Joan Crawford
43 titles
Filmography
43 results

This Woman Is Dangerous
(1952)The stylish leader of a gang of thieves enters a hospital for an eye operation and falls in love with her doctor.

Our Modern Maidens
(1929)In a follow-up to her trendsetting silent Our Dancing Daughters, Joan Crawford returns to the role of a reckless Jazz Age baby getting her kicks with torrid kisses and wild parties.

Today We Live
(1933)
Harriet Craig
(1950)A cold, perfectionist wife will stop at nothing to have her house and life run as she wishes, even if it means controlling her husband's every move.
This Modern Age
(1931)Torch Song
(1953)Academy Award winners Joan Crawford and Gig Young star with Michael Wilding in this musical romance.Broadway star Jenny Stewart (Crawford--The Women) has been toughened by years on stage, but her heart is ultimately melted by the blind war veteran (Young--Holiday for Sinners) who becomes much more to her than just her piano player.
Untamed
(1929)Crawford speaks! And sings! And dances! In her first Talkie, Joan Crawford plays Bingo, a jungle-raised oil heiress, who turns Manhattan upside down in her hunt for Andy McAllister (Robert Montgomery), the man of her dreams. Unfortunately for Bingo, Andy is penniless and refuses to agree to the match until he can provide for the wild, rich girl. Andy's prideful position is more than encouraged by Bingo's Uncle Ben (Ernest Torrence), who seeks to scuttle their love match. In addition to its pre-Code costumes and situations, Untamed also boasts Robert Montgomery's first leading role and two songs sung by the throaty Joan " - Chant of the Jungle" and "That Wonderful Something is Love" (a duet with Mr. Montgomery!).

Laughing Sinners
(1931)A cabaret performer, Ivy Stevens, has an affair with a low-rent travelling salesman and is dumped. Later, she finds solace in joining the Salvation Army.

Goodbye, My Fancy
(1951)A congresswoman who returns to her alma mater to accept an honorary degr ee, and finds herself romantically involved with both the college president and a magazine photographer.

The Ice Follies of 1939
(1939)Joan Crawford and Jimmy Stewart star as Larry and Mary a husband and wif e whose marriage is on thin ice when she gets a Hollywood film contract and he must work in the East.

Joan Crawford: Always the Star
(1996)Guts, determination and hard work lift a young woman out of brutal poverty into Academy Award-winning stardom as one of its highest paid actresses.

Montana Moon
(1930)Wealthy New York party girl Joan Prescott (Joan Crawford) has lassoed herself a cowboy!

Trog
(1970)The Abominable Snowman of the Himalayas. Bigfoot of the Pacific Northwest. Few claim to have seen these links to our primitive past. But when a wild half-man/half-ape emerges from his countryside cave, TV cameras are there to observe the event - and the terror!

What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?
(1962)Two aging sisters—both former celebrities—are bound together in a psychopathic relationship by their mutual dependency, jealousy, and hatred.

The Women
(1939)Joan Crawford and Norma Shearer star in this enjoyable comedy about a happily married woman who lets her catty friends talk her into divorce when her husband strays.

Across to Singapore
(1928)Ramon Novarro portrays the youngest in a seafaring family, in love with the girl promised to his swaggering oldest brother. The rival brothers set sail to Singapore.

Forsaking All Others
(1934)Here comes the bride - there goes the groom! The night before Mary Clay's (Joan Crawford) wedding, her flaky fiancé Dillon elopes with someone else. Mary's friend Jeff grabs his chance to buck up the jilted bride - and pitch some woo. Then Dillon reenters Mary's life and she must choose between the two men. Since Clark Gable plays Jeff and Robert Montgomery plays Dillon, it's a choice any woman would love to make! The three stars prove marriage is a funny affair in this snappy, sophisticated comedy. Director W.S. Van Dyke (The Thin Man), scriptwriter Joseph L. Mankiewicz (All About Eve) and supporting comedy virtuosos Rosalind Russell, Billie Burke and Arthur Treacher put extra sparkle in the wedding punch.
Spring Fever
(1927)
Grand Hotel
(1932)In the 1930s, MGM was home, as the studio itself put it, to “more stars than there are in heaven”—and they all aligned for this pinnacle of dream-factory glitz. In a single day in Berlin’s Grand Hotel, jewel thief Baron Felix von Geigern (John Barrymore) covets both the jewels of prima ballerina Grusinskaya (Greta Garbo) and the beautiful stenographer Flaemmchen (Joan Crawford), who is the mistress of General Director Preysing (Wallace Beery), boss to the terminally ill Otto Kringelein (Lionel Barrymore). Now, in just twenty-four hours, the lives of these glamorous guests will change forever in this classic Academy Award winner for best picture.

The Unknown
(1927)A murderer on the run-turned-knife thrower uses a traveling circus as a hideout while seeking to possess the daughter of the ringmaster at any cost.