violent and successful, strangely getting away each time with an amount around the £60,000 mark, and often leaving behind cash in excess of this sum. The robbers are willing to kill their own team, to get away. As Jack Regan himself puts it after the first raid in the film: "I've never seen so many dead people". Armed with gold-plated Purdey shotguns, they evaded Regan and the Flying Squad for quite some time, before Regan finds encouragement from his Detective Chief Superintendent who was sent down for corruption because Jack wouldn't testify in court for him.
|
|
|
The Black Candle (1991)
Character: William Filmore
Lily Whitmore is the heir to a crumbling factory that she's determined to restore to its former glory. Unfortunately, Lily must instead turn her attention to the conniving Lionel Filmore who's determined to marry into the family no matter what.
|
|
|
The Man Who Loved Redheads (1955)
Character: Denis
Framed in flashback, The Man Who Loved Redheads is an anecdotal comedy about a man (John Justin) whose life is defined by his first romantic experience. That liaison occurred in Justin's youth, when the young man matures and enters the diplomatic world, he spends the rest of his career searching for his first love.
|
|
|
Too Late the Hero (1970)
Character: Captain Hornsby
A WWII film set on a Pacific island. Japanese and allied forces occupy different parts of the island. When a group of British soldiers are sent on a mission behind enemy lines, things don't go exactly to plan. This film differs in that some of the 'heroes' are very reluctant, but they come good when they are pursued by the Japanese who are determined to prevent them returning to base.
|
|
|
King Rat (1965)
Character: Larkin
When Singapore surrendered to the Japanese in 1942, the Allied POWs, mostly British but including a few Americans, were incarcerated in Changi prison. Among the American prisoners is Cpl. King, a wheeler-dealer who has managed to establish a pretty good life for himself in the camp. King soon forms a friendship with an upper-class British officer who is fascinated with King's enthusiastic approach to life.
|
|
|
The Spy with a Cold Nose (1966)
Character: Pond-Jones
A dog with a spying device under its skin is sent to the Russian government as a present. When the Russians send the dog to a veterinary, British intelligence must get to the dog first and retrieve the spying device.
|
|
|
Lease of Life (1954)
Character: Martin Blake
The parson of a small rural community knows he is dying and this makes him reconsider his life so far and what he can still do to help the community.
|
|
|
Past Caring (1986)
Character: Victor
67 year-old Victor is forced to move into an old people's home but he prefers to grow old disgracefully.
|
|
|
Return from the River Kwai (1989)
Character: Colonel Grayson
A group of war prisoners has spilt blood, sweat and tears to construct a bridge over the river Kwai in Thailand. Just when the bridge is ready, an American bomber arrives and destroys it. Camp commander Tanaka wants to set an example and orders that some of the prisoners must be executed. Just in time major Harada arrives with orders that the healthiest prisoners must be transported to Japan by train and boat. A treacherous journey since the allied forces keep a close eye on railroads and practically own the seas.
|
|
|
Game for Vultures (1979)
Character: Raglan Thistle
The South African businessman David Swansey is delivering illegal German helicopters to Rhodesia. That makes the patriot Gideon Marunga an angry man.
|
|
|
A Doll's House (1973)
Character: Nils Krogstad
Nora Helmer has years earlier committed a forgery in order to save the life of her authoritarian husband Torvald. Now she is being blackmailed, and lives in fear of her husband finding out, and of the shame such a revelation would bring to his career. But, when the truth comes out, Nora is shocked to learn where she really stands in her husband's esteem.
|
|
|
Defence of the Realm (1986)
Character: Vernon Bayliss
A reporter named Mullen 'stumbles' onto a story linking a prominent Member of Parliament to a KGB agent and a near-nuclear disaster involving a teenage runaway and a U.S. Air Force base. Has there been a Government cover-up? Mullen teams up with Vernon Bayliss, an old hack, and Nina Beckam, the MP's assistant, to find out the truth.
|
|
|
Scent of Mystery (1960)
Character: Oliver Larker
An Englishman and a cabby try to save an heiress from murder in Spain.
|
|
|
Percy (1971)
Character: Emmanuel Whitbread
Edwin Antony (Hywel Bennett) is emasculated in an accident which kills a young philanderer. Doctors successfully replace his member with that of the dead man, but refuse to tell him the full story of the organ's origin. So Edwin begins a search which takes him to the philanderer's wife - and also to his many, many girlfriends...
