An English leading man with striking pale eyes and a knack for conveying intense, disturbing characters both evil and benign, Terence Stamp made his film debut as the naive yet ambiguous title character in Peter Ustinov's adaptation of "Billy Budd" (1962). After reinforcing his initial impression via the chilling title role of William Wyler's "The Collector" (1965), he went on to distinguish himself in the films of Joseph Losey ("Modesty Blaise" 1966), John Schlesinger ("Far From the Madding Crowd" 1967), Ken Loach ("Poor Cow" 1967) and Pier Paolo Pasolini ("Teorema" 1968).
A college lecturer takes off to Paris to start anew after a scandal had cost him his job.
Life Happens
A single mom ends up with full-time custody after the kid’s pro surfer dad takes off on tour.
Black Swan
"2 words - Natalie Portman"A young ballerina - Nina's passion of ballet dancing takes to new heights as her company searches for a new lead to play both the roles of White and Black...