Gregory Peck
25 titles
Filmography
25 results

The Omen
(1976)American diplomat Robert adopts Damien when his wife, Katherine, delivers a stillborn child. Father Brennan warns Robert that Damien will kill Katherine's unborn child. Shortly thereafter, Brennan dies and Katherine miscarries when Damien pushes her off a balcony. As more people around Damien die, Robert investigates Damien's background and realizes his adopted son may be the Antichrist.

Captain Horatio Hornblower R.N.
(1951)Hornblower (Gregory Peck) battles the French and the Spanish forces during the Napoleonic wars, but also finds time for romance.

The Guns of Navarone
(1961)One of the most exciting action films ever made! It's W.W. II, and concealed deep within the solid rock of a cliff, impregnable to assault by sea or air, are the German Army's mighty guns of Navarone. Because they control a strategic channel in the Aegean Sea, it's imperative that the guns are destroyed. A specialised commando team is assembled. Included are mountaineer Keith Mallory, explosive..

The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit
(1956)The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit is the powerful story of postwar hopes and dreams, adapted from Sloan WilsonÂ's best-seller. Gregory Peck stars as a doting husband and father who gives up his small time job and enters the thrilling world of advertising in Manhattan.

Cape Fear
(1962)A Southern lawyer (Gregory Peck) sets a trap on a houseboat for a twisted ex-convict (Robert Mitchum) terrorizing his family.

The Boys from Brazil
(1978)A Nazi-hunter chases infamous Dr. Josef Mengele, who has escaped to Paraguay to revive the Third Reich

The Bravados
(1958)Intense story of a man who relentlessly tracks down the four men reponsible for raping and killing his wife - but as the quest goes on, is he sacrificing his own humanity?

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.

Moby Dick
(1956)When a sailor joins the crew of a whaling ship captained by a man bent on killing a white whale, he is swept up in an obsessive and fatal pursuit

Gentleman's Agreement
(1947)A writer passes himself off as Jewish to pen a series of articles on anti-Semitism, and what he learns opens his eyes to the bigotry in the world around him.

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.

On the Beach
(1959)After World War III has ended life in the Northern Hemisphere and as the fallout heads for Melbourne, a sub of scientists investigate cyptic signals.

The Gunfighter
(1950)All gunfighter Jimmy Ringo wants is to reunite with his wife, but she can't forget his mistakes. Meanwhile, he faces trouble from all directions.

MacArthur
(1977)Giving a farewell address to West Point, General Douglas MacArthur reflects on his rich military career, from the Battle of Bataan to defying President Truman.

Mackenna's Gold
(1969)A sheriff has committed to memory a mythic map that leads to a lcanyon of gold - and now a bandit, his gang and others force the lawman to take them to the legendary loot.

Billy Two Hats
(1974)Archie and Billy, two bandits by trade, find themselves pursued by a ruthless marshal determined to bring them to justice, dead or alive.

The Sea Wolves
(1980)Screen legend Gregory Peck and Roger Moore lead an allstar cast in this suspenseful and powerful true story of a retired British cavalry unit undertaking an espionage operation in WWII.

The Snows of Kilimanjaro
(1952)A Hemingwayesque writer plays the movie of his life in his head as he lays dying from a hunting accident wound in the shadow of Mount Kilamanjaro.

Marooned
(1969)A gripping portrayal of three astronauts who, while on an extended special mission, find themselves unable to re-enter the Earth's atmosphere.

To Kill a Mockingbird
(1962)In a dusty Southern town during the Great Depression, a white woman accuses a black man of rape. Though he is obviously innocent, the outcome of his trial is such a foregone conclusion that no lawyer will step forward to defend him—except Atticus Finch. Finch's compassionate defense costs him many friendships but earns him the respect and admiration of his two children.