Helen McCrory Movies
A prolific English actress with a marked flair for period drama,
Helen McCrory accepted one of her first roles as a New Orleans prostitute in
Neil Jordan's gothic horror opus
Interview with the Vampire (1994); though this merely constituted a bit part,
McCrory gradually ascended to higher billing in outings such as
Witness Against Hitler (1995),
The James Gang (1997), and
Split Second (1999), before tackling the lead role of Anna Karenina in director
David Blair's 2001 miniseries adaptation of
Leo Tolstoy's seminal novel, and signed for another lead in the humorous made-for-television crime thriller
Dead Gorgeous (2002), adapted from the novel On the Edge by
Peter Lovesey.
McCrory maintained a higher profile and netted more widespread global recognition as the title character's mother in
Lasse Hallström's
Casanova (2005) and as Cherie Blair, the wife of British prime minister
Tony Blair, in the 2006 docudrama
The Queen.
McCrory then signed for a plum role as Narcissa Malfoy in the fantasy
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (2008). ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

- 1994
- R
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Anne Rice's best-selling romantic horror tale about the origins of a centuries-old vampire inspired this popular, atmospheric chiller. One of director Neil Jordan's major Hollywood productions, the film stays close to its source material, retaining the frame of a young reporter (Christian Slater) interviewing a man who claims to be a 200-year-old vampire. The man, Louis (Brad Pitt), shares his story, beginning in 18th-century New Orleans with his first encounters with the charismatic and decadent vampire Lestat (Tom Cruise). Lestat converts Louis to blood-sucking and immortality, but Louis fails to adopt Lestat's cavalier attitude, instead tormenting himself with guilt over his new nature. The two vampires remain deeply, if reluctantly, connected over the years, while becoming intimately involved with others of their kind, including Claudia (Kirsten Dunst), a mature immortal in a young child's body. Fans of the novel raised numerous objections, particularly after Rice initially spoke out against the casting of Cruise as Lestat; further casting difficulties followed the death of River Phoenix, whose role as the interviewer was assumed by Christian Slater. Rice later recanted her objections, and the combination of thrills and gothic romance proved popular with audiences. ~ Judd Blaise, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt, (more)

- 1994
- R
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Julia (Kate Beckinsale) has been busy about her job, doing painstaking restoration work on a fifteenth-century painting. As good restoration work is at least as much about doing good research and detective work as it is about the physical process of restoration, when her cleanup of the Flemish painting reveals a hitherto undiscovered Latin phrase which translates as "Who killed the knight?" she goes to the art authorities she knows to find out what it might mean. Oddly, at the same time a series of murders begin to rock her small world of art experts, patrons and restorers, and she finds that the mystery of the painting is interwoven with the mystery of the deaths around her. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
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- Starring:
- John Wood, Sinéad Cusack, (more)