Thursday, January 25, 2018

1001 NIGHTS AT THE MOVIES: PART 4


                The late 40’s encompassed the glorious hey-day of the old studio system.  With North America riding a celebratory wave of post victory euphoria, box office receipts shot to an all-time high in 1946. As the decade closed, standards of technical mastery in all movie-related crafts took on new levels of polish. Television’s impending threat was still only a faint rumble in the distance.  I believe  the phrase “movies are better than ever” became Hollywood’s battle cry in the 50’s, but certainly a proud, confident movie industry – never shy about self-promotion -  had been implicitly generating  that message since day one. And in the late 40’s movie-going was still undoubtedly America’s favorite pastime. Bing Crosby was the number one box office star of the era, holding top spot from ’45 to ’48, with  frequent screen partner Bob Hope beating him out by a nose  in ’49. Grable, Gable, Bogart, Cooper, Abbott & Costello, John Wayne, Cary Grant and Esther Williams all graced popularity polls of the time. Toplining mainstream studio product, they generated mountains of money.  Not just in America but abroad as well. American movies and American movie stars were, it seems, what the whole world wanted. And with foreign markets no longer shut down by World War 2, American films asserted their international dominance as never before. 
                Westerns remained as popular as ever, with John Wayne assuming the superstar status that would fuel an unprecedented decades-long run of box office success.  Roy Rogers and Gene Autry continued to rule the B western range. While A-list Stars like Joel McCrea and Randolph Scott, who had flourished in all genres for years, now concentrated their efforts almost exclusively on westerns – and with enviable success.
                All the studios continued to turn out musicals but MGM clearly solidified its regal prominence in the field. Artistically energized by producer Arthur Freed and director Vincente Minnelli (not to mention an unparalleled musical talent pool  -Garland, Kelly, Astaire, Sinatra and tons of other gifted performers), Metro’s best musicals blissfully reinvigorated the genre. Ice champion Sonja Henie had popularized competitive and recreational skating in a series of successful Fox musicals a few years earlier. And at Metro – from the mid-40’s on - beautiful Esther Williams did the same for swimming. Henie had won several Olympic championships before transitioning into films. Williams, a top competitive swimmer in her teens, saw her hopes for Olympic gold dashed when WW2 shut down the 1940 event. Her entry into films was all but accidental. But once they saw what they had, MGM built her into one of the era’s most imposing box office attractions.Headlining a string of hits that lasted well into the 50’s, Williams kept profits flowing into Leo the Lion’s coffers with gratifying regularity.
Esther Williams in 40's color - a match made in heaven
                Abbott & Costello, firecrackers at the box office during the war, found a second wind in the late 40’s when they started grappling with Universal’s monster brigade, initially in “Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein”, a sensation in its day – and now fondly regarded as an essential classic. Bob Hope remained a dominant force in screen comedy, as popular a solo attraction as he had been when teamed with Crosby. But sophisticated romantic and social comedies, like the ones crafted by Sturges and Lubitsch a few years earlier, seemed unable to take root in the late 40’s atmosphere. Films like “The Bachelor and The Bobbysoxer”, “I Was a Male War Bride” and “Sitting Pretty” were all comedy hits in their day, but haven’t aged well. Watch “It Had to be You” with Ginger Rogers and Cornel Wilde to see just how many ways a late 40’s attempt to resurrect screwball could go wrong . Somehow Hollywood seemed to have  lost the recipe, repeated attempts proving stubbornly out of tune with the postwar world. The dim bulb antics of Ma and Pa Kettle and Francis the Talking Mule were popular but definitely represented a lowering of the comedy bar.
                In the years before World War 2, Warner Brothers’ “Captain Blood” “The Adventures of Robin Hood” and (best of the bunch) “The Sea Hawk” had enshrined Errol Flynn as king of the swashbucklers. His best films lifted the period adventure to exhilarating new heights. Fox gave Flynn a serious swashbuckling  rival when Tyrone Power duelled his way across the screen in “The Mark of Zorro”.  