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Suggestions of similar film to The Bluegrass Special
There are 42 films with the same actors, 33 films with the same director, 61608 with the same cinematographic genres, 10999 films with the same themes (including 8 films with the same 5 themes than
The Bluegrass Special), to have finally
70 suggestions of similar films.
If you liked
The Bluegrass Special, you will probably like those similar films :
, 1h27
Directed by Budd Boetticher,
Andrew V. McLaglenOrigin USAGenres Drama,
RomanceThemes Films about animals,
Sports films,
Bullfighting filmsActors Robert Stack,
Joy Page,
Gilbert Roland,
Virginia Grey,
John Hubbard,
Katy JuradoRating67%
Chuck Regan (Robert Stack), a young American film producer travels to Mexico, where he takes up bullfighting to impress a local beauty, Anita de la Vega (Joy Page). Manolo Estrada (Gilbert Roland), an aging matador, reluctantly agrees to teach the brash, self-centered Regan., 1h51
Directed by Andrew V. McLaglenGenres Drama,
Action,
Adventure,
RomanceThemes Films set in Africa,
Films about religion,
Sports films,
Transport films,
Films about automobiles,
Auto racing films,
Road moviesActors Brooke Shields,
Lambert Wilson,
Horst Buchholz,
John Rhys-Davies,
John Mills,
Gene BarryRating49%
The setting is in the year 1927. After her father dies, a young American heiress, Dale disguises herself as a man and takes the place of her father in an international car race through the Sahara. Dale is taken prisoner by Rasoul, but is rescued by Jaffar. However, more trouble awaits her before she can finish the race. Dale falls in love with Jaffar and marries him. Rasoul ends up dying in the end. She wins the race, becoming the first woman to win this international car race., 1h41
Directed by Andrew V. McLaglen,
Tom LeetchOrigin USAGenres ComedyThemes Films about animals,
Films about apes,
Children's films,
Mise en scène d'un mammifèreActors Maurice Chevalier,
Yvette Mimieux,
Dean Jones,
Bernard Woringer,
Clément Harari,
Yvonne ConstantRating57%
Hank Dussard est le nouveau propriétaire d'une oliveraie. Il décide d'employer des chimpanzés pour la récolte ce qui provoque la colère des autres travailleurs. Hank parvient à gagner la confiance de la ville avec l'aide du Père Sylvain et de sa voisine Maria Riserau., 1h59
Directed by John Wayne,
Andrew V. McLaglenOrigin USAGenres Thriller,
Action,
Horror,
WesternThemes Political films,
Children's filmsActors John Wayne,
Rock Hudson,
Antonio Aguilar,
Lee Meriwether,
Bruce Cabot,
Melissa NewmanRating65%
After the American Civil War, Union Colonel John Henry Thomas (John Wayne) and company attack a group of Confederate soldiers, only to be informed after defeating them that the war had ended days ago. Another group of Confederate soldiers, led by Colonel James Langdon (Rock Hudson) prepare to join Emperor Maximilian of Mexico. Langdon torches his plantation before he departs rather than have it fall into the hands of carpetbaggers. At the same time, Thomas, with his adopted Indian son Blue Boy (Roman Gabriel) and his surviving command, brings a herd of 3,000 horses across the Rio Grande for sale in Durango, Mexico., 1h34
Directed by Henry KosterOrigin USAGenres Drama,
Comedy,
Comedy-dramaThemes Films about religion,
Children's filmsActors Loretta Young,
Celeste Holm,
Hugh Marlowe,
Elsa Lanchester,
Thomas Gomez,
Mike MazurkiRating70%
One winter's night, two French nuns, Sister Margaret and Sister Scholastica, come to the small New England town of Bethlehem (most likely modeled after Bethlehem, Connecticut – given the Abbey of Regina Laudis in that real town and the proximity to New York City), where they meet Amelia Potts, a painter of religious pictures. The Sisters announce that they have come to build a hospital there, and Chicago-born Sister Margaret explains that during the war she was in charge of a children's hospital in Normandy when it became a potential target during a military campaign. As many of the children could not be evacuated, Sister Margaret made a personal plea to an American general not to shell the hospital, which the Germans were using as an observation post. The hospital was spared but at the cost of American lives, and Sister Margaret made a promise to God that, in gratitude for saving the children, she would return to America to build a children's hospital., 1h58
Directed by Elia KazanOrigin USAGenres Drama,
RomanceThemes Films about writers,
Films about journalists,
Films about racism,
Films about religion,
Films about Jews and Judaism,
Children's filmsActors Gregory Peck,
Dorothy McGuire,
John Garfield,
Celeste Holm,
June Havoc,
Anne RevereRating71%
Philip Schuyler Green (Gregory Peck) is a widowed journalist who has just moved to New York City with his son Tommy (Dean Stockwell) and mother (Anne Revere). Green meets with magazine publisher John Minify (Albert Dekker), who asks Green, a gentile, to write an article on antisemitism ("some people don't like other people just because they're Jews"). He is not very enthusiastic at first, but after initially struggling with how to approach the topic in a fresh way, Green is inspired to adopt a Jewish identity ("Phil Greenberg") and writes about his first-hand experiences., 1h35
