Robert Mitchum Movies

The American Film Institute ranked Robert Mitchum as the 23rd greatest male actor of all-time.

The American Film Institute ranked Robert Mitchum as the 23rd greatest male actor of all-time.

Want to know the best Robert Mitchum movies?  How about the worst Robert Mitchum movies?  Curious about Robert Mitchum’s box office grosses or which Robert Mitchum movie picked up the most Oscar® nominations? Need to know which Robert Mitchum movie got the best reviews from critics and audiences? Well you have come to the right place….because we have all of that information.

The American Film Institute published their 50 Greatest Screen Legends in 1999. To qualify the performer had to have made their screen debut before 1950. The list presented the Top 25 actors and the Top 25 actresses of all time. One of my goals here on this website is to write a page on the 50 Greatest Screen Legends. With the publication of this page I am now exactly half way to my goal…..as I have done a page on 17 of the Greatest Actors and 8 of the Greatest Actresses. Which gets us to the subject of this page …..coming in at #23 on the Greatest Screen Legend Actors poll is Robert Mitchum.

Robert Mitchum (1917-1997) was an Oscar® nominated actor who appeared in 135 acting roles in movies and television between 1942 and 1997. He first gained fame appearing in the World War II movies, 1944’s Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo and 1945’s The Story of G.I. Joe. In the late 1940s, early 1950s he appeared in some of the greatest film noir movies ever produced….1947’s Out of the Past, 1950’s Undercurrent and 1952’s Angel Face. Other high watermarks in his career included…1954’s River of No Return(Marilyn Monroe), 1955’s The Night of the Hunter, 1962’s Cape Fear, 1967’s El Dorado and 1973’s The Friends of Eddie Coyle.

His IMDb page shows 135 acting credits from 1942-1997. This page will rank 82 Robert Mitchum movies from Best to Worst in six different sortable columns of information. Television shows, shorts, cameos and movies that were not released in theaters were not included in the rankings.

Robert Mitchum in 1955's The Night of the Hunter

Robert Mitchum in 1955’s The Night of the Hunter

Robert Mitchum Movies Ranked In Chronological Order With Ultimate Movie Rankings Score (1 to 5 UMR Tickets) *Best combo of box office, reviews and awards.

Robert Mitchum Movies Can Be Ranked 6 Ways In This Table

The really cool thing about this table is that it is “user-sortable”. Rank the movies anyway you want.

  • Sort Robert Mitchum movies by co-stars of his movies.
  • Sort Robert Mitchum movies by adjusted domestic box office grosses using current movie ticket cost (in millions)
  • Sort Robert Mitchum movies by yearly box office rank or trivia
  • Sort Robert Mitchum movies how they were received by critics and audiences.  60% rating or higher should indicate a good movie.
  • Sort by how many Oscar® nominations and how many Oscar® wins each Robert Mitchum movie received.
  • Sort Robert Mitchum movies by Ultimate Movie Ranking (UMR) Score.  UMR Score puts box office, reviews and awards into a mathematical equation and gives each movie a score.
  • Use the search and sort buttons to make this a very interactive page.
Robert Mitchum appeared in 135 acting roles....he received only one acting nomination in his ENTIRE career....a Best Supporting Actor Oscar® nomination for The Story of G.I. Joe.

Robert Mitchum appeared in 135 acting roles….he received only one acting nomination in his ENTIRE career….a Best Supporting Actor Oscar® nomination for The Story of G.I. Joe.

Possibly Interesting Facts About Robert Mitchum

 

1. How he got to Hollywood. Robert Mitchum was born in Connecticut in 1917, moved to California in 1936, got a job working as a machine operator and was pushed by his sister to join the local theater guild.

2. As a machine operator he suffered a nervous breakdown that resulted in temporary blindness. To avoid stress he decided to try and become an extra in the movies. It was a decision that worked out very well indeed.

