K. Gordon Murray - Films

Films

  • The Prince of Peace (aka The Lavton Story)
  • Why Girls Leave Home (aka Secrets of Beauty)
  • Children of Love (originally French)(1953)
  • Mother Holly (Frau Holle) (1954)
  • King Thrushbeard (1954)
  • Hansel and Gretel (1954/II)
  • Rumpelstiltskin (1955)
  • The False Prince (1957)
  • The Robot vs. The Aztec Mummy (1957)
  • Wasted Lives (1957) (originally The Most Wonderful Moment, an Italian film)
  • Little Angel (1958) (presenter)
  • Naughty New York (1959)
  • Santa Claus (film) (1959) (narrator)
  • Count Frankenhausen (aka The Bloody Vampire)(1962)
  • The Turkish Cucumber (1962)
  • Tom Thumb and Little Red Riding Hood (1962)
  • Bring Me the Vampire (1963)
  • Santa Claus and His Helpers (1964)
  • Santa's Enchanted Village (1964) (writer)
  • The Golden Goose (1964)
  • Magic Land of Mother Goose (1965)
  • The Swamp Of The Lost Monsters (aka Swamp Of The Lost Souls) (1965) (originally El Pantano De Las Animas, Swamp Of The Spirits, 1956)
  • Wrestling Women vs the Aztec Mummy (Las Luchadoras Contra La Momia)(1965)
  • Santa's Magic Kingdom (1966) (writer)
  • The Big Bad Wolf (1957/1966)
  • The Pied Piper Of Hamelin (1957/1966)
  • Shanty Tramp (1967) (writer)
  • The Doctor Says (aka The Doctor Speaks Out, The Price of Sin, Wages of Sin) (1968)
  • Savages from Hell (1968) (writer & composer)
  • Curse Of The Doll People (Munecos Infernales) (1968)
  • Shoemaker And The Elves (1956/1968)
  • The Princess and the Swineherd (1953/1968)
  • Santa's Giant Film Festival of the Brothers Grimm (1969)
  • Santa's Fantasy Fair (1969)
  • Witch's Mirror (1960/1969)
  • Mother Goose' Birthday Party (1970)
  • Jack & the Beanstalk (1970)
  • The Daredevil (1972)
  • Thunder County (1974)

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Famous quotes containing the word films:

    Does art reflect life? In movies, yes. Because more than any other art form, films have been a mirror held up to society’s porous face.
    Marjorie Rosen (b. 1942)

    The cinema is not an art which films life: the cinema is something between art and life. Unlike painting and literature, the cinema both gives to life and takes from it, and I try to render this concept in my films. Literature and painting both exist as art from the very start; the cinema doesn’t.
    Jean-Luc Godard (b. 1930)