Rocky Morton

Rocky Morton Trailers

Tellers TrailerSuper Mario Bros: This Ain't No Video Game Trailer

Rocky Morton is an English director. He is co-creator of the television series Max Headroom and co-director of the 1993 Hollywood Pictures film Super Mario Bros.. Several music videos for Tom Tom Club, Talking Heads, Gravity Kills, Orgy, George Harrison and Miles Davis are credited to Morton.

Most Popular Rocky Morton Trailers

Total trailers found: 9

Marx for Beginners Trailer (1979)

31 December 1979

In order to understand the works and ideas of Karl Marx, this animation takes an ordinary man through several different periods of history, from the cavemen to the philosophers of the world to better comprehend Marx ideals for the proletarian and why the world is an unfair contradiction of all sorts.

Tellers Trailer (2019)

13 June 2019

An aging detective comes out of retirement when the events around his grandson's suicide suggest foul play.

Super Mario Bros. Trailer (1993)

28 May 1993

Mario and Luigi, plumbers from Brooklyn, find themselves in an alternate universe where evolved dinosaurs live in hi-tech squalor.

D.O.A. Trailer (1988)

18 March 1988

Dexter Cornell, an English Professor becomes embroiled in a series of murders involving people around him.

Touch Me (All Night Long) Trailer (1992)

01 January 1992

An abstract play of shape, colour and light. Cathy Dennis wears a variety of bright neon bodysuits. s

Rush: Through the Camera Eye Trailer (1985)

17 July 1985

Through the Camera Eye is a videocassette/laserdisc release by the Canadian band Rush. It was released in 1985 by PolyGram Records.

Super Mario Bros: This Ain't No Video Game Trailer (2014)

03 November 2014

A documentary about the making of the live-action Super Mario Bros. movie.

The Best of Max Headroom Trailer (1987)

05 March 1987

Some of the best bits from 'The Max Headroom Show'.

Max Headroom: 20 Minutes into the Future Trailer (1985)

04 April 1985

While trying to expose corruption and greed, television reporter Edison Carter discovers that his employer, Network 23, has created a new form of subliminal advertising (termed "blip-verts") that can be fatal to certain viewers.