Robert Cummings
8 titles
Filmography
8 results

Saboteur
(1942)Director Alfred Hitchcock combines suspense and humor in a tale of an innocent man accused of wartime sabotage - he becomes front page news while evading the police on a cross-country hunt for the real spies.

Reign of Terror
(1949)A powerful figure in the French Revolution desperately seeks his book listing those marked for death, thereby guaranteeing his rise to dictatorship.

Beach Party
(1963)When a gang of teenagers descends upon a beach house, the anthropology professor next door secretly studies the youngsters’ vacationing habits.

The Devil and Miss Jones
(1941)John P Merrick, the world's richest man, is annoyed to hear workers at one of his stores are trying to form a union. Getting a menial job, he's determined to root out the troublemakers, but soon finds their grievances are genuine through the eponymous Miss Jones, Merrick's co-worker and O'Brien's girlfriend. Eventually, Merrick leads the fight for decent rights and also finds a girl of his own.
Promise Her Anything
(1966)A widow develops a love-hate relationship with her upstairs neighbour when she asks him to watch her child as she tries to woo her boss who hates kids.

My Geisha
(1962)A Hollywood actress disguises herself as a geisha to convince her producer-husband to cast her in his Japan-based production of MADAME BUTTERFLY.

The Carpetbaggers
(1964)Harold Robbins' tale of the ruthless men and beautiful women who shaped Hollywood. Harold Robbins' best seller about '30s Hollywood comes to the screen in a torrent of frank, controversial and (for the times) sensational scenes that helped break the Production Code.

What a Way to Go!
(1964)After attempting to donate $200 million to the Internal Revenue Service, Louisa (Shirley MacLaine) finds herself in the care of a psychiatrist, Dr. Stephanson (Bob Cummings). She relates the improbable story behind her strange gift. It includes a pair of penniless husbands (Dick Van Dyke, Paul Newman), who build large fortunes before suffering early -- and unusual -- deaths. To break the curse, Louisa weds a millionaire (Robert Mitchum), then a clown (Gene Kelly), without much improvement.