|
|
|
The Happy Valley (1987)
Character: Sir Henry 'Jock' Delves Broughton
In 1940 Kenya as their country prepares for war, the local aristocratic social set lives a decadent, self-indulgent lifestyle, that leads to murder. The same events were also dramatised in the feature film White Mischief, which was released seven months after the first transmission of The Happy Valley.
|
|
|
Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush (1968)
Character: Mr. George Beauchamp
Jamie McGregor is a virginal sixth-former in suburbia delivering groceries for the local supermarket, but he is more interested in other matters - Mary, Linda, Paula, and Caroline. He tries to seduce the girls of his dreams in the swinging sixties.
|
|
|
A Murder of Quality (1991)
Character: George Smiley
At the request of his old war time colleague Ailsa Brimley, George Smiley agrees to look into the murder of Stella Rode. Brimley had only just received a letter from her saying she feared for her life at her husband's hand. The husband, Stanley Rode teaches at Carne School, but Smiley is doubtful that he had anything to do with his wife's death. As Smiley investigates, he learns that Stella was a nosy busybody who loved to learn other's little secrets and then gossip about them - or possibly blackmail them. When a student is killed and Smiley unearths a secret, he has the evidence to name the killer.Based on John Le Carré's 1962 thriller (his first) in which George Smiley is brought out of spy retirement to solve a murder in a British public school. The setting is based on Le Carre"s own schooldays in Sherborne and his brief experience teaching at Eton.
|
|
|
The Boys from Brazil (1978)
Character: Sidney Beynon
Nazi hunter Ezra Lieberman discovers a sinister and bizarre plot, masterminded by Dr. Josef Mengele, to rekindle the Third Reich.
|
|
|
Toy Soldiers (1991)
Character: Headmaster
After federal agents arrest a drug czar and put him on trial, the cartel leader's vicious son storms a prep school and takes its students hostage. They rebel against the armed intruders and try to take back their academy by any means necessary.
|
|
|
You Must Be Joking (1965)
Character: Captain Tabasco
A motley group of soldiers are set loose on swinging England in an initiative test to collect a selection of esoteric items.
|
|
|
The Missionary (1982)
Character: The Bishop of London
In 1905, after 10 years of missionary work in Africa, the Rev. Charles Fortesque is recalled to England, where his bishop gives him his new assignment - to minister to London's prostitutes.
|
|
|
Zulu Dawn (1979)
Character: Colonel Pulleine
In 1879, the British suffer a great loss at the Battle of Isandlwana due to incompetent leadership.
|
|
|
The Cruel Sea (1953)
Character: Morell
At the start of World War II, Cmdr. Ericson is assigned to convoy escort HMS Compass Rose with inexperienced officers and men just out of training. The winter seas make life miserable enough, but the men must also harden themselves to rescuing survivors of U-Boat attacks, while seldom able to strike back. Traumatic events afloat and ashore create a warm bond between the skipper and his first officer
|
|
|
Alfie (1966)
Character: The Abortionist
A young man leads a promiscuous lifestyle until several life reversals make him rethink his purposes and goals in life.
|
|
|
The Wicked Lady (1983)
Character: Sir Ralph Skelton
Caroline is to be wed to Sir Ralph and invites her sister Barbara to be her bridesmaid. Barbara seduces Ralph, however, and she becomes the new Lady, but despite her new wealthy situation, she gets bored and turns to highway robbery for thrills. While on the road she meets a famous highwayman, and they continue as a team, but some people begin suspecting her identity, and she risks death if she continues her nefarious activities.
|
|
|
Robin and Marian (1976)
Character: Will Scarlet
Robin Hood, aging none too gracefully, returns exhausted from the Crusades to woo and win Maid Marian one last time.
|
|
|
The Sea Gull (1968)
Character: Dr. Yevgeny Dorn
Film adaptation of Anton Chekhov's story of life in rural Russia during the latter part of the 19th century.
|
|
|
The Hound of the Baskervilles (1983)
Character: Dr. Mortimer
When a nobleman is threatened by a family curse on his newly inherited estate, detective Sherlock Holmes is hired to investigate.
