Lee Remick
19 titles
Filmography
19 results

The Gift of Love: A Christmas Story
(1983)After tragically losing her mother, a grieving woman enters a dreamworld of her childhood home where she spends one last Christmas with her parents.

The Europeans
(1979)It's the fall of 1850, a few miles outside Boston. The household of the dour Mr. Wentworth receives two unannounced visitors from Europe, Eugenia and Felix, the daughter and son of his half sister.

Hustling
(1975)Based on Gail Sheehy's book, a magazine reporter investigates the prostitution industry in 1970s New York City and brings to light everyone involved.

Dark Holiday
(1989)
Bridge to Silence
(1989)A deaf woman looking to rebuild her life following the death of her husband finds herself struggling with her mother over the fate of her daughter.

Emma's War
(1986)After the start of WW2, a mother takes her children from Sydney to the countryside.

The Omen
(1976)American diplomat Robert adopts Damien when his wife, Katherine, delivers a stillborn child. Father Brennan warns Robert that Damien will kill Katherine's unborn child. Shortly thereafter, Brennan dies and Katherine miscarries when Damien pushes her off a balcony. As more people around Damien die, Robert investigates Damien's background and realizes his adopted son may be the Antichrist.

Wild River
(1960)An agent sent to oversee the completion of a dam encounters opposition from locals.

No Way to Treat a Lady
(1968)A crafty serial killer plays a game of cat-and-mouse with a harried police detective trying to track him down.

Days of Wine and Roses
(1963)Jack Lemmon and Lee Remick are unforgetable in Blake Edwards' searing, bittersweet study of an alcoholic couple on the rocks.

The Hallelujah Trail
(1965)Fearing that a large shipment of whiskey may not reach its destination, a colonel assigns Captain Paul Slater to safeguard the cargo until it arrives.

The Detective
(1968)
Hennessy
(1975)After his family is killed by British troops, an Irish explosives expert plots to destroy Parliament, pursued by both the IRA and Scotland Yard.
Mistral's Daughter
Judith Krantz’s Mistral’s Daughter is a sweeping saga spanning three generations of women bound to the brilliant, tempestuous painter Julien Mistral. From Paris in the 1920s to the world of high fashion, Kate, Teddy, and Fauve navigate love, betrayal, and legacy. Rich with scandal, glamour, and romance, it’s a story of ambition, art, and the unbreakable bonds of family.

The Competition
(1980)Two concert pianists (Richard Dreyfuss and Amy Irving) fall in love with each other before the biggest competition of their lives. Will true love triumph over the stress of playing on the world's largest stage?

A Delicate Balance
(1973)An invasion of friends and family pushes the repressed problems of a complacent marriage to the fore in this exceptional adaptation of Edward Albee's Pulitzer Prize-winning play. Oscar-winners Katharine Hepburn and Paul Scofield star, and acclaimed British director Tony Richardson allows these thoroughbreds to explore the full range of conflict and confrontation in this explosive WASP gothic.

The Medusa Touch
(1978)A French detective in London tries to unravel the mystery of a hospital patient with telekinetic powers, whose anxieties manifest in actual disasters.

A Face in the Crowd
(1957)A drifter catapults to nationwide fame after being discovered by a radio producer, but darkness looms as he slowly becomes consumed by his power.

The Long, Hot Summer
(1958)A drifter's arrival in a small Mississippi town has an unsettling effect on the members of a wealthy family, who decide that he is a potential suitor for their daughter.