The best Ian Carmichael’s drama movies

Ian Carmichael

Ian Carmichael

18/06/1920- 05/02/2010
If you love cinema, you will share this ranking of the best Ian Carmichael’s movies, although you may have ordered them differently. In any case, we hope you love it and with a little luck discovering a movie that you still don’t know about Ian Carmichael.

Betrayed

Betrayed
6.1/10
  • Genre: DramaRomanceWar
  • Release: 07/09/1954
  • Character: Capt. Jackie Lawson
Screen superstars Clark Gable ("Gone With The Wind," "It Happened One Night") and sultry bombshell Lana Turner ("Peyton Place," "The Postman Always Rings Twice") team-up in this intriguing WWII drama. Suspected of being a Nazi spy, Dutch-resistance member Turner is given a last chance mission to redeem herself. Gable is an American colonel who falls in love with her. Co-starring Victor Mature ("My Darling Clementine") and Oscar-nominee Louis Calhern ("The Asphalt Jungle").

The Colditz Story

The Colditz Story
6.9/10
  • Genre: DramaWar
  • Release: 25/01/1955
  • Character: Robin Cartwright
Allied prisoners of various nationalities pool their resources to plan numerous escapes from an "escape-proof" German P.O.W. camp housed in a Medieval castle.

Trottie True

Trottie True
5.7/10
  • Genre: ComedyDramaMusic
  • Release: 29/09/1949
  • Character: Bill the Postman (uncredited)
Tottie True is a gay-90s British music-hall performer who has her sights set on moving from rags to riches, who loses her heart to the pure-and-true blue balloonist, Sid Skinner, but continues her upward search on improving her social status. She finally settles for Lord Landon Digby who has lots of assets and a very-stiff upper lip. She gets a lot of the latter and very little of the former, and decides Sid might have been a better choice.

Storm Over the Nile

Storm Over the Nile
6.2/10
Storm Over the Nile is a 1955 film adaptation of the novel The Four Feathers, directed by Terence Young. The film not only extensively used footage of the action scenes from the 1939 film version stretched into CinemaScope, but exactly the same screenplay, almost line-for-line also then directed by Zoltan Korda as well as several pieces of music by the original composer Miklos Rozsa. It featured Anthony Steel, Laurence Harvey, James Robertson Justice, Mary Ure, Ian Carmichael, Michael Horden and Christopher Lee.[2] The film was shot on location in the Sudan.

Bond Street

Bond Street
6.4/10
  • Genre: Drama
  • Release: 12/05/1948
  • Character: Waiter
Charts the events occurring during a typical 24-hour period on London’s thoroughfare Bond Street. Linking the four stories together is the impending wedding of society girl Hazel Court and Robert Flemyng.

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