Martin Sheen Movies
Martin Sheen has appeared in a wide variety of films ranging from the embarrassing to the sublime. In addition to appearing in numerous productions on stage, screen, and television, Sheen is the father of a modern dynasty of actors and a tireless activist for social and environmental causes, particularly homelessness. Born
Ramon Estevez on August 3, 1940, he was the seventh of ten children of a Spanish immigrant father and an Irish mother. Growing up in Dayton, OH, Sheen wanted to be an actor so badly that he purposely flunked an entrance exam to the University of Dayton so he could start his career instead. With his father's disapproval, he borrowed cash from a local priest and moved to New York in 1959.
While continually auditioning for shows, Sheen worked at various odd jobs and changed his name to avoid being typecast in ethnic roles. "Martin" was the name of an agent/friend, while he chose "Sheen" to honor Bishop Fulton J. Sheen; until his early twenties, the actor had been a devoted Catholic. He joined the Actor's Co-op, shared a loft, and with his roommates prepared showcase productions in hopes of attracting agents. For a while he worked backstage at the Living Theater alongside aspiring actor
Al Pacino, and it was there that he got his first acting jobs. Around that time, Sheen married, and in 1963 broke into television on East Side West Side; more television would follow in the form of As the World Turns, on which he played the character Roy Sanders for a few years.
In 1964, Sheen debuted on Broadway in Never Live Over a Pretzel Factory, and that same year won considerable acclaim for his role in The Subject Was Roses, which in 1968 became a film in which he also starred. After making his feature film debut as a subway punk in The Incident (1967), Sheen moved to Southern California in 1970 with his wife and three children. During the beginning of that decade, he worked most frequently in television, but occasionally appeared in films as a supporting actor or co-lead. His movie career aroused little notice, though, until he played an amoral young killer (based on real life murderer Charles Starkweather) in
Terrence Malick's highly regarded directorial debut,
Badlands (1973). Further notice came in the mid-'70s, when the actor was cast by
Francis Ford Coppola to star in a Vietnam War drama filmed in the Philippines. Two years and innumerable disasters later -- including a near-fatal heart attack for Sheen -- the actor's most famous film,
Apocalypse Now (1979), was complete, and it looked as if he would finally become a major star.
Although the film won a number of honors, including a Golden Palm at the Cannes Film Festival, and Sheen duly gained Hollywood's respect, he never reached the heights of some of his colleagues. This was possibly due to the fact that during the 1970s and 1980s, he appeared in so many mediocre films. However, Sheen turned in memorable performances in such films as Ghandi (1982) -- from which the actor donated his wages to charity -- and
Da (1988), in which he took production and starring credits. He also did notable work in a number of other films, including
Wall Street (1987),
The American President (1995), and
Monument Ave. (1998). In 1999, he could be seen in a number of projects, including
Ninth Street and
Texas Funeral, which premiered at the Venice Film Festival that year; O, a modern-day adaptation of Othello; and The West Wing, a television series that cast him as the President of the United States (a role for which he would win the Best TV Series Actor in a Drama Award at the 2000 Golden Globe Awards).
Sheen took a supporting role in legendary director Martin Scorsese's crime drama The Departed, and joined the cast of Talk to Me, a 2007 comedy drama directed by Don Cheadle. In 2009, Sheen starred in The Kid: Chamaco, a boxing drama following a father (Sheen) and son's attempt to reconcile their differences to turn a fierce streetfighter into a boxing champion. The following year he would join son Emilio for The Way, an adventure drama featuring Sheen as a grieving father determined to make the pilgrimage to the Pyrenees in honor of his late son. The actor took on yet another lead role in Stella Days (2011), a drama that takes place in the 1950s and stars Sheen as a progressive Irish priest who causes a stir by opening a local movie theater.
In 1986, Sheen made his directorial debut with the Emmy-winning made-for-TV movie
Babies Having Babies. All three of his sons,
Emilio Estevez,
Ramon Estevez, and
Charlie Sheen (whom he directed in 1991's
Cadence), as well as his daughter, Renee Estevez, are movie and television actors. His brother,
Joe Estevez, also dabbles in acting. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

