Paul Stewart
16 titles
Filmography
16 results

The World at War
(1942)From Pearl Harbor to Nazi Germany, this historical documentary uses archival footage to examine the major events that led up to World War II.
Appointment with Danger
(1950)Investigating the murder of a postal inspector, Al Goddard follows up a lead from the only witness, a nun. Goddard infiltrates a band of thieves, but he is suspected by psychotic Joe Regas and must lie and cheat to convince him.

Loan Shark
(1952)In this film noir, an ex-convict, now on the right side of the law, infiltrates a group of loan sharks that preys upon desperate factory workers.

The Joe Louis Story
(1953)This film follows the life and career of heavyweight champion Joe Louis, who battled opponents inside the ring and racism outside it.
Top Secret Affair
(1957)
Fire and Ice: The Rocket Richard Riot
(2000)In 1955, as the tightly contested hockey season was coming to an end, the star of the Montreal Canadians was suspended by the president of the league, setting off a huge riot in the streets of Montreal. This riot added to the sparks of the political revolution in Quebec that led to the rise of the separatist movement, which still flourishes today.

Champion
(1949)A boxer pushes friends and family aside during his single-minded quest to win the middleweight title, his only way out of the poverty of the Depression.

The Window
(1949)Nine-year-old Tommy Woodry has a history of making things up, but he insists he really saw this: a murder in his own apartment building! No one believes Tommy's story. No one except the killers. From its taut pursuits to its sinister sense of danger lurking behind any apartment door, The Window is a minor gem of film noir. Bobby Driscoll, playing perhaps the genre's youngest protagonist, received an honorary Oscar for his portrayal of the imperiled boy. Noted cinematographer Ted Tetzlaff (Notorious) directs, ramping up the tension in this film based on a story by Cornell Woolrich (Rear Window).

A Child Is Waiting
(1963)A teacher at a Down syndrome institution bonds with a boy named Reuben, but their connection challenges the rules set by the wary head doctor.

Opening Night
(1977)HD. Gena Rowlands is a renowned actress who teeters on the edge of a breakdown as she counts down the days toward a big Broadway opening.

Edge of Doom
(1950)A mentally unbalanced young man kills a priest. One of the priest's colleagues sets out to find the killer.

Carbine Williams
(1952)Oscar-winner James Stewart stars in the title role as a jailed bootlegge r who invents the famed rifle and gains his freedom, co-starring Oscar-nominee Jean Hagen and James Arness.

Revenge of the Pink Panther
(1978)The ever-bungling Inspector Clouseau dodges bombs, bullets, karate chops, and his own blundering screw-ups β much to Chief Inspector Dreyfus' dismay.

Twelve O'Clock High
(1949)This gritty World War II action drama staring Gregory Peck, Oscar winner Dean Jagger, Hugh Marlowe, Gary Merrill and Millard Mitchell is seen as one of the most realistic portrayals of the heroics and perils of war.

W.C. Fields and Me
(1976)Following the romance between the iconic comedian WC Fields and his mistress, Carlotta Monti. Follow Fields from his beginnings as a Ziegfeld Follies headliner in New York to the movie sets of Hollywood.

City Beneath the Sea
(1971)Two American divers are distracted by fair ladies and skulduggery while trying to salvage a gold ship off Jamaica