Oliver Reed
40 titles
Filmography
40 results

The Brood
(1979)Frank Carveth and his ex-wife Nola are locked in a brutal custody battle over their daughter. Nola seeks therapy from Dr. Raglan, whose controversial practices include Psychoplasmics, a treatment that encourages patients to give form to their inner conflicts and anger. As the fragile Nola digs ever deeper into her own psyche, she births a series of mutant, homicidal children that carry on her wish for revenge against anyone who has ever wronged her.

Tommy
(1975)The Who's classic rock opera is brought energetically to life by an outstanding cast including manyof music's biggest stars. Roger Daltrey is Tommy and Elton John portrays the Pinball Wizard. Appearances by Tina Turner and Jack Nicholson.

Hannibal Brooks
(1969)The dilemma of a WWII British POW: How to safely and successfully transport an elephant from the Munich Zoo over the Swiss Alps... and while doing all that--escaping!

The Assassination Bureau
(1969)An investigator tests The Assassination Bureau, which kills only those who deserve it, by putting out a contract to kill its leader on the eve of WW1.
Sitting Target
(1972)A killer has one more victim on his hit list — his faithless wife! Oliver Reed snarls and seethes his way through a brute-force 70's crime thriller in the tradition of Get Carter. Douglas Hickox brings his filmmaking intensity to a story of revenge set in a London as bleak and brooding as the prison from which convicted killer Harry Lomart and his fellow inmate escape. Once free, Harry sets out to exterminate his seductive wife (Jill St. John), who carries another man's child. Armed with a handgun, fueled by rage, Harry draws closer to his sitting target. Also closing in: a police inspector, who's determined to protect the hunted woman. Reed and McShane — one grim, one voluble, and both steeped in violence — make an intimidating tough-guy team.

The Party's Over
(1965)A cleancut American businessman goes to London in search of his missing teenage girlfriend who’s fallen in with a wild gang of nihilistic beatniks.

The Hunting Party
(1971)While away on a hunting trip, a ruthless rancher discovers a gang has kidnapped his adulterous wife and begins to gun them down, one by one.

Z.P.G.
(1972)A nightmare of the future...or tomorrow's reality? Have a baby- go to the death chamber! A husband and wife (Oliver Reed and Geraldine Chaplin) defy the state's anti-procreation ban in this sci-fi what if? Set in a grim, overpopulated techno-future where message satellites drone overhead, citizens wear breathing masks as protection from the poisonous air and common housecats are among the extinct fauna displayed in natural history museums. Unwilling to accept the robot dolls offered by the state as replacements for children, the young couple secretly care for their infant amid a malicious society that rewards informants. Certainly they cannot keep their secret long. But will it be long enough for them to escape to a far-off land of new beginnings?

Ransom
(1977)A vengeful Native American stalks a resort town, murdering cops and rich people with a crossbow, demanding a ransom to stop the bloodshed.

The System
(1964)The seaside town of Roxham sparks to life only in the summer. So, to skim the cream off the season's spoils, the local boys put their "System" into operation.

The Revenger
(1989)A man, with the help of a friend, sets out to rescue his wife from the clutches of an evil mastermind who holds her hostage over a matter of $500,000.

Dr. Heckyl and Mr. Hype
(1980)Lovelorn and disfigured, a kindly doctor tries to poison himself, instead transforming into a dashing ladykiller with an insatiable thirst for blood.

Revolver
(1973)After violent criminals kidnap the wife of a tough prison warden and demand the release of an inmate, but the warden strikes back with a hostage of his own!

Jeremiah
(1998)The prophet, compelled by faith, abandons the woman he loves and suffers persecution to warn of Jerusalem’s imminent destruction by the Babylonians.

The Three Musketeers
(1973)One of the best film adaptations of Alexandre Dumas’ classic charts the mission to save a queen’s honor and retrieve her necklace from a secret lover.

Prisoner of Honor
(1991)Prisoner of Honor documents the French Dreyfus Affair that saw a French Captain sent to Devils' Island for espionage near the end of the nineteenth century. Richard Dreyfuss plays Colonel Picquart who is given the job of justifying Dreyfus' sentence. Instead, he discovers that Dreyfus, a Jew, was merely a convenient scapegoat for the actions of the true culprit, a member of the French General staff. His attempt to right the wrong sees his military career ended and the famous French author, Emile Zola, found guilty of libel.

The Curse of the Werewolf
(1961)This re-imagining of the classic horror story is set in 18th century Spain and follows an orphan child who terrifies those around him when he becomes a werewolf after a hunting expedition.

The Four Musketeers
(1974)In the sequel to The Three Musketeers, Milady is determined to make the Musketeers pay for foiling her plot to discredit the Queen of France.

Burnt Offerings
(1976)When a family rents an isolated country mansion for the summer, they find themselves surrounded by an evil presence that feeds on human suffering.

The Triple Echo
(1972)Barton (Brian Deacon) is a soldier in World War 2 England. He meets Alice (Glenda Jackson), who is looking after her farm as her husband is a Prisoner of War in Japan. He stays overnight and then decides to dessert and stay with Alice. People in the village are told he is her sister and Barton dresses for the part. Army Sergeant (Oliver Reed) comes to the farm, giving Barton undesired attention.