Elizabeth Wilson
14 titles
Filmography
14 results

Spring Awakening
(1994)Willa Cather’s writing comes alive in this story of two lovers who face a long separation, distance, and betrayal to find their way back together.

Miles To Go Before I Sleep
(1975)An elderly man works to fill his lonely life with meaning by volunteering at a rehab center where he tries to help a streetwise teenage girl.

Man on a Swing
(1974)When a young schoolteacher is found dead in her car in a parking lot in broad daylight, police chief Lee Tucker can find no clues pointing to her killer; flamboyant self-proclaimed psychic Franklin Wills offers his help to the skeptical policeman.

Where Are the Children?
(1986)Based on a novel by best-selling author Mary Higgins Clark, WHERE ARE THE CHILDREN? Nancy Eldridge (Jill Clayburgh) is the happy mother of two children, who lives in sheer bliss with her husband Clay (Max Gail). Tragedy arrives when the kids are kidnapped by psychopath Courtney Parrish (Frederic Forrest).

Patterns
(1956)When a young executive is recruited to a powerful Manhattan conglomerate, he is thrust into a power struggle that tests both his ethics and ambitions.

The Believers
(1987)A newly widowed police psychologist must contend with a series of ritualistic child murders seemingly perpetrated by a Caribbean religious cult.

Grace Quigley
(1985)When Grace Quigley meets a neurotic hitman, the two pair up to provide a painless parting for seniors who’ve had enough of life’s slings and arrows.

The Incredible Shrinking Woman
(1981)Lily Tomlin stars in this high-spirited comedy about a mother who shrinks after exposure to household chemicals, capturing the attention of a group of scientists plotting world domination.

The Graduate
(1967)Hollywood darlings Dustin Hoffman, Anne Bancroft, and Katharine Ross create one outrageous love triangle in this groundbreaking American film classic.

Nine to Five
(1980)A group of female office workers band together to seek revenge on their boss.

Regarding Henry
(1991)Harrison Ford stars as Henry, a successful but unscrupulous New York attorney who is shot during a hold-up at a convenience store. Although he survives, he is left with no memory, speech or motor skills. During his painful recovery Henry decides he no longer wants to be the cynical person he's told he was, and comes to appreciate life itself.

The Tunnel of Love
(1958)A drunken misunderstanding leads cartoonist Augie Poole—who couldn’t conceive with his wife—to believe he impregnated an adoption agency employee.

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.

The Day of the Dolphin
(1973)After training dolphins to speak English, a marine biologist (George C. Scott) races to stop assassins who kidnap them for a deadly plot.