Category
page 21970 American films

R. P. M.
1970 film by Stanley Kramer

Hornets’ Nest
1970 film by Franco Cirino, Phil Karlson

Alex in Wonderland
1970 film by Paul Mazursky

Cannon for Cordoba
1970 film by Paul Wendkos

Multiple Maniacs
1970 film by John Waters

No Blade of Grass
1970 film by Cornel Wilde

The Adventurers
1970 film by Lewis Gilbert

Start the Revolution Without Me
1970 film by Bud Yorkin

Last of the Mobile Hot Shots
1970 film by Sidney Lumet

Cotton Comes to Harlem
1970 film directed by Ossie Davis

They Call Me Mister Tibbs!
1970 film by Gordon Douglas

Julius Caesar
1970 film by Stuart Burge

The Honeymoon Killers
1970 film by Leonard Kastle

The Cross and the Switchblade
1970 film directed by Don Murray

Song of Norway
1970 film by Andrew L. Stone

The Dunwich Horror
1970 film by Daniel Haller

A Walk in the Spring Rain
1970 film by Guy Green

Trash
1970 film by Paul Morrissey

The Out-of-Towners
1970 film by Arthur Hiller

The Hawaiians
1970 film by Tom Gries

One More Time
1970 film by Jerry Lewis

Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon
1970 film by Otto Preminger

The Losers
1970 film directed by Jack Starrett

Puzzle of a Downfall Child
1970 film by Jerry Schatzberg

Little Fauss and Big Halsy
1970 film by Sidney J. Furie

The Rebel Rousers
1970 film by Martin B. Cohen

Which Way to the Front?
1970 film by Jerry Lewis

Land Raiders
1969 film by Nathan H. Juran

The Wild Country
1970 film by Robert Totten

My Lover My Son
1970 film by John Newland

Skullduggery
1970 film by Gordon Douglas

Something for Everyone
1970 film by Harold Prince

The Lady in the Car with Glasses and a Gun
1970 film by Anatole Litvak

The Invincible Six
1970 film by Jean Negulesco

House of Dark Shadows
1970 film by Dan Curtis

...tick...tick...tick...
1970 film by Ralph Nelson

Barquero
Barquero is a 1970 American Western film starring Lee Van Cleef and Warren Oates, produced by Hal Klein and directed by Gordon Douglas. Barquero was Lee Van Cleef's first American-made film since 1962's How the West Was Won. It was also his first starring role in an American Western. The film grossed $135,381 at the US/Canadian box-office.

Flap
1970 film directed by Carol Reed

The Baby Maker
1970 film by James Bridges

Promise at Dawn
1970 film directed by Jules Dassin

End of the Road
1970 film by Aram Avakian

The Deserter
1970 film by Burt Kennedy

Where's Poppa?
1970 film by Carl Reiner

The Delta Factor
1970 film by Tay Garnett

How Do I Love Thee?
1970 film by Michael Gordon

Count Yorga, Vampire
1970 film by Bob Kelljan

Gas-s-s-s
Gas-s-s-s (on-screen title: Gas! -Or- It Became Necessary to Destroy the World in Order to Save It.) is a 1970 American post-apocalyptic black comedy film directed by Roger Corman, written by George Armitage, and produced and released by American International Pictures. The plot follows survivors of an accidental military gas leak involving an experimental agent that kills everyone on Earth over the age of 25 (a cartoon title sequence shows a John Wayne-esque Army General announcing — and denouncing — the "accident"; the story picks up as the last of the victims are dying with social

Loving
1970 film by Irvin Kershner

Watermelon Man
1970 film by Melvin Van Peebles

Pieces of Dreams
1970 film by Daniel Haller

The Angel Levine
1970 film by Ján Kadár

Tropic of Cancer
1970 film by Joseph Strick

C.C. and Company
1970 film by Seymour Robbie

Macho Callahan
1970 film by Bernard L. Kowalski

Dirty Dingus Magee
1970 film by Burt Kennedy

The Resurrection of Broncho Billy
1970 short film

The Wizard of Gore
1970 film by Herschell Gordon Lewis

Darker than Amber
1970 film by Robert Clouse

Street Scenes
1970 film by Martin Scorsese

King of the Grizzlies
1970 film by Ron Kelly