- 1997
- NR
- Add Gunfighter to Queue
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In this offbeat western, a gunfighter whose magic gloves allow him to draw his weapon at unheard-of speed seeks revenge against a vicious outlaw who has killed many innocent people. Presented by Francis Ford Coppola, whose nephew directed the film. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- 1997
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In 1979, Randy Kehler and Betsy Corner stopped paying federal income tax as a way of protesting the U.S. government's increases in military spending and what Kehler and Corner considered to be an illegal and immoral foreign policy, particularly in Central America. The couple continued to pay state and local taxes, and filed their federal tax forms, donating the money they owed to war victims and the homeless. In 1991, the feds seized the couple's home in Corlain, MA. An Act of Conscience documents the couple's efforts to maintain their principles and hold onto their home. Martin Sheen narrates the film, briefly investigating the history of tax resistance in America, and exploring the small community of supporters that come to the couple's aid. Things take a dramatic turn when a young local couple, Terry Chornesky and Danny Franklin, purchase the house at a federal auction, and manage to move in, leading to a dramatic two-year siege of the home. Kehler, Corner, and their supporters risk arrest by continuing to occupy the property. During the siege, folksinger Pete Seeger shows up to lend his support. An Act of Conscience was produced, directed, shot, and edited by Robbie Leppzer. ~ Josh Ralske, Rovi
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- 1997
- R
- Add Truth or Consequences, N.M. to Queue
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The directorial debut of Kiefer Sutherland is part-Western, part-gangster flick in the style of Quentin Tarantino. Raymond (Vincent Gallo) is paroled from prison but decides to do one last robbery to get money to help him successfully woo his love Addy (Kim Dickens). With fellow ex-con Curtis Freley (Sutherland) and his friend Marcus Weans (Mykelti Williamson), who is really an undercover narcotics agent, Raymond botches a drug heist. Fleeing to Mexico, they pick up a pair of young yuppie lovers, Donna (Grace Phillips) and Gordon (Kevin Pollack), and hold them hostage for the ride. They change their getaway vehicle to Gordon's Winnebago mobile home. In Las Vegas, they try to sell stolen drugs to a mob kingpin, Tony Vega (Rod Steiger). ~ Michael Betzold, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Vincent Gallo, Mykelti Williamson, (more)

- 1997
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- 1997
- PG13
- Add Spawn to Queue
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One of the most popular independent comic books of its decade was transformed into this dark, bloody adventure intended to launch a profitable superhero franchise. Michael Jai White stars as Al Simmons, a corrupt assassin betrayed and murdered by his evil government supervisor, Jason Wynn (Martin Sheen). Sent to Hell, Simmons is offered a chance to return to the earthly plane if he will become a "Hellspawn" ("Spawn" for short), one of many super-powered creatures assigned to encourage living souls along the path to damnation. Simmons hastily agrees to this deal and becomes a twisted, scarred version of his former self, living in a dingy alleyway, with no hope of regaining his life, as several years have passed and his wife Wanda (Theresa Randle) has married his best friend, Terry Fitzgerald (D.B. Sweeney). Despite the best efforts of his mentor, a demonic clown (John Leguizamo), Spawn performs mostly heroic acts, though he is not above seeking revenge on Wynn. Despite the film's middling box office take, plans for a sequel were announced. The same summer that Spawn was released, the comic was also the basis of a well-received cable TV series. ~ Karl Williams, Rovi
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- Starring:
- John Leguizamo, Michael Jai White, (more)

- 1997
- PG
- Add Hostile Waters to Queue
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Based on an actual event, this made-for-television movie chronicles a delicate international situation that could have derailed Russian-American relations in the 1980s. Martin Sheen and Rutger Hauer star as military leaders on opposing sides, in this edgy drama about the collision between a Russian nuclear submarine and an American submarine off the coast of Bermuda. While the sub crews were dealing with the danger of a possible nuclear accident due to vessel damage, political leaders Reagan and Gorbachev were in the middle of sensitive peace talks. ~ Bernadette McCallion, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Rutger Hauer, Martin Sheen, (more)

- 1997
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This video offers viewers a virtual tour of some of America's most famous ballparks, both past and present. Included are several interviews with prominent players, who discuss their favorite parks and share stories of the games that took place there. Players interviewed include Brooks Robinson and Whitey Ford. Also included are dramatic readings by Sam Elliott and Katharine Ross. ~ Rob Ferrier, Rovi
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- 1996
- R
- Add The War at Home to Queue
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Jeremy Collier (Emilio Estevez) is the army veteran who returns home after his harrowing experiences in battle. His father Bob (Martin Sheen) is the emotionally detached parent who insists Jeremy put his unpleasant memories behind him and get on with his life. His mother (Kathy Bates) is the unusually cheerful woman who pretends nothing is wrong. The troubled Jeremy finds almost as much fighting at home as he did in the military in this powerful drama of a young veteran's adjustment to civilian life. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Kathy Bates, Martin Sheen, (more)