3. One producer did numerous screen tests on Robert Mitchum….and even after numerous tests the producer could not decide if Mitchum was the worst actor ever or one of the most natural actors ever. The screen tests and the extra work eventually led him to the low budget Hopalong Cassidy movie serials.

4. His first real break was getting a supporting part in a big budget high profile movie….. 1944’s Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo. The next year he got an Oscar® nomination for The Story Of G.I. Joe as Best Supporting Actor. This would turn out to be his only role that got him a nomination for acting (that includes Emmy®, Tony® and Golden Globes®)….135 roles and 1 nomination.

5. Robert Mitchum was married one time in his life and that was to Dorothy Mitchum for 57 years. They had two sons….Christopher and James and one daughter Petrina.

6. In 1948 Robert Mitchum was arrested, convicted and served jail time on charges for possession of marijuana. At the time of his arrest it was assumed this would destroy his promising career…instead it seemed to back up his tough guy anti-hero persona…. his career only lasted another 49 years.

7. Roles Robert Mitchum turned down over his career…..George C. Scott’s role in Patton, Gene Hackman’s role in The French Connection, a role in The Wild Bunch, and the Tony Curtis part in The Defiant Ones.

8. Later in his career, he became the King of the mini-series as he starred in not one not two but three of the most popular mini-series ever….1983’s The Winds of War, 1985’s North and South and 1988’s War and Remembrance.

9. Robert Mitchum’s voice is considered to one of the most distinctive voices to ever be heard on movie screens. This very deep singing voice was recorded on numerous records over the years and has been heard in many of his movies.

10. Probably the best Robert Mitchum tribute site is The Ultimate Robert Mitchum Headquarters.  Every Mitchum fan should be checking out this website….as it is filled with many many awesome Mitchum links.

Academy Award® and Oscar® are the registered trademarks of the Academy of Motion Arts and Sciences.

Check out Robert Mitchum’s career compared to current and classic actors.  Most 100 Million Dollar Movies of All-Time

afi top 25 actorsAFI’s Top 25 Screen Legend Actors….with links to our movie pages on the Screen Legend

1.   Humphrey Bogart  58 Movies Ranked….from Casablanca (1942) to Swing Your Lady (1938)
2.   Cary Grant 58 Movies Ranked… from North by Northwest (1959) to Born To Be Bad (1934)
3.   James Stewart 73 Movies Ranked Mr. Smith Goes to Washington(1939) to Big Sleep(1978)
4.   Marlon Brando 37 Movies Ranked….from The Godfather (1972) to Christopher Columbus (1992)
5.   Fred Astaire 39 Movies Ranked The Towering Inferno (1974) to The Amazing Dobermans (1976)
6.   Henry Fonda 81 Movies Ranked… On Golden Pond (1981) to City on Fire (1979)
7.   Clark Gable 63 Movies Ranked….from Gone With The Wind (1939) to Parnell (1937)
8.   James Cagney 61 Movies Ranked….from Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942) to Boy Meets Girl (1938)
9.   Spencer Tracy 53 Movies Ranked….from Boy’s Town (1938) to Up the River (1930)
10. Charles Chaplin 12 Movies Ranked….from The Kid (1921) to A Countess from Hong Kong (1967)
11. Gary Cooper 67 Movies Ranked….from Sergeant York (1941) to Fighting Caravans (1931)
12. Gregory Peck 53 Movies Ranked To Kill a Mockingbird(1962) to Amazing Grace & Chuck(1987)
13. John Wayne 83 Movies Ranked….from True Grit (1969) to Brannigan (1975)
14. Laurence Olivier 48 Movies Ranked….from Rebecca (1940) to Inchon (1982)
15. Gene Kelly 40 Movies Ranked….from Anchors Aweigh (1945) to Viva Knievel! (1977)
16. Orson Welles 75 Movies Ranked….from Citizen Kane (1941) to Treasure Island (1972)
17. Kirk Douglas 71 Movies Ranked….from Spartacus (1960) to Diamonds (1999)
18. James Dean 3 Movies Ranked….from East of Eden (1955) to Giant (1956)
19. Burt Lancaster 67 Movies Ranked From Here to Eternity (1953) to Executive Action (1973)
20. Marx Brothers 18 Movies Ranked….from Horse Feathers (1932) to The Story of Mankind (1957)
21. Buster Keaton 28 Movies Ranked….from The Cameraman (1928) to The Intruder (1936)
22. Sidney Poitier 46 Movies Ranked….from In the Heat of the Night (1967) to Fast Forward (1985)
23. Robert Mitchum 83 Movies Ranked….from The Longest Day (1962) to Matilda (1978)
24. Edward G. Robinson 67 Movies Ranked 10 Commandments(1956) to BiggestBundleofAll(1968)
25. William Holden 66 Movies Ranked….from The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) to Ashanti (1979)

