Richard Langridge

Most Popular Richard Langridge Trailers

Total trailers found: 10

Stone Cold Trailer (1997)

01 January 1997

A young boy, tired of his mother's abusive boyfriend, sets out on an adventure to London, meeting a friendly man.

Loved Up Trailer (1995)

21 August 1995

Tells the story of a girl who, while working in a London cafe, meets a "raver" who introduces her to the drug Ecstasy and the whole British drugs scene.

Amongst Barbarians Trailer (1990)

11 July 1990

Amongst Barbarians is set far away from Margaret Thatcher's Britain in Penang, Malaysia, a former British colony, where two young Englishmen have been arrested for drug trafficking.

The Act Trailer (1989)

09 August 1989

Eastern Europe, February 1944: Johann Frink and Otto Hansen, once famous Berlin cabaret artists, are summoned to take part in a special 'entertainment', devised by a mysterious Nazi captain.

The Spirit of Man Trailer (1989)

23 August 1989

In pursuit of faith, God and the Devil, spells are cast, buckets of water thrown and men with black beards dance and sing.

The Dumb Waiter Trailer (1985)

23 June 1985

In the kitchen, two assassins await the arrival of their victim. But someone keeps sending them messages via the dumb waiter.

Death of a Salesman Trailer (1996)

01 January 1996

Willy Loman, an aging, failing salesman, struggles to accept reality and his failure to achieve the American Dream.

Breaking the Code Trailer (1996)

17 September 1996

A biography of the English mathematician Alan Turing, who was one of the inventors of the digital computer and one of the key figures in the breaking of the Enigma code, used by the Germans to send secret orders to their U-boats in World War II.

The Attractions Trailer (1989)

26 July 1989

When Danny, 'one of Maggie's wandering minstrels', visits a seaside horror museum, he is rather disappointed.

Eskimos Do It Trailer (1988)

03 August 1988

When the widowed Mrs Bing goes into hospital for a routine operation, she little realises she will soon make a dramatic bid for the most essential freedom of all.