- 1996
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- 1996
-
- Add National Geographic: Last Voyage of the Lusitania to Queue
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On May 7, 1915, the world was at peace. Until a torpedo shot from the belly of a German U-boat, hiding in the frigid waters of the Irish Channel, shatters a state of the art ocean liner and sends her to a watery grave. While not as famous as the highly publicized wreck of the Titanic, this maritime disaster killed 1,198 innocent passengers and set the stage for impending doom, mistrust, and eventually a World War. Narrated by actor Martin Sheen, this documentary goes beneath the surface to try and shed some light on this tragedy that today still sits in a shroud of uncertainty. ~ C. Dwayne Smith, Rovi
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- 1996
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This made-for-television comedy picks up where the popular alien TV-series ALF left off. Captured by the military on his way back home, ALF is forced to undergo experiments at the hands of the unsympathetic Col. Gilbert Milfoil (Martin Sheen). Two military officers take pity on poor ALF and decide to free him from his captors. They escape and set out on a road trip that takes them on some bizarre adventures -- but ALF isn't out of the woods just yet. ~ Bernadette McCallion, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Martin Sheen, Jensen Daggett, (more)

- 1996
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In this video, popular writer and physician Deepak Chopra explains the Holy Grail's importance as a symbol of spirit, rather than as an object capable of being possessed. Included is a narrative of the Grail legend, dramatized with help from such actors as Robert Guillaume, Martin Sheen, and Joanna Cassidy. Through the use of this dramatization, Chopra shows how the symbol of the Grail can be useful in everyday life. Fans of Chopra's philosophy or those with an interest in a contemporary view of ancient myth will find this of use. ~ Rob Ferrier, Rovi
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- 1996
- PG13
This biographical drama was based on the true story of Dorothy Day, a devout Catholic who devoted much of her life to working with the poor and homeless on New York City's Lower East Side. Born in an Episcopalian household in 1897, Day (played by Moira Kelly) was a free-thinking agnostic in her young adulthood; she contributed to radical leftist journals and was friends with the likes of Eugene O'Neill (James Lancaste) and Mike Gold (Paul Lieber). After undergoing a painful abortion and giving birth to another child out of wedlock after her lover, Foster Batterham (Lenny Von Dohlen), abandoned her rather than marry, Day embraced Catholicism, a faith she would cling to strongly for the rest of her life. Day's leftist politics and her sense of personal activism remained; she established a political journal, "The Catholic Worker," in association with self-described Christian anarchist Peter Maurin (Martin Sheen), and was a tireless and outspoken champion of the rights of the poor and disenfranchised. Day came under heavy criticism for her political and social activism; as she put it, "If you feed the poor, you're called a saint, but if you ask why they're poor, you're called a Communist." However, Day continued her mission undaunted until her death in 1980, when she was called America's Mother Teresa. Entertaining Angels was produced by Paulist Pictures, a Catholic organization who also produced Romero, another film about a noted Catholic activist. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Moira Kelly, Martin Sheen, (more)

- 1996
-
- Add Sacred Cargo to Queue
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A man who thinks that he's on a mission of mercy finds himself in the middle of international espionage at its most dangerous in this thriller. Father Andrew Kanevsky (Martin Sheen) is a Catholic priest who persuades his brother Vince (Chris Penn) to join him as he travels to Russia to do missionary work with a group of Franciscan priests in St. Petersburg. Or at least that's what Vince thinks when they take off; as it turns out, Father Andrew is involved in a cloak-and-dagger scheme with the Franciscans to smuggle $200 million in religious relics out of Russia and into the U.S. before a group of Neo-Nazi terrorists who have overrun the city can lay claim to them. However, the terrorists are not easily foiled, and Father Andrew is captured and killed by their number; when Vince learns the truth about his brother's mission from Father Stanislav (J.T. Walsh), he's determined to see that the holy icons find their way to the U.S. as planned, even after two renegades split off from the terrorist faction and make off with the valuables on their own. Sacred Cargo was the first English-language feature for former Soviet playwright Aleksandr Buravsky, who also cowrote the screenplay. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Chris Penn, Martin Sheen, (more)

