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Rex Harrison Movies

Want to know the best Rex Harrison movies?  How about the worst Rex Harrison movies?  Curious about Rex Harrison box office grosses or which Rex Harrison movie picked up the most Oscar® nominations? Need to know which Rex Harrison movie got the best reviews from critics and audiences? Well, you have come to the right place.

Rex Harrison (1908-1990) was an Oscar® winning English actor.   Harrison began his career on the stage in 1924.  By the 1930s he was appearing in movies.  His movie career spanned over 6 different decades.  His IMDb page shows 59 acting credits from 1930 to 1986.   This page will rank 36 Rex Harrison Movies in 6 different statistical categories.    Television shows, cameos and his movies not released in North America theaters are not included in the rankings.

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

Year Movie (Year) Rating S
Year Movie (Year) Rating S
1964 My Fair Lady (1964)
AA Best Picture Win
AA Best Actor Win
1938 The Citadel (1938)
AA Best Picture Nom
1946 Anna and the King of Siam (1946)
1963 Cleopatra (1963)
AA Best Picture Nom
1960 Midnight Lace (1960)
1947 The Foxes of Harrow (1947)
1965 The Agony and the Ecstasy (1965)
1948 Unfaithfully Yours (1948)
1947 The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947)
1964 The Yellow Rolls-Royce (1964)
1958 The Reluctant Debutante (1958)
1938 Sidewalks of London (1938)
1945 Notorious Gentleman (1945)
1967 Doctor Dolittle (1967)
1941 Major Barbara (1941)
1940 Night Train To Munich (1940)
1945 A Yank in London (1945)
1936 Men Are Not Gods (1936)
1937 Storm in a Teacup (1937)
1945 Blithe Spirit (1945)
1954 King Richard and the Crusaders (1954)
1967 The Honey Pot (1967)
1939 Continental Express (1939)
1956 The Constant Husband (1956)
1940 Ten Days in Paris (1940)
1952 The Four Poster (1952)
1948 Escape (1948)
1953 Main Street to Broadway (1953)
1961 The Happy Thieves (1961)
1951 The Long Dark Hall (1951)
1977 Crossed Swords (1977)
1969 Staircase (1969)
1968 A Flea In Her Ear (1968)
1939 Over The Moon (1939)
1979 The Fifth Musketeer (1979)
1979 Ashanti (1979)

Rex Harrison 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 Rex Harrison movies by co-stars of his movies.
Sort Rex Harrison movies by adjusted domestic box office grosses using current movie ticket cost
Sort Rex Harrison movies by domestic yearly box office rank or trivia
Sort Rex Harrison 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 Rex Harrison movie received.
Sort Rex Harrison movies by Ultimate Movie Rankings (UMR) Score. UMR Score puts box office, reviews and awards into a mathematical equation and gives each movie a score.
Use the sort and search buttons to make this a very interactive table.

