James Coburn
56 titles
Filmography
56 results

Hudson Hawk
(1991)An ex-cat burglar (Bruce Willis) sets out to steal a series of priceless artifacts in this globe-spanning caper.

Walter and Henry
(2001)Living by a thread in an empty Brooklyn lot, it’s up to a 12 year old to find long-lost family when his street musician dad has a nervous breakdown.

The Set Up
(1995)A formerly incarcerated engineer is blackmailed by an inmate to provide the blueprints to a bank security system he plans to rob.

Deadfall
(1993)After accidentally killing his father in a sting-gone-wrong, a grifter travels to California to recover stolen money from his dad's twin.

Monsters, Inc.
(2001)A little girl named Boo wanders into the world of monsters.

Hell Is for Heroes
(1962)Set in 1944 during WWII, an embittered G.I. returns to his war-weary unit after being demoted from staff sergeant to private but is forced once again step up into a leadership role when they are ordered to defend a position along the German front line.

Candy
(1968)In this psychedelic cult classic, naïve and alluring Candy explores life and sex in a series of wacky adventures that satirize pornographic tropes.

Maverick
(1994)With more twists than a switchback trail and more sleights of hand than a shell game, Bret Maverick aims to win a riverboat poker tournament with a $500,000 prize.

The Man from Elysian Fields
(2001)A failed novelist's inability to pay the bills and support his wife leads him to work at an escort service where he gets involved with a rich woman.

Ride Lonesome
(1959)A bounty hunter escorts a killer to prison but allows his outlaw brother to catch up with them to have a showdown over a previous shocking murder.

The Great Escape
(1963)The award-winning, high-energy World War II epic about a maximum-security Nazi POW camp that three U.S. military prisoners attempt to break out of.

The Magnificent Seven
(1960)Seven master gunmen are pitted against an army of rampaging bandits in this thrilling action adventure, which saw Yul Brynner, Steve McQueen and Charles Bronson explode onto our screens as stars of the future.

The Loved One
(1965)An all-star cast pokes fun at Hollywood, Britain and the business of turning a profit from grief in the classic 1960s black comedy The Loved One. Innocent, serious British poet Dennis Barlow (Robert Morse--"Tru," How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying) comes to Los Angeles to make final arrangements for a relative who was a longtime film star, but didn't leave enough money to pay for his funeral. Taking a job as an assistant embalmer at a pet cemetery, Barlow falls in love with beautiful funeral-home cosmetician Aimee Thanatogenous (Anjanette Comer), who is also the object of prissy funeral director Mr. Joyboy's (Academy Award winner Rod Steiger--In the Heat of the Night) affections. Now, as Barlow stumbles his way through the underside of Hollywood, he becomes involved with his boss's (Jonathan Winters) plan to launch the dearly departed into eternal orbit in outer space.

Steve McQueen: Man on the Edge
(1990)Este documental se centra en el icónico Steve McQueen, un actor reconocido por sus pelÃculas y su inevitable caÃda del mundo del espectáculo.

Keys to Tulsa
(1997)A loser, whose wealthy mother tries to protect him, keeps bad company, loves the wrong women, and falls over his head into a deadly extortion scheme.

Screwballs
(1983)It's 1965 and the randy students at Taft and Adams High School are out for revenge on the uptight homecoming queen Purity Busch in a wild comedy that really scores.