|
|
|
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008)
Character: Marcus Brody (archive footage) (uncredited)
Set during the Cold War, the Soviets—led by sword-wielding Irina Spalko—are in search of a crystal skull which has supernatural powers related to a mystical Lost City of Gold. Indy is coerced to head to Peru at the behest of a young man whose friend—and Indy's colleague—Professor Oxley has been captured for his knowledge of the skull's whereabouts.
|
|
|
Brimstone & Treacle (1982)
Character: Tom Bates
A mysterious stranger inserts himself into a troubled family's life, blurring the lines between good and evil as he cares for their disabled daughter.
|
|
|
The Love She Sought (1990)
Character: James O'Hannon
An aging school teacher (Lansbury) at a Catholic grammar school in Minnesota questions her life's existence when she has to start battling a new bishop (Prosky). As a result she retires and moves to Ireland where she seeks an admirer (Elliott) with whom she has been corresponding for five years.
|
|
|
The Night My Number Came Up (1955)
Character: Fl. Lt. McKenzie
British Air Marshal Hardie is attending a party in Hong Kong when he hears of a dream, told by a pilot, in which Hardie's flight to Tokyo on a small Dakota propeller plane crashes on a Japanese beach. Hardie dismisses the dream as pure fantasy, but while he is flying to Tokyo the next day, circumstances start changing to align with the pilot's vivid vision, and it looks like the dream disaster may become a reality.
|
|
|
Maurice (1987)
Character: Dr. Barry
After his lover rejects him, Maurice attempts to come to terms with his sexuality within the restrictiveness of Edwardian society.
|
|
|
The Crazy Kill (1975)
Character: Dr. Frank Henson
A doctor and his wife are held hostage in their country home by an escaped convict and his sidekick, but a journalist's arrival complicates matters.
|
|
|
Russian Roulette (1975)
Character: John Petapiece
An RCMP officer is ordered to discreetly take a Russian immigrant into custody in advance of a state visit by the Soviet premier. When the prisoner is kidnapped, the officer is drawn into a complicated assassination scheme.
|
|
|
The Vault of Horror (1973)
Character: Diltant (segment 5 "Drawn and Quartered")
The sequel to Tales from the Crypt. Five strangers trapped in a basement vault converse about their recurring nightmares. Their stories include vampires, bodily dismemberment, east Indian mysticism, an insurance scam, and an artist who kills by painting his victims' deaths.
|
|
|
The Signalman (1976)
Character: The Signalman
A traveller comes across a signalman stationed by the exit of a railway tunnel in a deep cutting. The traveller becomes familiar with the signalman, and finds that he is troubled by an apparition which appears by the tunnel.
|
|
|
The Moon and Sixpence (1959)
Character: The Writer
A staid, dull Englishman abruptly deserts his wife and children to become a painter in the South Seas.
|
|
|
Camille (1984)
Character: Count de Noilly
Camille is a courtesan in Paris. She falls deeply in love with a young man of promise, Armand Duval. When Armand's father begs her not to ruin his hope of a career and position by marrying Armand, she acquiesces and leaves her lover. However, when poverty and terminal illness overwhelm her, Camille discovers that Armand has not lost his love for her.
|
|
|
The Ringer (1952)
Character: John Lemley
An underhand solicitor receives threatening notes, and the police are called in to protect him.
|
|
|
The Whoopee Boys (1986)
Character: Col. Phelps
Two obnoxious and dim-witted misfits attempt to save a school for needy children by attempting to sneak into the wealthy high society of Palm Beach to get the money needed for their cause.
|
|
|
The Holly and the Ivy (1952)
Character: Michael Gregory
An English clergyman's neglect of his grown children, in his zeal to tend to his parishioners, comes to the surface at a Christmas family gathering.
|
|
|
Dear Mr. Prohack (1949)
Character: Oswald Morfrey
A modern-day retelling of Arnold Bennett's novel, in which a Treasury official with a reputation for fiscal prudence is left a great deal of money and has no idea how to cope with sudden personal wealth.
|
|
|
They Who Dare (1954)
Character: Sergeant Corcoran
In Greece during the war a small group of British commandoes and patriots land on an island with orders to attack two airfields from which the Luftwaffe is threatening allied forces in Egypt. The island is crawling with troops, and even moving by night the men soon run into trouble.
|
|
|
Cuba (1979)
Character: Donald Skinner
A British mercenary arrives in pre-Revolution Cuba to help train the corrupt General Batista's army against Castro's guerrillas while he also romances a former lover now married to an unscrupulous plantation owner.
