Most Popular Nigel Stafford-Clark Trailers
Total trailers found: 10
Down in the Valley Trailer (1984)
16 April 1984
Short opera. A boy falls in love with a girl after an Appalachian prayer meeting, but her father wants her to go to the dance with a local shyster who the father thinks will bail him out of his money troubles instead.
Parker Trailer (1985)
03 May 1985
An Aussie businessman is trying to find out why and by whom he was kidnapped and then later released with no explanation.
Warriors Trailer (1999)
29 November 1999
If the conflict in Bosnia has become something of a forgotten war, it's not for the want of trying from the immensely powerful BBC film Warriors, the story of five young soldiers and their harrowing experiences in the region.
Stormy Monday Trailer (1988)
01 May 1988
When a corrupt American businessman tries to strong arm his way into businesses in Newcastle, England, he is thwarted by a club attendant and his waitress girlfriend.
Immortality Trailer (1998)
27 November 1998
A vampire in London is searching for the ideal woman to 'redeem' him.
The Bad Sister Trailer (1983)
05 February 1983
Jane is the illegitimate daughter of a Scottish landowner. She is disowned and expelled from his estates, but although she settles down to a new life in London, she is still haunted by the memory of her childhood and her mother's mysterious death.
The House Trailer (1984)
27 September 1984
Set in 1884, and based on the assumption that Britain is one of the Baltic states between Russia and Latvia, making it part of Europe instead of an off-shore island.
The Assam Garden Trailer (1985)
04 June 1985
An insecure, aggressive widow of a tea garden manager reluctantly develops an affectionate relationship with an Indian housewife and her family.
Last Day of Summer Trailer (1984)
07 June 1984
A young woman moves into a hippy commune and spends an idyllic summer with the young brother of one of the residents.
Shoot to Kill Trailer (1990)
03 June 1990
Shoot to Kill is a four-hour drama documentary reconstruction of the events that led to the 1984–86 Stalker Inquiry into the shooting of six terrorist suspects in Northern Ireland in 1982 by a specialist unit of the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC), allegedly without warning (the so-called shoot-to-kill policy); the organised fabrication of false accounts of the events; and the difficulties created for the inquiry team in their investigation.