The best Michael Kitchen’s tv movie movies

Michael Kitchen

Michael Kitchen

31/10/1948 (75 años)
If you love cinema, you will share this ranking of the best Michael Kitchen’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 Michael Kitchen.

The Bunker

The Bunker
6.8/10
Dramatization depicting the events surrounding Adolf Hitler's last weeks in and around his underground bunker in Berlin before and during the battle for the city.

Brimstone and Treacle

Brimstone and Treacle
7.5/10
Produced in 1976 for BBC's Play For Today. Banned for 11 years, and finally broadcast on August 25th, 1987. It was remade, with Denholm Elliot returning to the cast, in 1982.

The Railway Children

The Railway Children
7.4/10
Set at the turn of the 20th century, The Railway Children tells the story of three Edwardian children and their mother who move to a country house in Yorkshire after their father is mysteriously taken away by the police.

The Comedy of Errors

The Comedy of Errors
6.9/10
  • Genre: ComedyTV Movie
  • Release: 24/12/1983
  • Character: Antipholus of Ephesus / Antipholus of Syracuse
Aegeon of Syracuse has come to Ephesus to seek his son, who went in search of his missing twin and mother months ago. Too bad that Ephesus has just declared war on Syracuse, and will instantly put to death any Syracusean found within their borders unless a ransome's paid. Meanwhile, the son, Antipholus, and his servant, Dromio (also an identical twin), keep running into strangers who seem to know them...

A Royal Scandal

A Royal Scandal
6.6/10
The doomed marriage of the Prince Regent and Caroline of Brunswick.

Crossing to Freedom

Crossing to Freedom
6.8/10
A very proper Englishman becomes saddled with youngsters that he has to help escape Nazi Germany. Adaptation of Nevil Shute's novel.

No Man's Land

No Man's Land
8.6/10
'No Man's Land' is a play by Harold Pinter written in 1974 and first performed in 1975. In this 1978, TV adaptation, a seedy poet shows up at the home of a rich writer and they start reminiscing about the 'past,' in a menacing, Pinteresque fashion.

Caught on a Train

Caught on a Train
British playwright Stephen Poliakoff's comical teleplay investigates Europe's changing social landscape via three strangers who meet on a train. Peter (Michael Kitchen), an English businessman on an overnight trip through Europe, shares a compartment with a beautiful American woman, Lorraine (Wendy Raebeck). But Peter's hope for romance is soon dampened by Lorraine's xenophobia and the arrival of a haughty Viennese aristocrat (Peggy Ashcroft).

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