Vanessa Redgrave
37 titles
Filmography
37 results

Call the Midwife
Inspired by the memoirs of Jennifer Worth, Call the Midwife is set in the changing times of the 1950s and ‘60s, and follows the nurses, midwives and nuns working at Nonnatus House, in London's hard-up East End.

A Rumor of Angels
(2000)Still grieving the tragic death of his mother, young James (Trevor Morgan) is sent to stay with his Uncle Charlie (Ron Livingston) on the Maine coast, where he meets an eccentric old woman (Vanessa Redgrave) who will change his life forever.

Wetherby
(1985)When a mysterious new acquaintance kills himself in front of her, a young woman becomes haunted by her own long-repressed romantic past.

Mrs. Dalloway
(1997)In 1923 London, an aging socialite’s well-planned party is overshadowed by the return of an old suitor, prompting her to relive a day in her youth.

Mrs Lowry & Son
(2019)Based on the life of L.S. Lowry, this is the tale of the artist’s struggle to live with his controlling mother while working as a rent collector.

Out of Season
(1975)Another day in the life for mother-daughter team Ann and Joanna at their quaint seaside hotel takes a surprising turn with the arrival of a guest.

What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?
(1991)Una estrella infantil olvidada hace mucho tiempo reprende y abusa de su hermana en silla de ruedas después de que su fama vea un resurgimiento.

The Lost Girls
(2022)Like her grandmother and her mother Jane before her, Wendy must escape Peter Pan’s hold on her and the promise he wants her to keep.

The Gathering Storm
(2002)In his darkest hours as both a husband and a politician, Winston Churchill found the strength to wage a solitary battle against Nazi tyranny. Albert Finney and Vanessa Redgrave star as Winston and Clementine Churchill in this intimate story that chronicles the obstacles they faced in their marriage against the backdrop of the growing threat of World War II.

The Whistleblower
(2010)A searing drama, based on real events, about a Nebraska cop sent to keep peace in Bosnia who discovers sex-trafficked girls being used by the U.N.

Song for Marion
(2012)A curmudgeonly old widower pays tribute to his late wife by joining an eccentric senior singing group, which helps put him back in tune with life.

Camelot
(1967)This lavish film adaptation of the hit Broadway musical celebrates a fleeting, mythical time of love and chivalry--the reign of King Arthur and the Knights of The Round Table. Although torn apart by the conflicts between passion, love, honor and duty, it was a golden era that could have been ... and could yet be.

The Charge of the Light Brigade
(1968)The contrasts between Victorian England’s aristocracy and lower classes play out in a very bad plan to attack a Russian naval base in the Crimean War.
The Sea Gull
(1968)A brilliant cast brings playwright Anton Chekhov's masterpiece of the capricious power of passion to the screen. The story is set during two gatherings, two years apart, on the same Russian country estate and among six lovers, most of whom are not loved in return. Those who are hard-shelled and worldly shrug off romantic disappointment. Those who are not, cannot...and tragedy ensues. With direction by Sidney Lumet (Network, Dog Day Afternoon, The Verdict) and the talents of James Mason, Vanessa Redgrave, Simone Signoret, David Warner, Denholm Elliott and more lights of film and stage, The Sea Gull resonates with profound emotion.

A Quiet Place in the Country
(1968)Vanessa Redgrave and Franco Nero star in this visually arresting Giallo horror film about an painter whose artistic block is accompanied by a series of bizarre nightmares that steadily worsen...and which may signal a descent into madness!
Consuming Passions
(1988)A satire about what happens when three men are accidentally shoved into a vat of chocolate in a confectionery factory, and chocolate lovers favour the resulting confections.

Oh! What a Lovely War
(1969)Oh! What a Lovely War features a stellar cast, and by fusing the surreal with the factual, and juxtaposing savagely funny satire with quiet sorrow, Richard Attenborough has created the oddest and most outstanding film ever made about the “game” that became World War One.

Crime and Punishment
(2002)A modern day interpretation of Fydor Dostoyevsky's timeless classic, "CRIME AND PUNISHMENT" is one man's search for the true meaning of his existence. But while enlightened by his revelations, he is ultimately and tragically, unable to elude his destiny.

Prick Up Your Ears
(1987)The true story of British playwright Joe Orton and how his skyrocket to fame ended in his own brutal, shocking murder by his longtime lover.

Wilde
(1997)Brilliant, egocentric and completely unique, Oscar Wilde (Stephen Fry) defied convention on almost every level. While coming to terms with his newfound sexual identity, he also experienced his most creative period, resulting in some of his best-known works. As his literary career flourished, the self-realization of his homosexuality caused Wilde enormous torment as he juggled marriage, fatherhoodand responsibility with his obsessive love for Lord Alfred Douglas (Jude Law). It is this passionate and stormy relationship which consumed and ultimately destroyed him. Featuring a brilliant supporting cast including Jennifer Ehle, Academy Award(r)-Winner Vanessa Redgrave and Tom Wilkinson as Wilde's chief adversary, the Marquis of Queensbury.