John McIntire
21 titles
Filmography
21 results

The Phenix City Story
(1955)Richard Kiley stars in this gripping crime drama about a crusading lawyer who takes on the corrupt machine running a Southern town.

The New Daughters of Joshua Cabe
(1976)While posing as his daughters, three women discover an elderly homesteader has been falsely imprisoned for murder and hatch a plot to smuggle him out.
The President's Lady
(1953)Andrew Jackson attempts to prove that his wife is innocent of scandalous charges. Romance from pages of American history.

Apache
(1954)The lone Apache, Massai, valiantly fights a one-man war against the U.S. Army in his attempt to remain free at any cost.

The Gunfight at Dodge City
(1959)Seeking a fresh start, Bat Masterson (Joel McCrea) rolls into Dodge City with a chip on his shoulder and a gun on his hip. But soon, his mysterious past will catch up with him when an old friend calls in a favor...one that might cost him his life!

Stranger on Horseback
(1955)Circuit Judge Rick Thorne hunts for justice in a small frontier town under the feudal thumb of the suspected killer’s tyrannical cattle baron father.

Herbie Rides Again
(1974)Herbie comes to the rescue when a greedy real estate tycoon is after an elderly widow's home.

Powderkeg
(1971)A tongue-in-cheek adventure set in 1914 about a pair of trouble-shooting cowpokes hired to rescue the passengers of a train hijacked from Mexico.

The Mark of the Hawk
(1957)A colonial African country is the backdrop for this Sidney Poitier classic about a man trying to keep his people and the British Colonists from war.

Summer and Smoke
(1961)Academy Award. winner Geraldine Page stars as the spinster Alma. Laurence Harvey is Doctor John Buchanan, the handsome young man Alma has loved since childhood. But when a sultry vamp appears (Rita Moreno), the doctor falls hard, descending into a seamy nightlife and leaving Alma's dreams behind like forgotten embers.

Flaming Star
(1960)A young mixed-race Native American must choose sides between his white father and his Kiowa mother when his mother's people go on the warpath. The film examines the effects of a mixed-race family on the community at large. This mainly dramatic role is considered one of Elvis's better on-screen efforts.

Rooster Cogburn
(1975)An adventure-filled follow-up to True Grit, Rooster Cogburn stars John Wayne as the rough-and-tumble lawman and Katharine Hepburn as a missionary who joins him to avenge her father's death.

Turner & Hooch
(1989)Scott Turner, a neat freak detective, reluctantly teams up with a slobbering pooch named Hooch.

Francis
(1950)A dimwitted lieutenant is labeled a lunatic when he insists a talking mule helped him on his military ventures.

Psycho
(1960)Phoenix secretary Marion Crane, on the lam after stealing $40,000 from her employer in order to run away with her boyfriend, Sam Loomis, is overcome by exhaustion during a heavy rainstorm. Travelling on the back roads to avoid the police, she stops for the night at the ramshackle Bates Motel and meets the polite but highly strung proprietor Norman Bates, a young man with an interest in taxidermy and a difficult relationship with his mother.

The Tin Star
(1957)A young sheriff enlists the aid of a seasoned bounty hunter to combat the outlaws preying on his town.

Two Rode Together
(1961)One of the first popular Westerns to recognize the dignity of Indian life, this stirring action drama was directed by John Ford and stars Jimmy Stewart as a cynical and corrupt U.S. Marshal.

Scene of the Crime
(1949)While his wife urges him to quit the force, a Los Angeles homicide detective works to solve the murder of his old partner with ties to local bookies.

The Scarlet Coat
(1955)Colonial counter-intelligence officer Cornel Wilde poses as a deserter to ferret out a British spy in this action-packed Revolutionary War adventure.

The Kentuckian
(1955)Eli Wakefield (Burt Lancaster) and his son are Kentucky adventurers longing for life on the Texas frontier. They learn, however, that their greatest challenge lies not in the uncharted wilderness, but in the people they meet along the way.