The Carpetbaggers (1964)
April 8, 1964Release Date
The Carpetbaggers (1964)
April 8, 1964Release Date
Plot.
Where to Watch.
Currently The Carpetbaggers is available for streaming online, rent, buy or watch for free on: Apple TV, Google Play Movies, Amazon Video, YouTube, Fandango At Home
Streaming in:πΊπΈ United States
This Movie Is About.
Cast & Crew.
George Peppard
Jonas Cord
Carroll Baker
Rina Marlowe Cord
Alan Ladd
Nevada Smith
Robert Cummings
Dan Pierce
Martha Hyer
Jennie Denton
Elizabeth Ashley
Monica Winthrop
Lew Ayres
'Mac' McAllister
Martin Balsam
Bernard B. Norman
Ralph Taeger
Buzz Dalton
Archie Moore
Jedediah
Archie Moore
Jedediah
Leif Erickson
Jonas Cord Sr.
Arthur Franz
Morrissey
Edward Dmytryk
Director
Tom Tully
Amos Winthrop
Harold Robbins
Writer
John Michael Hayes
Writer
Audrey Totter
Prostitute
Anthony Warde
Moroni
Joseph E. Levine
Producer
Elmer Bernstein
Composer
Charles Lane
Eugene Denby
Bess Flowers
Wedding Guest
Joseph MacDonald
Cinematographer
Frank Bracht
Editor
Ann Doran
Reporter
Vaughn Taylor
Doctor
Tom Lowell
David Woolf
John Conte
Ed Ellis
Francesca Bellini
Cynthia Randall
Lisa Seagram
Moroni's Secretary
Victoria Jean
Jo Ann Cord
Paul Frees
Narrator (voice)
Lynn Borden
Starlet in Restaurant
Wag Blesing
Cowboy
Frank London
Taxi Driver
George Barrows
Stunts
Paul Baxley
Stunt Double
Hal Pereira
Art Direction
Walter H. Tyler
Art Direction
Media.
Details.
Release DateApril 8, 1964
StatusReleased
Running Time2h 30m
Box Office$40,000,000
Genres
Last updated:
Wiki.
The Carpetbaggers is a 1964 American drama film directed by Edward Dmytryk, based on the best-selling 1961 novel The Carpetbaggers by Harold Robbins and starring George Peppard as Jonas Cord, a character based loosely on Howard Hughes, and Alan Ladd in his last role as Nevada Smith, a former Western gunslinger turned actor. The supporting cast features Carroll Baker as a character extremely loosely based on Jean Harlow as well as Martha Hyer, Bob Cummings, Elizabeth Ashley, Lew Ayres, Ralph Taeger, Leif Erickson, Archie Moore and Tom Tully.
The film is a landmark of the sexual revolution of the 1960s, venturing further than most films of the period with its heated sexual embraces, innuendo, and sadism between men and women, much like the novel, where author Dawn Sova asserts "there is sex and/or sadism every 17 pages".