Robert Mitchum
72 titles
Filmography
72 results

El Dorado
(1966)Robert Mitchum plays to perfection an alcoholic but gutsy sheriff who relentlessly battles the dark side of the wild West, ruthless cattle barons and crooked “businessmen.”

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

5 Card Stud
(1968)After a cardsharp is caught cheating, he is taken out and lynched by the drunkards he was playing against. Soon afterwards, the men who were in the lynch mob start being murdered, one after another; all by hanging. Who will be killed next and who is responsible? Is it one of the original party seeking to cover their accursed deed, or perhaps the mysterious Rev Jonathan Rudd, who has recently arrived in town?

Crossfire
(1947)This gritty film noir made history as the first Hollywood film to confront antisemitism. Three of the era’s most celebrated Roberts—Young, Mitchum, and Ryan—star in the hard-hitting tale of a police detective and an army sergeant whose investigation into the murder of a Jewish veteran leads them to a psychotic soldier consumed by hatred and bigotry. The first B movie to be nominated for the Academy Award for best picture, CROSSFIRE also netted a best supporting actor nomination for Robert Ryan, whose breakthrough performance as the vicious killer established his edgy, tightly wound screen persona.

Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison
(1957)A two-person character study directed by John Huston, Heaven Knows Mr. Allison stars Robert Mitchum as a World War II Marine sergeant and Deborah Kerr as a Roman Catholic nun. Both nun and sergeant are marooned on a South Pacific island, hemmed in by surrounding Japanese troops. Mitchum does his best to make the nun's ordeal less painful, but is torn by his growing love for her.

The Red Pony
(1949)Turning to ranch hand Billy Buck for love and support, young Tom Tiflin inadvertently drives his family further apart. When his father gives him a red pony to care for, Tom again turns to Billy for help. Scripted by John Steinbeck, based on his novel "The Red Pony." Aaron Copland composed the film score.

The Way West
(1967)An epic tale of the brave men and women who left the comfort of the East for the promise of free land in the untamed West.

Desire Me
(1947)During World War II, a woman receives news that her husband has died in a Nazi concentration camp. She falls in love with another man, who was in the army with her husband and imprisoned with him. But the new man in her life is actually a psychotic who escaped from the concentration camp, leaving her husband for dead . . . but he is not.

Pursued
(1947)Haunted by nightmares and living with a neighboring family, a boy falls for his adoptive sister and faces obstacles in this new home.

Fire Down Below
(1957)The long-standing bond between two small-time smugglers sailing around the Caribbean is threatened when a gorgeous siren seeks passage on their boat.

Villa Rides
(1968)Un piloto aviador norteamericano que había sido encarcelado en México se une a la causa revolucionaria que encabeza el Centauro del Norte.

Mr. North
(1988)After gaining a reputation as a mysterious healer, a charming Yale graduate must defend his honor before his unique talent lands him in jail.

What a Way to Go!
(1964)After attempting to donate $200 million to the Internal Revenue Service, Louisa (Shirley MacLaine) finds herself in the care of a psychiatrist, Dr. Stephanson (Bob Cummings). She relates the improbable story behind her strange gift. It includes a pair of penniless husbands (Dick Van Dyke, Paul Newman), who build large fortunes before suffering early -- and unusual -- deaths. To break the curse, Louisa weds a millionaire (Robert Mitchum), then a clown (Gene Kelly), without much improvement.

The Locket
(1946)A dark personal secret drives a young woman to use every man she encounters.

Rachel and the Stranger
(1948)A mail-order bride finds herself attracted to a handsome drifter.

Till the End of Time
(1946)World War II is over, and millions of Gls forever changed by the war return to a nation far different from the one they left.

When Strangers Marry
(1944)Kim Hunter and Robert Mitchum star in this drama of a desperate young bride who travels to New York searching for her husband. There she meets a former suitor who offers to help, but by whom she is Betrayed. Millie Baxter (Hunter) gets a telegram from her new husband, Paul (Dean Jagger). She travels to New York City to help, but cannot find him. There she meets Fred Graham (Mitchum), who offers to help. Then, when she gets a call from her husband begging her to help him run from the law, she is torn between the husband accused of murder whom she loves but barely knows... and the charming former suitor who offers to help. Now, as Millie learns more about these two men, she discovers which is guilty of murder--and must find evidence to prove what she knows without losing her own life first.

The Grass Is Greener
(1960)A rousing chorus of NoМДеЗl Coward's Stately Homes of England is heard as the opening titles of The Grass Is Greener fade into several stock shots of those stately homes. One of these mansions is owned by British earl Victor Rhyall (Cary Grant), who opens his home to American tourists in order to make ends meet.

Undercurrent
(1946)
The Last Tycoon
(1976)F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel is brought to life in this story of a movie producer slowly working himself to death.