For comments….all you need is a name and a comment….please ignore the rest.

101 thoughts on “Robert Mitchum Movies

    1. Hey Dan. Thanks for this information on Robert Mitchum and Earl Hodges and their movies together.

  1. 1 HI MO I have said before that I watched a TV interview one time in which Jim Mitchum discussed the powerful screen presence of his brother Bob. Jim told of how Howard Hawks allowed him onto the set of the 1967 El Dorado to watch Bob and the Duke doing a scene in which they walked down the street side by side towards the cameras.

    2 Jim was stationed behind the cameras and in the interview he said “Such was the joint physical presence of brother Bob and John Wayne that I almost had the impression that three men were walking towards me instead of only two.” [Even Mickey Rooney and Alan Ladd couldn’t have matched that iconic impact!]

    3 Best POSTERS in ENTRIES 1- 26 were I thought Rachel and the Stranger, Midway with Chuck taking centre stage, Holiday Affair [one of my own 3 fave Xmas movies] The Lusty Men, the run of posters for Home from the Hill, the 3 for Heaven Knows Mr Allison, Pursued, The Enemy Below [I remember standing in a queue for that one in 1957/58 and a few yards away directly across the road was another queue for Mr Mumbles’ Sayonara. It was like finding oneself in the Land of the Legends!] the foreign language one for the 1962 Cape Fear, and the entire set for El Dorado.

    4 The following were the STILLS I most liked (1) Big Bob with Jane Russell (2) The Yakuza (3) Mitch as Marlowe (4) the 3 Roberts in Crossfire (5) with the Duke in El Dorado (6) with Jane Greer in 1947’s Out of the Past who was the only actress who stood by him after he was jailed for marijuana whilst other actress distanced themselves from him. Jane Greer and he therefore made their 2nd film together, The Big Steal in 1949.

    5 Overall a 98% rated presentation in my own book.

    1. Hi Bob, thanks for the review, rating, info and comment, much appreciated.

      Glad the posters and stills met with your approval.

      I saw photos of Mitchum mopping up the corridors in prison. “The only difference between me and my fellow actors is that I’ve spent more time in jail.”

      Five films scored 10 out of 10 in Mitchum’s filmography, they are – Ryan’s Daughter, El Dorado, The Longest Day, Out of the Past and Night of the Hunter. My top 5.

      Three more scored 9 – Crossfire, Eddie Coyle and G.I. Joe.

      Number 1 and 2 on both IMDB and Rotten Tomatoes is Night of the Hunter and Out of the Past. They are also no.1 & 2 on Bruce’s Critics chart.

      The Longest Day tops the UMR chart but not the adjusted grosses chart, the top spot goes to an older war movie Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo, oooh!

      “I came back from the war and ugly heroes were in.”

      “Movies bore me; especially my own.”

      1. 1 Thanks for the feedback on my Mitchum posts.

        2 I meant to say that Bruce and you agree on 7 out of the 10 best reviewed films but are miles apart [no pun intended] on Ryan’s Daughter which was your No 5 and his No 35 with 62%. IMDB gives it 75% rating.