|
|
|
The Hound of the Baskervilles (1978)
Character: Stapleton
When a nobleman is threatened by a family curse on his newly inherited estate, detective Sherlock Holmes is hired to investigate.
|
|
|
Saint Jack (1979)
Character: William Leigh
Jack Flowers is an American hustler trying to make his fortune in 1970s Singapore in small time pimping. His dreams of building a fortune by running a brothel himself and returning to the States is materialized when he is offered the opportunity by the CIA to run a brothel for the R&R activities of U.S. soldiers on leave in Singapore.
|
|
|
Pacific Destiny (1956)
Character: Arthur Grimble
Life is strange and worrying for a cadet who arrives in the Pacific in the colonial service. And the testy resident commissioner, who had been expecting an experienced man, soon shows his disapproval.
|
|
|
Nothing But the Best (1964)
Character: Charlie Prince
Success has James Brewster's name written all over it, and he also has his heart set on his boss's daughter. A con artist hires him to help out on a bank scheme, but then again, James will do anything to get rich and be the most successful businessman in Britain-even if it means murder!!!
|
|
|
Percy's Progress (1974)
Character: Sir Emmanuel Whitbread
Percy, the man with the world's first penis transplant, discovers that there is a chemical in the world's water that makes men impotent.
|
|
|
|
|
Transmutations (1985)
Character: Dr. Savary
When high class hooker Nicole is kidnapped from her brothel, Rich businessman Hugo Motherskille hires her ex love Roy Bain to find her. Investigating the disappearance, he eventually finds traces that lead to Dr. Savary, who has produced a strange white powder that's coveted by a race of deformed human beings who live in the underworld in the sewers below the city.
|
|
|
Across the Andes by Frog (1977)
Character: Mr. Gregory
Explorer Walter Snetterton and his party travel to the Andes to prove his theory that frogs are able to climb mountains. Due to the Cup Final the only person willing to act as guide is an elderly - but extremely agile - old lady and as Snetterton prepares to strike camp all his men desert him for the charms of the local ladies. Snetterton is never found but the frogs manage to escape and make it to Mexico City, thus proving his theory to be right.
|
|
|
The Sound Barrier (1952)
Character: Christopher Ridgefield
A young RAF pilot tests his father-in-law’s prototype supersonic aircraft to the limit, at a time of intense development in the field of aviation, just as commercial jet airliners are about to enter service.
|
|
|
A Private Function (1984)
Character: Dr. Swaby
In the summer of 1947, Britain prepares to commemorate the wedding of Princess Elizabeth and Prince Phillip. To get around food-rationing laws, Dr. Charles Swaby, accountant Henry Allardyce and solicitor Frank Lockwood are fattening a black-market pig for the big day. Egged on by his wife, meek Gilbert Chilvers steals the swine, but the couple must conceal it from inspector Morris Wormold.
|
|
|
To the Devil a Daughter (1976)
Character: Henry Beddows
An American occult novelist battles to save the soul of a young girl from a group of Satanists, led by an excommunicated priest, who plan on using her as the representative of the Devil on Earth.
|
|
|
The House That Dripped Blood (1971)
Character: Charles Hillyer (segment 1 "Method for Murder")
A Scotland Yard investigator looks into four mysterious cases involving an unoccupied house.
|
|
|
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
Character: Dr. Marcus Brody
When Dr. Indiana Jones – the tweed-suited professor who just happens to be a celebrated archaeologist – is hired by the government to locate the legendary Ark of the Covenant, he finds himself up against the entire Nazi regime.
|
|
|
Scorchers (1991)
Character: Howler
Bayou La Teche, Louisiana sizzles as the Cajun town celebrates the wedding of Splendid and Dolan. The trouble comes on the wedding night when Splendid is determined to maintain her innocence. On the other side of town Splendids' cousin has her own problems. Her man has been sleeping with Thais, the town hooker. She heads to the Tiger Cafe with gun in hand to get back her man.
|
|
|
The Rise and Rise of Michael Rimmer (1970)
Character: Peter NIss
Fresh-faced young Michael Rimmer worms his way into an opinion poll company and is soon running the place. He uses this as a springboard to get into politics and in the mini-skirted flared-trousered world of 1970 Britain starts to rise through the Tory ranks.
|
|