Carrie Snodgress Movies

Want to know the best Carrie Snodgress movies?  How about the worst Carrie Snodgress movies?  Curious about Carrie Snodgress box office grosses or which Carrie Snodgress movie picked up the most Oscar® nominations? Need to know which Carrie Snodgress movie got the best reviews from critics and audiences? Well, you have come to the right place….because we have all of that information.

Carrie Snodgress (1945-2004) was an Oscar® nominated American actress.  Snodgress is best remembered for her Oscar® nominated role in 1970’s Diary of a Mad Housewife.     Her IMDb page shows 64 acting credits from 1969 to 2004.  This page will rank Carrie Snodgress movies from Best to Worst in six different sortable columns of information.  To do well in our overall rankings a movie has to do well at the box office, get good reviews by critics, be liked by audiences, and get some award recognition.

1995’s Pale Rider

Carrie Snodgress Movies Ranked In Chronological Order With Ultimate Movie Rankings Score (1 to 5 UMR Tickets) *Best combo of box office, reviews and awards.

1978’s The Fury

Carrie Snodgress Movies Can Be Ranked 6 Ways In This Table

The really cool thing about this table is that it is “user-sortable”. Rank the movies any way you want.

  • Sort Carrie Snodgress movies by her co-stars
  • Sort Carrie Snodgress movies by adjusted domestic box office grosses using current movie ticket cost (in millions)
  • Sort Carrie Snodgress movies by yearly domestic box office rank
  • Sort Carrie Snodgress movies by how they were received by critics and audiences.  60% rating or higher should indicate a good movie.
  • Sort by how many Oscar® nominations and how many Oscar® wins each Carrie Snodgress movie received.
  • Sort Carrie Snodgress movies by Ultimate Movie Rankings (UMR) Score.  UMR puts box office, reviews and awards into a mathematical equation and gives each movie a score.

Check out Carrie Snodgress‘s career compared to current and classic actors.  Most 100 Million Dollar Movies of All-Time.

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2 thoughts on “Carrie Snodgress Movies

  1. 6/Very sadly while waiting for a liver transplant Carrie was hospitalized in Los Angeles where she died of heart failure on April 1 2004. She was just 58 years old.

    7/Her career was therefore cut short prematurely but it might have been even more prestigious and-high profile anyway had she gone through the right “sliding door” back in 1976 when Sylvester Stallone tells us:

    “The first choice for Adrian in the movie Rocky was a girl named Carrie Snodgress who I wanted badly because, at the time, I wanted Adrian’s family to be Irish and Harvey Keitel would be the brother. She said there wasn’t enough money in it (we were getting paid $360 before taxes), so I said “I’ll give you my share, I truly want you.” She passed to do a part in Paul Newman’s Buffalo Bill and the Indians, which never happened for her.” [Conversely Rocky went on to get a best AA picture win and generate a worldwide adjusted Cogerson gross just slightly short of $1 billion at the moment]

    8/Nevertheless because of Carrie’s tragic premature death I am well-pleased that Bruce has now profiled her in this new page in recognition of the fine work she did do so “Voted Up!” RIP Carrie.

  2. 1/I saw Carrie in two big screen movies: Wild Things and Murphy’s Law.

    2/However I watched her as well on television in a 1969 episode of The Virginian western series-her 2nd acting role of any kind; a couple of episodes of Angela Lansbury’s detective series Murder She Wrote; and a 1977 episode of the medical crime series Quincy called The Face of Fear.

    3/In the latter Carrie compellingly plays a young woman [Vicki Maguire] who has suffered from agoraphobia and when after 7 years she finally leaves her house she witnesses a murder; but because of her illness nobody believes her except her psychologist and Dr Quincy.

    4/In fact Wikipedia details over 40 television credits for her from 1969 until 2004 when she was as a final actin role in the TV movie Iron Jawed Angels starring Hilary Swank and Anjelica Huston. Bruce records above that Carrie’s final big screen role was in 2002

    5/She did some decent stage work too. Her Broadway debut had been in 1981 with A Coupla White Chicks Sitting Around Talking. She also appeared in All the Way Home/ Oh! What a Lovely War!/ Caesar and Cleopatra/ Tartuffe/ The Balcony and The Boor (all at the Goodman Theatre Chicago); and Curse of the Starving Class at the Tiffany Theatre (in Los Angeles).

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