        3 I have not seen that movie myself but I gather that in it Big Bob’s love making isn’t satisfactory to Sarah Miles and I watched a TV interview in which two critics discussed it and one said the story was far-fetched. When the other asked him why, he retorted “Robert Mitchum not good in bed. Nonsense!”

        4 However Mitch’s apparent predicament in Ryan’s Daughter is consistent with what some film historians have described as, especially in those early noirs and westerns, a world-weary “loser”. One historian reckoned that in Pursued Mitchum’s character was one of the most victimised ever seen on the screen while another observer remarked how in Macao Big Bob was such a “loser” that he couldn’t even win at cards with a marked deck!

        5 Also the closing scenes in Not as a Stranger showed us one of the biggest
        humiliations ever suffered by a Classic Era Hollywood hero. Robert’s “loser” obsession on screen reminds one of McQueen’s preoccupation with “escaping” in his movies. However Big Bob may have liked being a “loser” in real life too because he is on record as saying “I enjoyed being in jail.”

        PS I invite any of your own viewers who are surprised at for example my picking Lamour over Ava to go through their films carefully and note who had the best stand-alone box office record.

  2. Bob, I’ve been posting a lot of comments today, making up for going AWOL yesterday I suppose. Thanks for reviewing the first half of my Robert Mitchum supersized video.

    Glad you liked the posters and stills.

    I agree on Fire Down Below. I had high hopes with Mitchum, Lemmon and Hayworth starring but it all fell apart in the second half. especially with that protracted, disastrous climax.

    “Years ago, I saved up a million dollars from acting, a lot of money in those days, and I spent it all on a horse farm in Tucson. Now when I go down there, I look at that place and I realize my whole acting career adds up to a million dollars worth of horse sh*t.”

    “People think I have an interesting walk. Hell, I’m just trying to hold my gut in.”

    1. HI STEVE

      1 Yes it was a relatively long absence for you.. In fact there has been so much AWOLing across the board that I began to think Bruce had taken over your activities as well as his own !!!

      2 I liked the story of Big Bob and the horses and in a way it reminds me of the country and western son that I’ve mentioned before about the cowboy who goes to the big city for a new life but the woman whom he meets there jilts him at the alter and the singer wails in the final verse –

      “So I’m going back to Texas
      To my herds of cows and grass.
      I’m going back to Texas
      To be one more horse’s a**”

  3. 1 MO In Sept 1997 I attended the graduation of my daughter in Glasgow, Scotland and I’ve mentioned before that as I was queuing outside the university waiting to get in to the ceremony I bought a newspaper which told me that Mitchum and Jimmy Stewart had just died within hours of each other. Slightly ironically a week later I watched on television a film starring an actor who had co-starred with both Stewart and Mitchum, Richard Widmark in the aptly titled When the Legends Die [1972].

    2 POSTERS that on balance are my favourites –White Witch Doctor, Wrath of God, foreign language ones for Fire Down below and Good Guys and the Bad Guys The Racket [I simply love that tagline] Macao with Jane’s obvious attributes dominating the poster, 5 Card Stud, with Dino and Big Bob squaring off, Track of the Cat, two great ones for River of No Return with my Rory getting good feature billing, Secret Ceremony, Thunder Road, Where Danger Lives, the 1st, highly original, one for Not as a Stranger, and par excellence The Way West’s poster [10 years earlier Burt using his own production company planned to do that one with Kirk, Jimmy Stewart and Burt himself].

    3 Another fine run of stills in Part I and I liked (1) the opening one of Mitch relaxing (2) a scene from White Witch Doctor (3) from Fire Down Below – saw it again recently, awful film and I thought Lemmon actually dominated both Mitch and Rita (4) Big Bob with Marilyn (5) a very young Mitch with gun and (6) the “Big 3” in The Way West.

    4 Great stuff so far – Part 2 in morning.

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