Dennis Price
14 titles
Filmography
14 results

Kind Hearts and Coronets
(1949)A black sheep distant relative of Edwardian England blue bloods plots to murder the eight heirs standing between him and the family fortune.

Song of Paris
(1952)A comedy of errors and desire concerning a love triangle and rivalry between two men in Paris who are smitten with a vivacious cabaret singer.

Twins of Evil
(1971)Two orphaned identical twins go live with their uncle, a religious sect leader who hunts all women suspected of witchcraft or vampirism.

Dracula, Prisoner of Frankenstein
(1972)Dr. Frankenstein uses his Monster and a captive Count Dracula to abduct a can-can dancer as a test subject for his experiments in world domination.

A Canterbury Tale
(1944)Three modern-day pilgrims investigate a series of mysterious and bizarre crimes in a small town on the way to Canterbury, England.

Victim
(1961)A closeted lawyer risks his career to bring a blackmailer to justice.

Tunes of Glory
(1960)Returning from battle after WWII, tensions flare in a Scottish regiment when the acting commanding officer is replaced by an Oxford-educated outsider.

The Earth Dies Screaming
(1964)A devastating, deadly alien invasion to take over Earth forces survivors in Britain to fight off the weapons of war, including robots and poison gas.

Curse of the Voodoo
(1965)A hunter kills a great lion that is sacred to a local tribe of voodoo worshipers. When he returns home, he finds himself seeing strange apparitions.

Horror Hospital
(1973)A ‘60s pop singer going to a country estate for a rest falls for the owner’s niece, but neither know the owners use the guests as surgical subjects.

Oscar Wilde
(1960)Genius. Celebrity. Accused, convicted and destroyed for daring "the love that dare not speak its name." Oscar Wilde Robert Morley stars as the celebrated and enduring author of such works as "The Picture of Doran Gray," "Lady Windermere's Fan," "Salome" and "The Importance of Being Earnest," a man guilty of being Irish, literate and gay. But Wilde transgressed when he became involved with an young aristocrat, Lord Alfred Douglas (John Neville), whose father, the Marquess of Queensberry (Edward Chapman), accused him of unspeakable crimes, an accusation that resulted in trial, imprisonment, banishment and financial ruin.

Venus in Furs
(1969)A trumpeter is sucked into a psycho-sexual horror along with his sultry girlfriend and the mysterious beauty who may lead them all straight to hell.

The Millionairess
(1960)A millionairess and a doctor cannot marry until they meet conditions set up by their respective parents.

Jules Verne's Rocket to the Moon
(1967)A blustering showman embraces a bold plan to reach the moon first, facing off against schemers, lovers, and dreamers in a whimsical space adventure.