Directed by Jean NegulescoOrigin USAGenres Drama,
Thriller,
Action,
Noir,
RomanceThemes Children's filmsActors Ida Lupino,
Cornel Wilde,
Celeste Holm,
Richard Widmark,
O. Z. Whitehead,
Tom MooreRating71%
Pete Morgan manages Jefty's Road House for his longtime friend, Jefferson "Jefty" Robbins, who inherited the place from his father. Jefty is attracted to Lily Stevens, his new singer from Chicago, but Pete thinks she is just another in a long string of girls he will eventually have to send on her way. Jefty, however, is convinced that Lily is different, even though she is playing hard-to-get., 1h48
Directed by Anatole LitvakOrigin USAGenres DramaThemes Medical-themed films,
Psychologie,
Films about psychiatry,
Films set in psychiatric hospitals,
Children's filmsActors Olivia de Havilland,
Mark Stevens,
Leo Genn,
Celeste Holm,
Glenn Langan,
Leif EricksonRating75%
Virginia Cunningham (Olivia de Havilland) is an apparently schizophrenic inmate at a mental institution called the Juniper Hill State Hospital. She hears voices and seems so out of touch with reality that she doesn’t recognize her husband Robert (Mark Stevens)., 2h18
Directed by Joseph L. MankiewiczOrigin USAGenres Drama,
ComedyThemes Films about films,
Films about television,
Théâtre,
Children's filmsActors Bette Davis,
Anne Baxter,
George Sanders,
Celeste Holm,
Gary Merrill,
Hugh MarloweRating81%
At an awards dinner, Eve Harrington—the newest and brightest star on Broadway—is being presented the Sarah Siddons Award for her breakout performance as Cora in Footsteps on the Ceiling. Theatre critic Addison DeWitt observes the proceedings and, in a sardonic voiceover, recalls how Eve's star rose as quickly as it did., 2h3
Directed by Clarence BrownOrigin USAGenres Drama,
Comedy-dramaThemes Films about animals,
Sports films,
Films about horses,
Children's films,
Mise en scène d'un mammifère,
Horse sports in filmActors Mickey Rooney,
Donald Crisp,
Elizabeth Taylor,
Anne Revere,
Angela Lansbury,
Reginald OwenRating72%
National Velvet is the story of a 12-year-old girl, Velvet Brown (Elizabeth Taylor), who lives in the small town of Sewels in Sussex, England, who wins a spirited gelding in a raffle and decides to train him for the Grand National steeplechase. She is aided by a penniless young drifter named Mi (or Michael) Taylor (Mickey Rooney), who found Mrs. Brown's name and address among his late father's effects, but is unaware of what it was doing there. Hoping to gain some money from the association, Mi stays at the Browns' home, but Mrs. Brown is unwilling to allow Mi to trade on his father's good name and remains vague about how she knew him. Nevertheless she convinces her husband (Donald Crisp) to hire Mi over his better judgment, and Mi is brought into the home as a hired hand. It is revealed that Mi had been a jockey in Manchester, but his career ended in a collision which resulted in the death of another jockey. Since then Mi has not held a job, and he has come to hate horses. Velvet's horse is named "The Pie," short for "Pirate," the epithet given him by his owner due to the horse jumping clear of his paddock and wrecking things in the village. The man decides to be rid of the Pie, and offers him up in a raffle. Velvet wins The Pie, and on realizing the extent of the horses natural talent, she pleads with Mi to train the horse for the Grand National. He believes it a fools errand, not because of the horse, but because they have no real way to support the effort. He makes his case to Mrs. Brown, but she consents to Velvet's desire to train the horse. Velvet and Mi train the horse and enter him into the race. An experienced jockey is hired to ride him. The night before the race Velvet senses that the jockey hired to ride The Pie has no faith in him, and doesn't believe the horse can win. Velvet convinces Mi to fire the jockey, leaving them without a rider. That night Mi determines to overcome his fears and ride The Pie himself. Instead, he discovers that Velvet has slipped on the jockey's colors, and intends to ride the horse in the race herself. Aware of the dangers of such a race, Mi pleads with Velvet but is unable to dissuade her. As the race unfolds Velvet and The Pie avoid a number of falls, clear all the hurdles and win the race. Elated by their win, Velvet faints and falls off her mount at the finish. As she is revived the race doctor realizes she is not a young man, but a young woman. As such she and The Pie are disqualified, but Velvet knows The Pie proved himself. Velvet becomes a media sensation, declining an offer of £5,000 to travel to Hollywood with The Pie to be filmed. She ran the Pie at the Grand National because he deserved to have a chance. He wasn't an oddity to be stared at. In refusing the offer she states simply: "He wouldn't like being looked at." At the close of the film Mi takes his leave, and Mrs. Brown gives Velvet permission to reveal to him the nature of her relationship with his father. Velvet rides off to catch up with Mi and tell him that his father had been Mrs. Brown's coach when she won the prize as the first woman to swim the English Channel, many years before.