Robert Sean Leonard
16 titles
Filmography
16 results

Swing Kids
(1993)American big-band jazz beats in the hearts of young German friends confronted by the Nazis.

My Best Friend Is a Vampire
(1987)After a woman seduces him, a young man transforms into a blood-sucking vampire. Instead of fighting his affliction, he tries to change.

Standoff
(1998)The FBI attempt to raid the headquarters of a heavily armed religious fanatic group, but the operation goes terribly wrong and a couple of feds seek protection at an abandoned farm. But they are not the only ones there…

House
Dr. Gregory House (Hugh Laurie) is devoid of anything resembling bedside manner and wouldn't even talk to his patients if he could get away with it. Dealing with his own constant physical pain, he uses a cane that seems to punctuate his acerbic, brutally honest demeanor. While his behavior can border on antisocial, House is a brilliant diagnostician whose unconventional thinking and flawless instincts afford him widespread respect. An infectious disease specialist, House thrives on the challenge of solving medical puzzles in order to save lives. He has assembled an elite team of young experts to help him unravel these diagnostic mysteries: neurologist Dr. Eric Foreman (Omar Epps); immunologist Dr. Allison Cameron (Jennifer Morrison); and intensevist Dr. Robert Chase (Jesse Spencer). House has a good friend and confidant in oncology specialist Dr. James Wilson (Robert Sean Leonard), with whom he consults with on a regular basis.

Dead Poets Society
(1989)It's 1959 and an unconventional teacher comes to a staid prep school in this moving drama. He tells the boys of a secret society of people who go against the status quo and encourage them to seize the day. When this philosophy leads to a tragedy, he's fired and the students leap to his defence.

Tape
(2001)Three old high school friends dissect painful memories.

The Boys Next Door
(1996)A devoted social worker must find a way to say goodbye when he decides to leave his job assisting four men with intellectual disabilities.

Killer: A Journal of Murder
(1996)A prison guard (Leonard) at Leavenworth with lofty ideals and hopes of reform struggles to understand a violent, hateful and conscienceless convict (Woods). The result is a written testimonial to a crime that no one could have predicted. Based on a true story and Gaddis and Long's book "Killer: A Journal of Murder."
Into the Deep: America, Whaling & The World
(2010)Into the Deep: America, Whaling& the World is a two-hour documentary by Ric Burns about the history of the whaling industry in the United States. The film was initially released on May 10, 2010.

Married to It
(1991)Three New York City couples become friends while planning a school play for their children, resulting in unexpected and humorous predicaments.

Ground Control
(1998)Years after a tragedy forced him into retirement, an ex-air traffic controller returns to work—and without radar—when a fierce storm cripples Phoenix.

In the Gloaming
(1997)A loving mother, a son in search of peace and four people separated by more than miles. Now, in the twilight of their time together, their reconciliation finally begins. Christopher Reeve directed this moving drama about a family who never really knew each other until it was almost too late.

The I Inside
(2004)An amnesiac discovers himself leaping through time between 2000 and 2002 as his past returns to him.

The Last Days of Disco
(1998)Story of two female Manhattan book editors fresh out of college, both finding love and themselves while frequenting the local disco.

Much Ado About Nothing
(1993)Young lovers Claudio and Hero devise a matchmaking scheme to get bachelor Benedick and caustic Beatrice to fall for one another.

Eugene O’Neill: A Documentary Film
(2006)The author of such innovative works as "The Iceman Cometh" and "Long Day's Journey Into Night," Nobel and Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, Eugene O'Neill wrote 20 long plays in fewer than 25 years. Much of his writing was influenced by his troubled childhood and relationships. Eugene O'Neill takes viewers on an extraordinary journey into his turbulent life — and ultimately redemptive art.