Gary Cooper
39 titles
Filmography
39 results

Springfield Rifle
(1952)A Union officer in the United States Civil War goes undercover — pretending to be court-martialed — to uncover who is stealing army horses and selling them to the South.

Task Force
(1949)A retiring admiral reminisces about his esteemed career, from his Naval Academy graduation in 1917 to lobbying Congress for aircraft carrier warfare.

Dallas
(1950)Blade Hollister rides into town to find the men who killed his family and stole his land while he was fighting in the Civil War. He takes the identity of U.S. Marshal Wetherby and exacts his revenge, but the wiliest of the killers forces a final showdown.

Along Came Jones
(1945)Gary Cooper (1952's "High Noon") gives a marvelous, tongue-in-cheek performance as a fumble-fingered cowpoke who is mistaken for a notorious bandit and almost gets killed by both sides of the law all while managing to capture the attention of Loretta Young. William Demarest co-stars as Cooper's trusty sidekick and Dan Duryea plays the villainous Monte Jarred for whom Cooper is mistaken.
One Sunday Afternoon
(1933)One Sunday afternoon in the park, aspiring dentist Biff Grimes (Gary Cooper) meets a beauty (Fay Wray), falls heart over head in unrequited love, and – despite eventually marrying a pretty, steadfast girl – never stops wondering what might have been. Years later, Biff gets the chance to find out when he meets his would-be sweetheart again. Displaying the same all-American appeal that mark his memorable performances in such classics as Mr. Deeds Goes to Town and Sergeant York, Cooper makes James Hagan's hit play into endearing screen entertainment. Hollywood knew it had a good thing, remaking the film in 1941 as The Strawberry Blonde with James Cagney and as a musical in 1948 with Dennis Morgan.

Casanova Brown
(1944)Legends Gary Cooper and Teresa Wright reunite in this wacky romantic comedy about a young man who receives some startling news on the eve of his wedding...he's a father! It's irresistible fun that will make you laugh and cry. Frank Morgan co-stars!

Saratoga Trunk
(1945)Beautiful Clio Dulaine arrives in her New Orleans birthplace with one goal: to exact revenge on her father’s family, who exiled Clio and her mother to Paris years earlier.

Return to Paradise
(1953)After washing up on a Pacific island controlled by a puritanical missionary, a drifter challenges the despot and carves out a life with the locals.

The Adventures of Marco Polo
(1938)During the late 13th century, adventurer Marco Polo travels to China, where he finds Emperor Kublai Khan, court intrigue, danger, and unexpected love.

Fighting Caravans
(1931)Mientras un joven explorador ayuda a proteger una caravana de viajeros, sus compañeros exploradores intentan evitar que el hombre se enamore.

Gary Cooper: The Face of a Hero
(1998)Known for his personification of the Western hero, it was Montana-born Cooper's horse riding skills that first brought him bit parts in movies.
Desire
(1936)A French jewel thief (Marlene Dietrich) speeds to Spain with pearls, which she drops in the pocket of a U.S. engineer (Gary Cooper).

A Farewell to Arms
(1932)Un conductor de ambulancia estadounidense herido y una enfermera inglesa se enamoran en Italia durante el apogeo de la Primera Guerra Mundial.

Lilac Time
(1928)In this love story set against the backdrop of the World War I, a British flying ace and a local farm girl fall in love in rural France.

Today We Live
(1933)
Children of Divorce
(1927)A young flapper preys on her childhood sweetheart's fear of divorce and tricks him into marrying her instead of the woman he truly loves.

Sleepless Nights
(2016)Frozen in fear has a whole new meaning in this terrifying collection of four tales involving the helpless and scary phenomenon of sleep paralysis.

Alice in Wonderland
(1933)Little Alice (Charlotte Henry) meets the Cheshire Cat (Richard Arlen), Humpty Dumpty (W.C. Fields) and other Lewis Carroll characters in a surreal world.

Wings
(1927)Two rivals—in love with the same woman—become fighter pilots during World War I in this Best Picture winner from the first-ever Academy Awards.