Randal Herley Trailers
Cheeky TrailerA Is for Acid TrailerGiving Tongue Trailer
Randal Herley was born in 1923 in Dewsbury, Yorkshire, England, UK. He was an actor, known for Crown Court (1972), Taggart (1983) and Poirot (1989). He was married to Marjorie H. Grainger. He died on April 14, 2013 in Manchester, Greater Manchester, England, UK.
Most Popular Randal Herley Trailers
Total trailers found: 9
01 January 1986
A missing 1950s era airplane is found 27 years later at the bottom of a lake. British and Soviet spy agencies are intensely interested.
02 October 1983
Will they starve her? Shave her head? Force her to wear a hair shirt? Elspeth's friends and family react with horror, grief and even derision to her desire to become a nun.
02 December 1980
A teenage girl is sent to a women's prison, but should she really be there?
01 September 1996
Jessie Fielding is a young MP who is trying to get an anti-hunting bill through the two Houses of Parliament, which is a little surprising as she hunted as a teenager with friend Barb Gale.
09 September 2002
Dramatisation of the true story of the notorious 'acid bath murderer' John Haigh, who murdered women and disposed of their bodies in vats of acid in the 1940s.
08 September 2003
Consumed with sadness after the death of his wife and subsequent rejection from his son, a widower, at the urging of his friends, opts to appear on a vulgar, wildly popular game show (for which his wife signed him up) and watches his life start to change for the better.
27 December 1983
Three old chums agree to take the ailing Sam on one last trip to see his flousy girl-friend, Lily Bless Her, in the middle of the night.
13 May 1986
An author seeking solitude in a small hotel in the South of France is an unwilling witness to a relationship between a young couple and two interior designers.
01 January 1994
Discusses Malthus's theories of population and the causes of poverty. As film contrasts the 19th century poor in Scotland with today's poor in India, it takes on the international population "establishment", challenging the entrenched view that overpopulation alone is responsible for poverty and environmental destruction.