Will Geer
12 titles
Filmography
12 results

The Manchu Eagle Murder Caper Mystery
(1975)A poultry farmer becomes a novice private eye and solves various capers around his small town, including the murder of the local milkman.

Salt of the Earth
(1954)Based on an actual strike against the Empire Zinc Mine in New Mexico, the film deals with the prejudice against Mexican-American workers.

The Hanged Man
(1974)Milagrosamente aún con vida después de ser ahorcado, un hombre armado defiende la granja de una joven viuda de un despiadado saqueador de tierras.

Unknown Powers
(1978)Hollywood stars guide you on a mind-bending, immersive journey into paranormal phenomena, including ESP, psychic surgery, and past-life hypnosis.

Seconds
(1966)An unhappy middle-aged banker agrees to a procedure that will fake his death and give him a completely new look and identity - one that comes with its own price.

Napoleon and Samantha
(1972)Two young children suddenly find themselves in charge of a gentle, aging circus lion. However, when they are threatened with being split up by stern authorities, the trio embarks on a perilous journey across the wilds of the American Northwest.

The Billion Dollar Hobo
(1977)To inherit a fortune, a clumsy man must travel the rails as a penniless hobo, just as his rich uncle did in the dark days of the Depression.

Black Like Me
(1964)True story of a White reporter who darkens his skin during the 1960s’ civil rights-era to feel the reality of racist American hate toward Black men.

Lust for Gold
(1949)Looking to rediscover Arizona's legendary gold mine, the Lost Dutchman, a man retraces the same steps taken by his grandfather, a Dutch miner who finds millions in missing Spanish gold and then is tricked out of his fortune by a ruthless couple.

Bandolero!
(1968)Two outlaw brothers (James Stewart and Dean Martin) on the run with a beautiful hostage (Raquel Welch) join forces with the lawmen following them to fight off Mexican bandoleros.

The Crucible
(1967)An all-star cast brings Arthur Miller’s play about the Salem witch trials, written as an allegory for the 1950s McCarthy hearings, to the screen.

Intruder in the Dust
(1949)Who shot Vinson Gowrie in the back? The jailhouse at Jefferson, Mississippi, may not hold the actual killer, but it does have the suspect an angry lynch mob wants: Lucas Beauchamp, who has long refused to exhibit the obsequious attitude expected of black people in Jefferson. Based on William Faulkner's novel and filmed in his hometown of Oxford, Intruder in the Dust is both a gripping whodunit and a milestone of social-conscience filmmaking. Claude Jarman, Jr. (reunited with director Clarence Brown of The Yearling) plays the youth whose troubled sense of right makes him a catalyst in solving the mystery. And Juano Hernandez is memorable as Lucas: proud, perceptive, strong words that also describe this superb film named one of 1949's 10 Best by the National Board of Review.