The best Pete Murray’s movies

Pete Murray

Pete Murray

Today we present the best Pete Murray’s movies. If you are a great movie fan, you will surely know most of them, but we hope to discover a movie that you have not yet seen … and that you love! Let’s go there with the best Pete Murray’s movies.
Genre:

Peeping Tom

Peeping Tom
7.6/10
  • Genre: DramaHorrorThriller
  • Release: 16/05/1960
  • Character: Young Man Embracing Girl (uncredited)
Loner Mark Lewis works at a film studio during the day and, at night, takes racy photographs of women. Also he's making a documentary on fear, which involves recording the reactions of victims as he murders them. He befriends Helen, the daughter of the family living in the apartment below his, and he tells her vaguely about the movie he is making.

Otley

Otley
6.1/10
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release: 01/10/1968
  • Character: DJ (voice)
A petty crook finds himself mistaken for a murderer and a secret agent.

Captain Boycott

Captain Boycott
6.4/10
  • Genre: DramaHistory
  • Release: 26/08/1947
  • Character: Young Officer (uncredited)
Based on real events, this historical drama is set in 19th-century Ireland, when poverty-stricken tenants dispossessed by greedy landowner Capt. Boycott (Cecil Parker) band together to assert their rights. Patriotic farmer Hugh Davin (Stewart Granger) leads the rebels. Choosing nonviolent resistance, the villagers ostracize their nemesis, who squanders his fortune to repair his ruined reputation and wagers what's left on a horse race.

Hungry Hill

Hungry Hill
6.2/10
  • Genre: Drama
  • Release: 07/01/1947
  • Character: Lieutenant Fox
Life becomes a tragedy for the wife (Margaret Lockwood) of an Irish heir (Dennis Price) to a 19th-century family feud and fortune.

Portrait from Life

Portrait from Life
6.7/10
  • Genre: Drama
  • Release: 15/12/1948
  • Character: Lieutenant Keith
A British army officer becomes fascinated by the portrait of a young woman. He travels to Germany to find her, only to discover that she is suffering from amnesia.

Simon Simon

Simon Simon
5.9/10
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release: 01/06/1970
  • Character: Fireman
A comedy short with very little speaking. Graham Stark and John Junkin have a new elevated platform to work with but still manage to get into lots of trouble. Lots of celebrity appearances.

My Brother Jonathan

My Brother Jonathan
7.1/10
  • Genre: Drama
  • Release: 05/02/1948
  • Character: Tony Dakers
Jonathan Dakers' early ambition was to become a great surgeon and to marry Edie Martyn. But, on the death of his father, he is obliged to start work as a partner in a poor general practice in the Black Country. Edie falls in love with Jonathan's brother, Harold, who is killed in the Great War, and Jonathan marries her as planned. It is only afterwards that he realises he now loves another.

Caravan

Caravan
6.2/10
During the last half of the 19th century writer Richard Darrell saves Don Carlos from two robbers, and is entrusted by Don Carlos to take a valuable necklace to Spain. Richard leaves his fiancé, Oriana, and starts the trip. He meets Wycroft, a henchman for Sir Francis Castteldow, an aristocrat out to steal Oriana from Richard. The latter is assaulted, robbed and nearly killed and, as a result, loses his memory. He marries a gypsy girl, Rosal, while Oriana, thinking him dead marries the dastardly Sir Francis. Everybody will meet again. Complications will arise.

Time Flies

Time Flies
5.5/10
The Professor (Felix Aylmer) is showing Susie (Evelyn Dall) around his time machine when it accidently takes off with Tommy (Tommy Handley) and Bill (George Moon) also on board. They are transported to Elizabethan England where they come across Walter Raleigh, William Shakespeare, Queen Elizabeth 1, Captain John Smith and Pocohontas. Will our time travellers return?

The Very Strange Story of the Legendary Joe Meek

The Very Strange Story of the Legendary Joe Meek
7.5/10
Documentary about the influential pop composer and record producer Joe Meek, who died in dramatic circumstances in 1967 after a bizarre childhood and a career, often controversial, which spanned the period from the mid-50s to the rise of the Beatles in the 60s. At the end of his life he was suffering from paranoid delusions that people were watching him through walls. Alan Lewens' film charts an Ortonesque tale of post-war Britain.

Murder in Soho: Who Killed Freddie Mills?

Murder in Soho: Who Killed Freddie Mills?
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 01/08/2018
  • Character: Himself
A real-life murder mystery about the life and untimely death of a national boxing hero, who is often described as Britain's first sporting celebrity. Set in 1960s Soho, the film delves into the world of UK and US organised crime, with gangland figures such as the Krays, boxing, gambling, police corruption and a string of brutal unsolved murders that would become synonymous with the name Freddie Mills. With access to eight hours of previously unseen home movies, this is an intimate portrayal of a man who rose from the humble surroundings of the fairground boxing booth to become world light-heavyweight champion and became a household name appearing on television and in films. But it all ended on 25 July 1965, when he was found shot dead in the back seat of his car.

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