Margaret Rutherford
11 titles
Filmography
11 results

Murder She Said
(1961)When nobody will believe she witnessed a murder, elderly sleuth Miss Marple takes a job as a maid to ferret out clues.

Murder at the Gallop
(1963)Agatha Christie, the grand dame of the mystery novel, weaves an twisting tale of terror that can only by unraveled by gray-haired intrepid amateur sleuth Miss Marple.

Murder Most Foul
(1964)Agatha Christie's Miss Marple finds herself the only jury member who believes a defendant's innocence and she sets out to prove it.

Murder Ahoy
(1964)Agatha Christie's Miss Marple investigates a murder on a naval cadet training ship.

The Mouse on the Moon
(1963)When the royal castle needs plumbing β and money to buy it β the sly Prime Minister of a tiny nation creates a phony space program to raise the funds. But when the local wine turns out to be ideal for rocket fuel...going to space becomes a reality!

The Happiest Days of Your Life
(1950)After a mistake at the Ministry of Education, the girls of St. Swithin's School are forced to move in with the boys of Nutbourne College, causing calamitously comedic chaos for their headmasters.

Passport to Pimlico
(1949)Residents of a part of London declare independence after they discover an old treaty, which leads to the need for a passport to Pimlico.

Innocents in Paris
(1953)Restoration of the classic 1953 comedy about a weekend trip in Paris, where a group of tourists find their lives changed as the city welcomes them.

Chimes at Midnight
(1965)The crowning achievement of Orson Welles's extraordinary film career, Chimes at Midnight was the culmination of the filmmaker's lifelong obsession with Shakespeare's ultimate rapscallion, Sir John Falstaff.

The V.I.P.s
(1963)Very important people (Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Louis Jourdan) must wait in a London airport.

I'm All Right Jack
(1959)An aristocrat in search of a career becomes caught up in the struggles between his profit-minded uncle and an aggressive labour union. Contains discriminatory content. (1959)(105 mins)