Dean Jagger
21 titles
Filmography
21 results

X: The Unknown
(1956)A radioactive, mud-like creature terrorizes a Scottish village in this Hammer Horror classic.

Warpath
(1951)A man joins the cavalry in his quest for two killers; Indians capture all three.

The Hanged Man
(1974)Milagrosamente aún con vida después de ser ahorcado, un hombre armado defiende la granja de una joven viuda de un despiadado saqueador de tierras.

The Proud Rebel
(1958)A Confederate veteran living in the Yankee North struggles with his son's shock induced muteness and the hate of the Northerners.

Western Union
(1941)An engineer leading the construction of a telegraph line hires a former outlaw as a scout, but his old gang starts to interfere with the project.

Driftwood
(1947)An orphan helps a doctor fight an epidemic in a small western town.

Game of Death
(1978)Five years after the release of Enter the Dragon and the death of its star Bruce Lee, director Robert Clouse was recruited by Golden Harvest to complete Lee's last, unfinished masterwork, only a third of which was filmed before he died: Game of Death. The result is an exciting rollercoaster ride that blends Lee's martial arts mastery with Clouse's eye for nail-biting suspense.

Denver and Rio Grande
(1952)The film is a dramatization of the building of the Denver and Rio Grande railway, which was chartered in 1870.

Elmer Gantry
(1960)A charming conman pretends to be a preacher and romances a roadside revivalist. Will his charade collapse when an ex-lover shows up to settle a score?

The Kremlin Letter
(1970)A network of older spies from the West recruits a young intelligence officer with a photographic memory for a mission to Russia. They must recover a letter written by the CIA that promises American assistance to Russia if China gets the atomic bomb.

Alligator
(1980)After it’s flushed down the toilet, a baby alligator grows to monstrous size as it prowls the city sewers. Chaos erupts when it comes to the surface.

The Eternal Sea
(1955)US Admiral John Hoskins' devotion to the Navy inspired his heroic efforts to retain active-duty status and command despite a crippling injury in World War II, as portrayed in this well-acted biography.

Dark City
(1950)A social misfit who turns to gambling becomes an assassin's target after a crooked card game and the subsequent suicide of one of the gamblers.

End of the World
(1977)After witnessing a man’s death in a bizarre accident, a priest embarks on a spiritual quest, where he encounters his power-hungry alien doppelganger.

White Christmas
(1954)Two talented song-and-dance men (Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye) team up after the war to become one of the hottest acts in show business.

King Creole
(1958)Elvis Presley gives Bourbon Street a new beat in King Creole. He plays a troubled youth whose singing sets the French Quarter rockin’.

Firecreek
(1968)Screen legends and Academy Award-winners James Stewart and Henry Fonda head this story about a farmer with a part-time job as sheriff in a small town, who finds himself face-to-face with a gang of outlaw drifters who want nothing but to start trouble.

Twelve O'Clock High
(1949)This gritty World War II action drama staring Gregory Peck, Oscar winner Dean Jagger, Hugh Marlowe, Gary Merrill and Millard Mitchell is seen as one of the most realistic portrayals of the heroics and perils of war.

Billy Rose's Jumbo
(1962)Jimmy Durante, Doris Day and Martha Raye star in this big-screen portrayal of Rogers and Hart's Broadway musical about an all-out effort to save a struggling circus--Billy Rose's Jumbo. Pop Wonder's (Durante) gambling debts have put his circus in danger of default--an event completely unforeseen by Lulu (Martha Raye) the fortuneteller--and the circus has to sell its beloved elephant, Jumbo.

The Glass House
(1972)A young guard and a college professor convicted of manslaughter both start their first day in prison. Starring Alan Alda and Billy Dee Williams. Story by Truman Capote.