R Movie (Year) UMR Co-Star Links Adj. B.O. Worldwide (mil) Review Oscar Nom / Win UMR Score
R Movie (Year) UMR Co-Star Links Actual B.O. Domestic (mil) Adj. B.O. Domestic (mil) Adj. B.O. Worldwide (mil) B.O. Rank by Year Review Oscar Nom / Win UMR Score S
1 My Fair Lady (1964)
AA Best Picture Win
AA Best Actor Win
Audrey Hepburn 56.60 752.8 752.80 3 79 12 / 08 99.8
3 The Citadel (1938)
AA Best Picture Nom
Robert Donat &
Rosalind Russell
3.90 182.8 481.10 40 79 04 / 00 97.7
4 Anna and the King of Siam (1946) Irene Dunne &
Linda Darnell
9.50 337.8 337.80 22 71 05 / 02 96.6
2 Cleopatra (1963)
AA Best Picture Nom
Elizabeth Taylor &
Richard Burton
57.80 839.8 1,462.70 1 52 09 / 04 94.8
7 Midnight Lace (1960) Doris Day &
Myrna Loy &
10.00 181.2 181.20 24 71 01 / 00 93.4
5 The Foxes of Harrow (1947) Maureen O'Hara 8.60 292.2 292.20 22 63 01 / 00 92.7
6 The Agony and the Ecstasy (1965) Charlton Heston 10.80 132.5 132.50 19 79 05 / 00 92.0
9 Unfaithfully Yours (1948) Linda Darnell 3.40 107.1 107.10 99 82 00 / 00 88.5
8 The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947) Gene Tierney &
George Sanders
2.80 95.9 95.90 118 84 01 / 00 88.2
10 The Yellow Rolls-Royce (1964) Ingrid Bergman 13.30 177.4 190.00 14 56 00 / 00 87.2
11 The Reluctant Debutante (1958) Kay Kendall 4.40 92.6 177.40 53 73 00 / 00 83.0
12 Sidewalks of London (1938) Vivien Leigh &
Charles Laughton
2.20 101.9 101.90 103 69 00 / 00 82.7
13 Notorious Gentleman (1945) Lilli Palmer 2.80 102.1 102.10 104 68 00 / 00 82.3
15 Doctor Dolittle (1967) Rex Harrison &
Samantha Eggar
8.80 90.4 90.40 34 54 09 / 02 77.8
16 Major Barbara (1941) Deborah Kerr 1.70 73.8 73.80 141 67 00 / 00 76.4
14 Night Train To Munich (1940) Margaret Lockwood 1.00 44.6 44.60 168 76 01 / 00 76.4
17 A Yank in London (1945) Dean Jagger 2.80 102.1 102.10 100 58 00 / 00 75.9
20 Men Are Not Gods (1936) Miriam Hopkins 1.60 81.1 81.10 115 58 00 / 00 69.8
19 Storm in a Teacup (1937) Vivien Leigh &
Sara Allgood
1.00 48.1 48.10 168 66 00 / 00 67.5
18 Blithe Spirit (1945) Directed by David Lean 0.50 17.9 17.90 163 73 01 / 01 66.4
23 King Richard and the Crusaders (1954) Virginia Mayo 3.90 107.1 221.40 85 43 00 / 00 61.4
21 The Honey Pot (1967) Susan Hayward 2.50 25.8 25.80 85 67 00 / 00 58.6
22 Continental Express (1939) Valerie Hobson 0.70 33.4 33.40 198 63 00 / 00 56.2
23 The Constant Husband (1956) Kay Kendall 0.60 13.8 13.80 197 67 00 / 00 52.2
24 Ten Days in Paris (1940) Kaaren Verne 0.40 19.4 19.40 215 64 00 / 00 50.2
27 The Four Poster (1952) Lilli Palmer 1.10 26.1 26.10 192 61 01 / 00 49.9
25 Escape (1948) Peggy Cummins 0.60 18.4 18.40 189 64 00 / 00 49.4
28 Main Street to Broadway (1953) Agnes Moorehead &
Lionel Barrymore
1.30 26.3 28.00 197 60 00 / 00 47.3
29 The Happy Thieves (1961) Rita Hayworth 2.00 33.8 33.80 94 58 00 / 00 47.1
30 The Long Dark Hall (1951) Lilli Palmer 0.90 23.3 23.30 209 57 00 / 00 38.0
31 Crossed Swords (1977) Charlton Heston &
Ernest Borgnine
7.30 40.9 40.90 72 50 00 / 00 34.4
32 Staircase (1969) Richard Burton 5.30 46.5 46.50 51 47 00 / 00 33.3
33 A Flea In Her Ear (1968) Rosemary Harris 1.90 17.8 17.80 123 54 00 / 00 28.3
35 Over The Moon (1939) Merle Oberon 0.90 38.5 38.50 187 43 00 / 00 21.0
34 The Fifth Musketeer (1979) Olivia de Havilland 2.60 13.1 13.10 100 50 00 / 00 18.4
36 Ashanti (1979) Michael Caine &
William Holden
1.70 8.5 8.50 127 43 00 / 00 8.1

Adjusted Rex Harrison Adjusted Worldwide Box Office Grosses 

Movie (Year) UMR Co-Star Links World-Wide Box Office Adjusted (mil) S
Movie (Year) UMR Co-Star Links World-Wide Box Office Adjusted (mil) S
Cleopatra (1963)
AA Best Picture Nom
Elizabeth Taylor &
Richard Burton
1,462.70
The Citadel (1938)
AA Best Picture Nom
Robert Donat &
Rosalind Russell
481.10
King Richard and the Crusaders (1954) Virginia Mayo 221.40
The Yellow Rolls-Royce (1964) Ingrid Bergman 190.00
The Reluctant Debutante (1958) Kay Kendall 177.40
Main Street to Broadway (1953) Agnes Moorehead &
Lionel Barrymore
28.00
Elizabeth Taylor and Rex Harrison in 1963’s Cleopatra

Possibly Interesting Facts About Rex Harrison

1. Reginald Carey Harrison was born in  Huyton, Lancashire (Liverpool) in 1908.

2.  As a child, Rex Harrison lost most of the sight in his left eye  after catching the measles.

3.  As a child, Harrison changed his name to Rex, knowing it was the Latin word for “King”.

4.  Rex Harrison served in the Royal Air Force during World War II.  He reached the rank of Flight Lieutenant.

5.  Rex Harrison was married six times.  Three of his wives were his movie co-stars:  Lilli Palmer, Kay Kendall and Rachel Roberts.   He had two sons and three stepsons.    Jared Harris was his stepson from 1971 to 1975.

