Carroll Baker
30 titles
Filmography
30 results

How the West Was Won
(1962)Academy Award-winning epic follows the trials and tribulations of three generations of a frontier family as they embark to tame the wild American West.

Something Wild
(1961)A conservative executive accepts a ride with a wild, eccentric woman, who takes him on an outrageous odyssey that turns both their worlds upside down.

Bridge to the Sun
(1961)While staying in Washington, D.C., Tennessee-born Gwen Harold falls in love with and marries Japanese diplomat Hidenari (Terry) Terasaki, despite the objections from her family.

A Quiet Place to Kill
(1970)A deadly love triangle begins when an injured race car driver accepts her ex-husband's invitation to recover at his seaside estate with his new wife.
Station Six-Sahara
(1963)
Knife of Ice
(1972)An intense horror movie with an insane final twist centers on an imperiled mute woman being pursued by a sexual psychotic in the Spanish countryside.

Sylvia
(1965)A private detective falls in love with a poet whose shady past he has been hired to check.

Paranoia
(1969)Recently widowed, a jet-setting lonely American socialite arrives in Italy and is seduced by young couple into a world of sex, drugs, and extortion.

So Sweet... So Perverse
(1969)In a kinky retelling of “Diabolique,” lush Paris locations, trippy flashbacks, and a swinging score adorn a tale of abuse, lust, danger, and revenge.

The Fourth Victim
(1971)When a wealthy Englishman's third wife dies suddenly, the police launch an investigation upon discovering that his previous wives met similar ends.

Harlow
(1965)An account of the troubled life and brief career of Jean Harlow, who rose to Hollywood stardom during the 1930s.

The Sky is Falling
(1975)Hopeless American expatriates inhabit a small Spanish village where residents are mysteriously dying after the arrival of a religious cult.

Cheyenne Autumn
(1964)John Ford's last Western masterpiece chronicles the struggle by Cheyenne Indians to migrate homeward across the Great Plains in 1878.
You Must Remember This: The Warner Bros. Story
(2008)The power and the stories. The trends and trendsetters. The mirror that reflects our life and times. It's Rick sticking his neck out for nobody. Superman rescuing Lois Lane. Bette Davis pumping lead into the man she loves. George Clooney masterminding a Vegas heist. Harry Potter wielding his powers. You must remember these....Clint Eastwood narrates Richard Schickel's perceptive five-episode, 85th-anniversary salute to the studio that gained a four-footed hold with an unlikely star (Rin Tin Tin), championed tough guys and dames who gave the Depression and the Nazis the raspberry, countered the box-office onslaught of TV and emerged as a 21st-century giant. Art, business, stars, moneymen, America - it's an enthralling tale. And it's all here.

Cyclone
(1978)After their plane crashes into the ocean, a group of survivors board a small boat, where they face grim realities when their food supply runs out.

Captain Apache
(1971)Un oficial del ejército estadounidense llamado el Capitán Apache investiga un asesinato y descubre un complot de asesinato presidencial.

On Fire
(1987)Arson investigator Joe faces unwanted retirement, spiraling into depression. His devoted family tries to help, but he struggles to let them in.

Charlton Heston: For All Seasons
(1995)He’s been a king and a slave, a hero and a villain, this leading man is renowned for the heroic figures he played during his early years in Hollywood.

The Big Country
(1958)When a ship captain heads west to join his fiancée on her father’s ranch, he is thrust into the middle of a bitter feud between two families.

The Greatest Story Ever Told
(1965)With an all-star cast, the life and teachings of Jesus Christ of Nazareth are retold on a grand scale in this inspiring, larger-than-life film.