- 1995
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- Add Eyewitness: Jungle to Queue
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Part of the Eyewitness educational video series, which features simple discussions of scientific material one topic at a time for kids and parents, too, Eyewitness: Jungle travels to some of the world's most lush and vibrant jungles to understand how they function. Martin Sheen hosts the episode, which teaches viewers key facts about the complex jungle ecosystem and introduces a wide variety of jungle wildlife. Kids meet ants, monkeys, and birds, but cinematography also surveys diamond-bright stars. ~ Betsy Boyd, Rovi
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- 1995
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- Add Eyewitness: Rock & Mineral to Queue
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Part of the Eyewitness educational video series, which features simple discussions of scientific material one topic at a time for kids and parents, too, Eyewitness: Rock and Mineral examines the inorganic realm -- rocks, minerals, and how they came to be. Martin Sheen hosts the program, tracing the evolutionary path of inorganic materials, which proves almost as action-packed and jagged as the story of organic evolution. ~ Betsy Boyd, Rovi
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- 1995
-
Part of the Eyewitness educational video series, which features simple discussions of scientific material one topic at a time for kids and parents, too, Eyewitness: Horse analyzes the age-old relationship between horse and man. Martin Sheen hosts the program, discussing the history of civilized man's necessary bond with wild, mighty steed. Viewers are left to ponder, "Are horses really as mentally tame as we assume?" ~ Betsy Boyd, Rovi
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- 1995
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Part of the Eyewitness educational video series, which features simple discussions of scientific material one topic at a time for kids and parents, too, Eyewitness: Elephant maps the history of nature's largest animal. Viewers learn that just like man, the elephant has been linked to ancient evolutionary ancestors. The program traces the great animal's existence from prehistoric times and discusses the creature's physiology and herd instinct. ~ Betsy Boyd, Rovi
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- 1995
-
- Add Eyewitness: Dinosaur to Queue
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Part of the Eyewitness educational video series, which features simple discussions of scientific material one topic at a time for kids and parents, too, Eyewitness: Dinosaur analyzes fossilized bones to obtain knowledge about the prehistoric period. Martin Sheen hosts the episode, explaining exactly what these fossils convey about time gone by and raising the provocative question, "Were dinosaurs really lizards?" ~ Betsy Boyd, Rovi
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- 1995
-
Part of the Eyewitness educational series, which features simple discussions of scientific material, one topic at a time, for kids and parents, too, Eyewitness: Ape investigates the life of apes and their important relationship to all of mankind. Via the observation of modern-day primates, scientists are able to piece together the ladder of evolution. Martin Sheen narrates the program. ~ Betsy Boyd, Rovi
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- 1995
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Raising the Bamboo Curtain is a two-tape set that attempts to introduce viewers to the realities of postwar Southeast Asia, presenting the people of the region and offering an exposition on what the future may hold for an area torn asunder by war for the last four decades. Narrated by Martin Sheen, this first episode, Awakening Vietnam, returns American eyes to the scenes of great national tragedy and offers hope that after all these years something resembling friendship might rise from the ashes. The vibrancy of cities like Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City offers evidence that Vietnam is a country on the verge of becoming an economic force. ~ Rob Ferrier, Rovi
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- 1995
- PG
An innocent prank involving a stolen atomic bomb turns three mischievous teens into national criminals. This being a zany comedy, all of the ensuing chases and plot twists are all in good fun. The whole fine mess begins when a trio of adolescent boys sneak off to their secret hideout to avoid their parents' wrath and find the big bomb just sitting there. Hearing opportunity's knock, they call the President and threaten to detonate the weapon if he does not immediately cancel school. Not only do they soon find themselves fleeing the FBI but also an idiotic pair of villains who want the A-bomb for themselves. The pranksters soon find themselves in the unlikely situation of world saviors. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Martin Sheen, Kate Mulgrew, (more)

- 1995
- R
- Add Dead Presidents to Queue
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Albert Hughes and his brother Allen Hughes followed their striking debut Menace II Society with this ambitious look at the social and political lives of the African-American community in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Anthony Curtis (Larenz Tate) is a young man coming of age in the Bronx in 1968. Working two part-time jobs -- one as a milkman's helper and another for local numbers runner Kirby (Keith David) -- Anthony is torn between doing the right thing and trying to get by in a environment that offers few opportunities to young black men. After graduating from high school, Anthony decides to join the Marines, news that is not well-received by his parents, who want him to go to college, or his girlfriend Juanita (Rose Jackson), with whom Anthony recently lost his virginity. After serving a horrific tour of duty in Viet Nam with his friends Skip (Chris Tucker) and Jose (Freddy Rodriguez), Anthony finds himself back home in 1973, where Juanita has been raising the child he fathered before he shipped out, drugs and crime have crippled his community, and honest job prospects are practically nil. Eventually, Anthony falls in with Kirby, Skip, and Jose, who have teamed with Juanita's sister Delilah (N'Bushe Wright), a Black Power activist, and Cleon (Bokeem Woodbine), in a scheme to rob an armored truck taking worn greenbacks ("dead presidents") to a mint to be destroyed. Martin Sheen and Seymour Cassel appear unbilled in small roles. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Larenz Tate, Keith David, (more)

- 1995
- PG13
In this youthful sports drama, a former professional tennis player begins acting as a mentor for a troubled teen whose life is being destroyed by an overbearing father. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Vincent Van Patten, Rae Dawn Chong, (more)