Flannery O'Connor

Most Popular Flannery O'Connor Trailers

Total trailers found: 10

The Displaced Person Trailer (1977)

12 April 1977

A conscientious but driven Polish refugee disrupts the hierarchy of power on a Georgia farm in the 1940s.

Wildcat Trailer (2023)

01 September 2023

Can scandalous art still serve God? Does suffering precede all greatness? Can illness be a blessing? In 1950, writer Flannery O'Connor visits her mother Regina in Georgia when she is diagnosed with lupus at twenty-four years old.

Wise Blood Trailer (1979)

24 October 1979

A Southerner--young, poor, ambitious but uneducated--determines to become something in the world. He decides that the best way to do that is to become a preacher and start up his own church.

Katafalk Trailer (1990)

10 June 1990

What you won't do for the happiness of your only daughter! Successfully get rid of the "beloved child" and not go broke at the same time - that's the only dream of a punchy mother.

Do You Reverse? Trailer (1932)

14 April 1932

“When I was six I had a chicken that walked backward and was in the Pathé News. I was in it too with the chicken.

Black Hearts Bleed Red Trailer (1992)

01 January 1992

A stark adaptation of Flannery O’Connor’s short story A Good Man Is Hard To Find.

A Circle in the Fire Trailer (1974)

27 June 1974

When two scrappy boys show up at Mrs. Cope's farm, she doesn't quite know what to do.Only boys, how much damage can they do? When Mrs.

And The Lame Shall Enter First Trailer (1993)

14 September 1993

The film takes place in America in the 30-50s of our century. The hero of the film, claiming to be a biblical prophet, goes from an embittered teenager to a hardened criminal.

Loves with Gravity: Gul and Adem Trailer (1996)

09 February 1996

Adapted from the story \"Good Country People\" by Flannery O. Connor. Plot - Longing for love, the story of the exploitation of Gul, who has an artificial leg, by the cunning peasant Adam.

Uncommon Grace: The Life of Flannery O'Connor Trailer (2017)

25 February 2017

Despite her premature death at age 39, Flannery O’Connor left behind one of the most haunting and strikingly original bodies of work in 20th Century literature.