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The Bedford Incident is a 1965 British-American Cold War film directed by James B. Harris, starring Richard Widmark and Sidney Poitier, and produced by Harris and Widmark. The cast also features Eric Portman , James MacArthur , Martin Balsam , and Wally Cox , as well as early appearances by Donald Sutherland and Ed Bishop .
The Bedford Incident, a 1965 film based on a novel about an engagement between an American destroyer and a Soviet submarine in the North Atlantic. By Dawn's Early Light , a 1990 TV film based on the novel Trinity's Child by William Prochnau , about an accidental nuclear attack on the US and the subsequent desperate attempts to avoid nuclear ...
The Bedford Incident (1965) – a U.S. destroyer finds a Soviet Submarine and a false alarm causes trouble for the crew on board the ship. The Beginning or the End (1947) – a fictionalized docudrama about the Manhattan Project and the nuclear bombing of Hiroshima.
Harris' directorial debut was the Cold War thriller The Bedford Incident (1965). He also directed the actor James Woods in two films: the prison-guard drama Fast-Walking (1982) with actress Kay Lenz, and the thriller Cop (1988), based on a James Ellroy novel, which Woods co-produced. Harris also directed the 1993 thriller Boiling Point. [2]
Title Director Cast Genre Note The Family Jewels: Jerry Lewis: Jerry Lewis, Sebastian Cabot, Donna Butterworth: Comedy: Paramount: Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Russ Meyer: Tura Satana, Haji, Lori Williams
Title Director Cast Genre Notes 1965: The Alphabet Murders: Frank Tashlin: Tony Randall, Anita Ekberg, Robert Morley: Mystery: The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders: Terence Young: Kim Novak, Richard Johnson
Even so, the hull of the submarine would have been largely intact, certainly enough to still return Bedford's pinging.--172.190.229.3 03:44, 1 March 2013 (UTC) The answer as far as the Bedfords crew are concerned is largely academic - they would all have died instantly when the torpedoes struck. That's the point of the film.
Donald Sutherland (1935–2024) was a Canadian film, television, and stage actor, which spanned over 60 years of his career. He was nominated for eight Golden Globe Awards, winning two for his performances in the television films Citizen X (1995) [1] and Path to War (2002); [2] the former also earned him a Primetime Emmy Award. [3]