FR

pixel
Oh My Gore ! homepage >

Filmography from John Phillips

Filmography from : John Phillips


Actor :

E html>if(typeof uet === 'function'){ uet('bb', 'LoadTitle', {wb: 1}); }window.addEventListener('load', (event) => { if (typeof window.csa !== 'undefined' && typeof window.csa === 'function') { var csaLatencyPlugin = window.csa('Content', { element: { slo, Justus Addiss (16 episodes, 1966-1968), Jerry Hopper (15 episodes, 1965-1968), Sobey Martin (14 episodes, 1964-1966), Harry Harris (12 episodes, 1965-1967), Leonard J Horn (9 episodes, 1964-1966), Felix E Feist (6 episodes, 1964-1965), Robert Sparr (5 episodes, 1967-1968), James Goldstone (4 episodes, 1964-1965), Gerald Mayer (4 episodes, 1966-1967), Nathan Juran (3 episodes, 1965-1966), Sutton Roley (3 episodes, 1966), Charles R Rondeau (3 episodes, 1968), Laslo Benedek (2 episodes, 1964-1965), Irwin Allen (2 episodes, 1964), John Brahm (2 episodes, 1964), Alex March (2 episodes, 1965-1966), Alan Crosland Jr (1 episode, 1964), Joseph Lejtes (1 episode, 1964), Gerd Oswald (1 episode, 1964), James B Clark (1 episode, 1965), Leo Penn (1 episode, 1965), Abner Biberman (1 episode, 1966), Tom Gries (1 episode, 1966), Harmon Jones (1 episode, 1967), 0
Voyage chronicled the adventures of the world's first privately owned nuclear submarine, the SSRN Seaview. Designed by Admiral Harriman Nelson, she was a tool of oceanographic research for the Nelson Institute of Marine Research. Though the show is known for its "monster" episodes, many plots were veiled commentaries of what was happening in the news. Such plotlines as nuclear doomsday, pollution of natural resources, foreign threat, and theft...


E html>if(typeof uet === 'function'){ uet('bb', 'LoadTitle', {wb: 1}); }window.addEventListener('load', (event) => { if (typeof window.csa !== 'undefined' && typeof window.csa === 'function') { var csaLatencyPlugin = window.csa('Content', { element: { slo, Wolf Rilla, 0
In the English village of Midwich, the blond-haired, glowing-eyed children of uncertain paternity prove to have frightening powers....


E html>if(typeof uet === 'function'){ uet('bb', 'LoadTitle', {wb: 1}); }window.addEventListener('load', (event) => { if (typeof window.csa !== 'undefined' && typeof window.csa === 'function') { var csaLatencyPlugin = window.csa('Content', { element: { slo, Franc Roddam, 0
London, 1965: Like many other youths, Jimmy hates the philistine life, especially his parents and his job in a company's mailing division. Only when he's together with his friends, a 'Mod' clique, cruises London on his motor-scooter and hears music such as that of 'The Who' and 'The High Numbers', he feels free and accepted. However, it's a flight into an illusionary world. ...


E html>if(typeof uet === 'function'){ uet('bb', 'LoadTitle', {wb: 1}); }window.addEventListener('load', (event) => { if (typeof window.csa !== 'undefined' && typeof window.csa === 'function') { var csaLatencyPlugin = window.csa('Content', { element: { slo, Jonathan Alwyn (7 episodes, 1971-1973), Alan Cooke (3 episodes, 1971), Jim Goddard (3 episodes, 1971), Derek Bennett (2 episodes, 1973), Reginald Collin (2 episodes, 1973), Graham Evans (2 episodes, 1973), Bill Bain (1 episode, 1971), Piers Haggard (1 episode, 1971), Kim Mills (1 episode, 1971), Mike Vardy (1 episode, 1971), Peter Duguid (1 episode, 1973), Don Leaver (1 episode, 1973), Dennis Vance (1 episode, 1973), 0
This British TV series, shot almost entirely on videotape, dramatized short mystery fiction by authors who were contemporaries of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Many of these authors were virtually unknown to modern audiences, although all of the detectives portrayed had appeared in popular ongoing series of short stories or novels. "Rivals" featured the only dramatizations to date of such period characters as Jacques Futrelle's "The Thinking Machine"...


E html>if(typeof uet === 'function'){ uet('bb', 'LoadTitle', {wb: 1}); }window.addEventListener('load', (event) => { if (typeof window.csa !== 'undefined' && typeof window.csa === 'function') { var csaLatencyPlugin = window.csa('Content', { element: { slo, Freddie Francis, 0
A special sideshow torture exhibit has the power, according to showman Dr. Diablo, to warn people of evil in their futures. As skeptical customers are shown the greed and violence they're hiding, one of them snaps and kills Diablo. When they run off, we see the murder to be staged as part of the show. One of the customers has hung around to see this, and wants to make a deal with Diablo, aka the Devil....