Tony Goldwyn Movies
The grandson of movie mogul
Samuel Goldwyn, actor
Tony Goldwyn favored his grandmother's side of the family (she was film actress
Frances Howard) by pursuing an acting rather than an executive career. Goldwyn's first major film was 1987's
Gaby: A True Story, in which he was eighth-billed. His breakthrough feature was 1990's
Ghost, in which he played Carl, the "lying snake" who sets up the murder of his best friend (
Patrick Swayze) and then callously moves in on the dead man's grieving girlfriend (
Demi Moore). A master at playing charming-but-shallow yuppies, Goldwyn went on to appear in films ranging from
The Pelican Brief (1994) to
Nixon (1995) to the thriller
Kiss the Girls (1997). In 1998, Goldwyn played astronaut Neil Armstrong in the made-for-TV docudrama series
From the Earth to the Moon; the following year he made his directorial debut with the similarly-titled
A Walk on the Moon. Starring
Diane Lane as a dissatisfied housewife who finds physical and emotional enlightenment with a blouse salesman (
Viggo Mortensen) in 1969 upstate New York, the film enjoyed an overwhelmingly favorable reception. Also in 1999, Goldwyn earned additional kudos for voicing the title character of Disney's animated
Tarzan. Audiences were able to see more of the actor in 2000, when he appeared in
Don Roos' romantic drama
Bounce and in the
Arnold Schwarzenegger sci-fi thriller The 6th Day. When his sophomore effort as a director, the romantic comedy Someone Like You..., failed to generate much interest, Goldwyn would turn toward television to helm episodes of The L Word, Without a Trace, Grey's Anatomy, and Law & Order (many of which he also appeared in as an actor) while racking up an impressive list of credits in such efforts as the Christian-themed drama Joshua, The Last Samurai, and as a haunted writer whose attempt to clean the skeletons out of the family closet lead to tragedy in Ghosts Never Sleep. A 2005 performance as a cop whose life is profoundly affected by a firearm in American Gun found Goldwyn as strong as ever in front of the camera, and the following year it was time once again to take the reins for the romantic comedy drama re-make The Last Kiss; a contemporary tale of love and anxiety starring Scrubs and Garden State actor Zach Braff. . ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

- 1992
- R
- Add Traces of Red to Queue
Jack Dobson (James Belushi) is lying down, bleeding and dead, in a deserted clearing in the woods: "Yeah, that's me. No wife, no kid. Just one 9-millimeter bullet lodged in my chest." The voice from the corpse then introduces the audience to the area of his demise --Palm Beach, a town where everyone "leads three lives: public, private, and secret." Dobson is a homicide detective in Palm Beach who takes advantage of his position to bed a variety of women, while his brother Michael (William Russ) prepares to run for public office. One of Dobson's lovers is imported New Yorker Ellen (Lorraine Bracco). She sees Dobson leave a parking lot with a waitress and before long the waitress turns up dead. Dobson investigates the murder and determines that a serial killer is on the loose. When more women turn up dead with connections to Dobson, the finger of guilt points not only to Jack but also to his partner Steve (Tony Goldwyn), Steve's wife Beth (Faye Grant), and even his respectable senatorial candidate brother. ~ Paul Brenner, Rovi
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- Starring:
- James Belushi, Lorraine Bracco, (more)

- 1997
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Alan Madison made his directorial debut with this shrink-wrapped souffle of comedic conflicts in the life of lame NYC psychologist Jeff Stewart (Tony Goldwyn), who is burdened with an unloving wife (Edie Falco) and regarded with contempt by his own patients. In addition to criminals sent to him by the state, his clients include a variety of Harlem residents -- a sex offender (Bruce MacVittie); Mrs. K, a religious fanatic (Tammy Grimes); oversexed hand model Ericca Ricce (Debi Mazar); and Daryl (Giancarlo Espositio), whose lover is dying of AIDS. Others in Stewart's building include British ambulance-chaser McMurtry (Roger Rees), a Holocaust survivor (Mark Margolis) preoccupied with his chessboard, and a fortune-teller in drag (Charles Busch). As his life unravels, speculation surfaces suggesting Stewart himself should be in therapy. Shown at the 1997 Vancouver Film Festival. ~ Bhob Stewart, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Tony Goldwyn, Edie Falco, (more)