6. Rex Harrison frequently wore a specific ring with a dark square-cut stone, on his little finger of his left hand. It appears in almost all of his films.

7. Chuck Jones has stated that Bugs Bunny’s character was based on an amalgam of Rex Harrison, Dorothy Parker and D’Artagnan.

8. Rex Harrison was in four Oscar® Best Picture nominees: The Citadel (1938) Cleopatra (1963), My Fair Lady (1964) and Doctor Dolittle (1967). My Fair Lady was the only winner.

9. Rex Harrison  was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 1989.

10. Check out Rex Harrison‘s career compared to current and classic actors.  Most 100 Million Dollar Movies of All-Time.  If you want to see Tyrone Power’s movie career posters then you need to check out this Steve Lensman You Tube Video

Academy Award® and Oscar® are the registered trademarks of the Academy of Motion Arts and Sciences.  Golden Globes® are the registered trademark and service mark of the Hollywood Foreign Press.  Emmy® is a registered trademark.
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29 thoughts on “Rex Harrison Movies”

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Older comments
  1. BOB on GOLDEN GLOBES 3 of 3 says:
    January 16, 2023 at 7:28 am

    It actually always struck me as an ironic coincidence that in Raging Work Horse DeNiro’s boxer Jake LaMotta got to recite Brando’s classic “I coulda been a contender” speech from Waterfront-

    whereas Tennessee Williams effectively blocked ‘Rocky’ Stallone from reproducing the Stanley part in a big-screen remake of Streetcar. The world can surprise you with how fair it can be at times!

    Wisely, over here at least, the distributors gave Banshees only a limited Art House release, accurately assessing that it would mostly appeal to artistic connoisseurs such as I.

    And if you are in touch with Steve again, WH, in whatever one of those alternative universes where he currently lurks tell him that Banshees is not a horror movie and it shouldn’t go into his Xmas movies video.

    Actually I was wondering if there is a coincidence in Steve’s absence with the fact that when Martin Luther King was assassinated Brando went absence from films for a time, so demoralised was he by Dr King’s death. You know, Work Horse, how Steve likes to emulate Brando and other Legends.

    And I did notice that when Steve went AWOL last summer it was round-about the time his own political hero Boris “Big Dog” Johnson lost the British Conservative party leadership.

    Although as you know Steve has always been a big hit with me and indeed many others on this site – I’m afraid he wouldn’t have gone down well with Laddie or The Duke.That’s because Steve, whilst probably a moderate or even conservative voter himself most likely lives in one of what are called the “Red Wall” voting districts of England.

    Anyway in a nutshell my main point here is that as the old cliché goes you should always “follow the money”. Anyone who has read my own posts – and there will be many of them out there; reading my posts probably account for about 90% of the total views that the Cogerson site racks up – will know that whereas despite my misgivings about Myrna Loy I always thought that she deserved Oscar-love as much as most stars and more-so than many;

    but unfortunately she had no box office clout to encourage the “money vultures” to fight her corner. They were simply not interested in sponsoring one of the uncommercial “leading ladies” of Gable, Powell and Leach.

    And finally a “word to the wise guy” himself. You are undoubtedly one of the most active and purposeful guys that I have had the pleasure to come across BUT – whilst it is undoubtedly a healthy lifestyle choice and commendable athletic feat – running up and down the Rocky Steps like a [this time Race] Horse will never turn anyone into a good actor or great boxer.

    If that WAS an automatic key to greatness in those activities whoever Stallone’s double was might well have eclipsed Brando’s Stanley on screen or Ali in the ring.

    Reply
    1. Cogerson says:
      January 16, 2023 at 12:36 pm

      Hey Bob….Steve has said a return visit to UMR is coming in the near future. We have been discussing a recent trivia that has really blown my mind. A little background.

      Over the weekend, WoC and I saw A Man Called Otto in theaters….and The Duke at home. The Duke which stars Helen Mirren and Jim Broadbent. It revolves around the stealing of a Goya painting in the early 1960s. In real life the painting was missing for 4 years.

      When Dr. No came out in 1962, the painting was missing. There is a scene in Dr. No’s lair where Connery stops and looks at a painting. That painting was a copy of the stolen Goya. The joke being that Dr. No had the missing photo. Apparently the Bond producers have been doing this in joke for numerous Bond movies.

      Steve was aware of the joke…but another UMR Hall of Famer, George, who is a huge Bond fan, had no idea that was there….I told George “It’s like a joke that took you 60 years to understand.”
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R8ZFCF-C0W0&t=183s

      Reply
      1. BOB to BRUCE Reply says:
        January 16, 2023 at 4:42 pm

        HI BRUCE

        Thanks for the reply, new interesting trivia and the link.

        Reply

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