Michael Gough
27 titles
Filmography
27 results

Beauty and the Beast
(1997)The tale as old as time brings magic, romance, and music together as a young woman finds herself in the presence of an enchanted castle.

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.

Crucible of Horror
(1971)At their limit with the head of their family and his sadistic ways, a mother and daughter make a choice to murder him in cold blood.

Dracula
(1958)After finding his missing friend undead in Dracula’s crypt, vampire hunter Van Helsing must save his pal’s frail fiancée from the count’s next bite.

Wittgenstein
(1993)A witty portrayal of Ludwig Wittgenstein, the eccentric Viennese philosopher who shaped 20th-century thought with humor and insight.

Blanche Fury
(1948)A childless widow bequeaths her estate to another family, but her husband's illegitimate son hopes to grab the estate for himself.

Tom and Jerry & The Wizard of Oz
(2011)Tom and Jerry soar over the rainbow and travel down the yellow brick road in this all-new animated retelling of the classic tale.

Tom and Jerry: Back to Oz
(2016)Dorothy and Tom and Jerry get thrust back to the Land of Oz when an evil Gnome King takes over the Emerald City and sends flying monkeys to Kansas to steal Dorothy's magical ruby slippers.

The Sword and the Rose
(1953)Mary Tudor, in love with a commoner, is forced to marry an aging French king.

Mr. Topaze
(1961)Mr. Topaze (Peter Sellers), an honest and unassuming school teacher, is fired when he refuses to give a pass grade to a failing student, the grandson of a wealthy baroness. Castel Benac, a government official who runs a crooked financial business on the side, is persuaded by his mistress, Suzy, a musical comedy actress, to hire Mr. Topaze as the front man for his business. Gradually, Topaze becomes a rapacious financier who sacrifices his honesty for success and, in a final stroke of business bravado, fires Benac and acquires Suzy in the deal.

Rob Roy, The Highland Rogue
(1953)When German-born King George I ascends to the throne of England, he appoints as Secretary of State the villainous Duke of Montrose. Montrose's first evil order of business is to suppress the rowdy MacGregor clan and ensure their allegiance to the new king. But the devious Secretary of State underestimates the fervent Scottish pride running deep in the veins of fiery Highlander Rob Roy and his quick-tempered compatriots! An epic, legendary adventure filled with action, conflict, and a dose of bonny romance!

Batman Returns
(1992)In the second of the blockbuster Batman films, the physically deformed criminal genius The Penguin threatens Gotham City--and, helpless, the entire city can only pray that Batman Returns. Only Batman (Michael Keaton) can defend the city from total chaos as The Penguin (Danny DeVito) lays twisted waste to a great metropolis. Meanwhile, the Dark Knight may have met his equal in the lethally lithe...

The Small Back Room
(1949)"THE SMALL BACK ROOM (1949) directed by Powell and Pressburger, marked their return to Alexander Korda after a successful period at Rank. Critically acclaimed, the film was nominated for a BAFTA for Best Film. Starring David Farrar as British scientist Sammy Rice and Kathleen Byron as the dept secretary and Sammy's girlfriend.

The Phantom of the Opera
(1962)A unique and haunting interpretation of Gaston Leroux's grand guignol classic. The classic tale of the disfigured musician who haunts the London Opera House (a change from Paris for this version) and kidnaps the young soprano he loves. The addition of an evil dwarf makes for heightened drama.

Savage Messiah
(1972)A prim spinster meets a fiery young sculptor in the Paris library, and their lives change forever. Intense, tempestuous--and platonic--their relationship feeds their talent and creativity, their Savage Messiah. Director Ken Russell (Altered States, Women in Love) peels the façade from the obsessive, unconventional relationship that fosters one of the great artists of the early 20th century: Sophie Brzeska (Dorothy Tutin), who believes she will never find love, becomes the muse to Henri Gaudier (Scott Antony), the bad boy of the Paris art scene, a man twenty years her junior. They live together; he takes her name; and she inspires him to create brilliant works of art--until his heroic and needless death in World War I at the age of 24.

The Dresser
(1983)The lives and relationships of those within a British traditional touring stage company provide the backdrop for the five-time 1983 Oscar nominee, THE DRESSER (Best Picture; Best Actor; Best Supporting Actor; Best Director; Best Screenplay Adaptation). THE DRESSER is a compelling study of intense relationship between the leader of the company and his dresser. Sir (Albert Finney), a grandiloquen..

Out of Africa
(1985)In Kenya during the early 1900s, the married Baroness Blixen, whose pen name is Isak Dinesen, falls in love with British hunter Denys Finch Hatton.

Winnie the Pooh: A Valentine for You
(1999)Pooh is jealous when Christopher Robin catches a case of "the smitten."

The Horse's Mouth
(1958)In Ronald Neame’s film of Joyce Cary’s classic novel, Alec Guinness transforms himself into one of cinema’s most indelible comic figures: the lovably scruffy painter Gulley Jimson. As the ill-behaved Jimson searches for a perfect canvas, he determines to let nothing come between himself and the realization of his exalted vision. A perceptive examination of the struggle of artistic creation, The Horse’s Mouth is also Neame’s comic masterpiece.

Curse of the Crimson Altar
(1968)In search of his missing brother, Robert Manning is led to a remote country house that he believes may be tied to the legend of the Black Witch.