Victor McLaglen
26 titles
Filmography
26 results

The Lost Patrol
(1934)A shot rings out, the captain falls and with him dies the knowledge of his unit's mission. Now a stalwart sergeant takes charge as he and his men try to escape the surrounding.

A Girl in Every Port
(1928)Two friends have a history of romantic rivalry. When one finally decides to settle down, will his mysterious new girl come between them?
The Informer
(1935)Winner of four Academy Awards, this powerful and suspenseful drama tells the story of a hard-drinking Irish man who betrays his wanted friend for a mere twenty pounds during the Irish Rebellion of 1922. Nominated for Best Picture, this critically acclaimed film brought Oscars to Academy Award-winning director/producer John Ford ("She Wore A Yellow Ribbon," "Rio Bravo," "The Grapes of Wrath"), actor Victor McLaglen ("Gunga Din," "Fort Apache"), composer Max Stein ("Casablanca") and writer Dudley Nichols ("Stagecoach").
Hangman's House
(1928)As "Hanging Judge" James O'Brien approaches death, he prepares for his daughter's welfare by arranging her marriage to the wealthy John Darcy, whom she despises. Meanwhile, an exiled patriot named Hogan returns to Ireland to kill the man who caused his sister's suicide. That man is Darcy. Set in Ireland this movie is notable as the first movie in which John Wayne is clearly visible, as a spectator at the steeplechase who knocks down a fence.

The Black Watch
(1929)As World War I breaks out, a British Army captain lets his comrades think he's a coward when he leaves for India on a secret rescue mission.

The Devil's Party
(1938)This year’s reunion for a group of childhood friends who grew up together in the slums is interrupted by a murder, a coverup and the fallout of both.

Broadway Limited
(1941)A borrowed baby used for a publicity stunt aboard a long-distance train creates a world of trouble for a high-strung film director and his leading lady.

The Cock-Eyed World
(1929)In the Tropics, two Marines encounter a captivating woman who stirs their emotions, giving them even more reasons to argue and fight over her.

Laughing at Life
(1933)An Irish gunrunner flees U.S. authorities to South America where he’s hired to organize a band of revolutionaries secretly planning to eliminate him.

Wee Willie Winkie
(1937)Taken by her mother (June Lang) to live in India a young girl (Temple) gradually wins the heart of her feisty grandfather (C. Aubrey Smith), a colonel at a British army outpost. Before long she captures the heart of his entire regiment as well as his chief enemy (Ceasar Romeo), using her considerable charms to prevent a full scale war.

Gunga Din
(1939)Cary Grant leads the way in this action-packed adventure about three rowdy British soldiers who defeat a murderous cult in India with help from native water boy, Gunga Din.

What Price Glory
(1926)World War I and a shotgun marriage unite two U.S. Marines and romantic rivals stationed in France who are gunning for the same innkeeper's daughter.
Under Pressure
(1935)The story of battling partners on a tunneling crew called the Sandhogs who are attempting to break through from Brooklyn to New York.

Sea Fury
(1958)The first mate of a British salvage boat rivals his captain for a Spanish girl.

The Quiet Man
(1952)A tired American ex-boxer returns to his native hamlet in Ireland to win the hand of a spirited young woman. He is confronted by strict local customs and the woman's belligerent brother. Set in the verdant Irish countryside, this lively film has beautiful scenery, brilliant repartee, and local charm.

Forever and a Day
(1943)This wonderful romantic-adventure yarn tells of Britain's epochal struggles to retain the integrity of an empire and the freedom of her people by tracing the quaint history of a picturesque London mansion, its illustrious builder and his descendants.

Many Rivers to Cross
(1955)A determined young woman gives new meaning to ‘shotgun wedding’ while pursuing a certain Kentucky backwoodsman through the 1798 American frontier.

Let Freedom Ring
(1939)Combining Nelson Eddy’s fine baritone voice with its message of religious and ethnic tolerance, Let Freedom Ring distinguishes itself as a most unusual western.

Whistle Stop
(1946)After many years in Chicago, Mary returns to her hometown and finds herself caught in a love triangle with two suitors jealous enough to kill for her.

The Unholy Three
(1925)After getting booted from their circus sideshow, the ventriloquist, dwarf, and strongman forge an “unholy” criminal alliance to strike it rich.