Movies Club Logo

Movies Club Logo
PopularTrending
Search
Portfolio
GitHub
LinkedIn

© 2026 Movies Club. Built with Next.js & TypeScript

Data provided by TMDB

poster

Dominick Dunne

Known ForActing
Birthday1925-10-29
Age83 years old at death
Date of Death† 2009-08-26
Place of BirthHartford, Connecticut, U.S.

Biography

Dominick John Dunne (October 29, 1925 – August 26, 2009) was an American writer, investigative journalist, and producer. He began his career as a producer in film and television, noted for involvement with the pioneering gay film The Boys in the Band (1970) and the award-winning drug film The Panic in Needle Park (1971). He turned to writing in the early 1970s. After the 1982 murder of his daughter Dominique, he came to focus on the ways in which wealth and high society interacts with the judicial system. A frequent contributor to Vanity Fair, Dunne, from the 1980s, also appeared regularly on television discussing crime. Description above from the Wikipedia article Dominick Dunne, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Filmography

poster
2008
7.6
Crime
Drama

Changeling

poster
1998
3.8
Comedy

An Alan Smithee Film: Burn, Hollywood, Burn

poster
2006
6.0
Comedy
Drama

Bernard and Doris

poster
1997
6.1
Comedy
Romance

Addicted to Love

poster
2020
7.5
Documentary

Jay Sebring… Cutting to the Truth

poster
2008
7.5
Documentary

Dominick Dunne: After the Party

poster
2011
4.7
Documentary

Making the Boys

poster
2008
Documentary

Celebrity: Dominick Dunne — A Journalist in the Age of Celebrity

poster
2005
5.3
Documentary

The Last Mogul

poster
2007
4.8
Documentary

Black White + Gray: A Portrait of Sam Wagstaff and Robert Mapplethorpe

poster
1971

Bad Marien's Last Year

poster
1997
4.3
Talk

The View

poster
1993
7.7
Comedy
Family

Frasier

poster
2005
7.9
Crime
Drama

The Closer

poster
1967
7.2
Documentary

Omnibus

poster
1997
Talk

Ruby

poster
1996
8.1
Documentary

E! True Hollywood Story

poster
1993
Documentary

The Big Story

poster
2002
7.5
Documentary

Dominick Dunne's Power, Privilege, and Justice