Works
- Selected film works
- Road Gang, 1936
- Love Begins at 20, 1936
- Devil's Playground, 1937
- Fugitives for a Night, 1938
- A Man to Remember, 1938
- Five Came Back, 1939 (with Nathanael West and J. Cody)
- Curtain Call, 1941
- Bill of Divorcement, 1940
- Kitty Foyle, 1940
- The Remarkable Andrew, 1942
- Tender Comrade, 1944
- A Guy Named Joe, 1944
- Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo, 1944
- Our Vines Have Tender Grapes, 1945
- Gun Crazy, 1950 (co-writer, front Millard Kaufman)
- He Ran All the Way, 1951 (co-writer, front Guy Endore)
- The Prowler, 1951 (uncredited with Hugo Butler)
- Roman Holiday, 1953 (front Ian McLellan Hunter)
- They Were So Young, 1954, (pseudonym: Felix Lutzkendorf)
- The Boss, 1956 (front: Ben L. Perry)
- The Brave One, 1956 (front Robert Rich)
- The Green-eyed Blonde, 1957 (front: Sally Stubblefield)
- From the Earth to the Moon, 1958 (co-writer as front: James Leicester)
- Cowboy (1958) (front: Edmund H. North)
- Spartacus, 1960, dir. by Stanley Kubrick
- Exodus, 1960 (based on Leon Uris' 1958 novel of the same name)
- The Last Sunset, 1961
- Lonely are the Brave, 1962
- The Sandpiper, 1965
- Hawaii, 1966 (based on the novel by James Michener, 1959)
- The Fixer, 1968
- Johnny Got His Gun, 1971 (also directed)
- The Horsemen, 1971
- F.T.A., 1972
- Executive Action, 1973
- Papillon, 1973 (based on the novel by Henri Charrière, 1969)
- Novels, plays and essays
- Eclipse, 1935
- Washington Jitters, 1936
- Johnny Got His Gun, 1939
- The Remarkable Andrew, 1940 (also known as Chronicle of a Literal Man)
- The Biggest Thief in Town, 1949 (lay)
- The Time Out of the Toad, 1972 (essays)
- Night of the Aurochs, 1979 (unfinished, ed. R. Kirsch)
- Non-fiction
- Harry Bridges, 1941
- The Time of the Toad, 1949
- The Devil in the Book, 1956
- Additional Dialogue: Letters of Dalton Trumbo, 1942–62, 1970 (ed. by H. Manfull)
Read more about this topic: Dalton Trumbo
Famous quotes containing the word works:
“Night and Day ve been tampered with,
Every quality and pith
Surcharged and sultry with a power
That works its will on age and hour.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“Was it an intellectual consequence of this rebirth, of this new dignity and rigor, that, at about the same time, his sense of beauty was observed to undergo an almost excessive resurgence, that his style took on the noble purity, simplicity and symmetry that were to set upon all his subsequent works that so evident and evidently intentional stamp of the classical master.”
—Thomas Mann (18751955)
“The noble simplicity in the works of nature only too often originates in the noble shortsightedness of him who observes it.”
—G.C. (Georg Christoph)