Though  successful in multiple genres, both actors regularly - and gracefully - employed sword and cutlass to embellish their popularity. After the war, their studios saw fit to construct lavish new swashbucklers around both. Power dazzled in “Captain from Castile” ( filmed in Mexico) and “Prince of Foxes”, lovingly shot amid splendid historic Italian locations. Certainly one of the most beautiful black and white movies ever made. Flynn ended the period with one of his greatest vehicles, the elegant and elegiac “Adventures of Don Juan”. Other studios and other stars got into the game, including onetime member of the U.S. fencing team Cornel Wilde (“Bandit of Sherwood Forest”), Douglas Fairbanks Jr. (in Max Ophul’s superb “The Exile”) and – in an unlikely but effective bit of casting – Larry Parks, doing a 180 after his epically popular turn as Al Jolson, was “The Swordsman”. This was a marvelous Scottish swashbuckler helmed by Joseph H. Lewis, the inventive and exciting director who – a couple of seasons later - was to give the world the matchless “Gun Crazy”. Elegant Louis Hayward, who’d already enjoyed prewar swashbuckler success in James Whale’s “The Man in the Iron Mask”, also returned to the genre. Few handled a sword or wore doublet and hose with as much dash. Nor could many match his way with flowery swashbuckler dialogue. 1948’s “The Black Arrow” featured him in a Robert Louis Stevenson adaptation, first of many to flourish in the years immediately following.
                The now famous rivalry between Bette Davis and Joan Crawford reasserted itself with a vengeance in the late 40’s. As the 30’s progressed, Bette's popularity had risen meteorically; Joan’s commercial shine, on the other hand,  was dimming.  Davis became the screen’s top dramatic star – and a huge box office draw - during the war years. While Crawford’s status continued to erode (in a series of admittedly shaky vehicles) to the point where MGM cancelled her contract in 1943. Joan’s legendary determination served her well, though, when she convinced Jack Warner to sign her. Bette was ensconced as Diva #1 on the Warner lot. But when Joan’s initial vehicle “Mildred Pierce” unleashed a geyser of box office gold (and won her a Best Actress Oscar), battle lines for studio supremacy were drawn. Crawford’s phoenix-like rise (which continued with “Humoresque” and “Possessed”) coincided with a sudden string of weak Davis vehicles.  So that by the end of the 40’s it wasn’t exactly clear who was queen bee on the lot. Little did any of the participants know that all the sturm and drang – onscreen and off - would soon be swept aside by the sudden rise of a new – and decidedly different - Warners’ discovery, Doris Day.  Her sunny persona would soon become the studio’s brightest box-office beacon.
Joan Means Business
                One of the most exciting developments of the period, movie-wise, was the wave of groundbreaking movies from abroad that began to appear on North American screens. They seldom made giant inroads at the box office (even in their home countries). But their exciting, gloves-off approach, jolted into being by the social and political shakeups of World War 2, offered revolutionary themes, approaches and techniques that would ultimately change movies forever. The Italian neo-realist movement introduced an unvarnished, tell-it-like-it is style – one that used real locations and largely non-pro casts to stunning effect. De Sica (“Ladri di Biciclette”)and Visconti (“La Terra Trema”) became household names among intellectuals and artists. Roberto Rossellini astonished the worldwide artistic community with “Roma-Citta Aperta” and “Germania Anno Zero”. Ambitious Hollywood performers yearned to be part of the movement. An awed Ingrid Bergman deserted Tinseltown to work with him on a series of Italian masterpieces. She also sent morally judgmental Americans into self-righteous conniptions when she left her husband to live with (and eventually wed) Rossellini . For almost a decade, a sulking Hollywood establishment wanted nothing to do with their former golden girl. France dazzled the world with Marcel Carne’s sweeping “Les Enfants du Paradis” and the spellbinding Cocteau fantasy “La Belle et la Bete”. Not to mention less celebrated but similarly impressive items like Rene Clement’s gripping “Les Maudits” and Henri-Georges Clouzot’s emotional refugee epic “Manon”.
                                                           
 Aside from the outright art films, Europe also revived a genre that would inspire a major Hollywood trend in the 50’s. Italy had introduced the sword and sandal (or peplum) film in the early teens. Hollywood enjoyed isolated, but spectacular, successes with the genre in the 20’s. And the early 30’s had seen  DeMille lending characteristic glitz to a couple of splashy ancient world epics. But since then very little. 1937’s costly, but crude and bombastic Mussolini-backed ancient Roman spectacle “Scipione l’Africano” had attracted little attention outside Italy’s borders. But in 1949 Italian film-maker Alessandro Blasetti took Europe by storm with “Fabiola”, a film that out-peplumed all previous peplums. Aside from the spectacle, it also happens to be a very good film. Stars Henri Vidal and Michele Morgan are both superb – and the whole thing is wildly compelling. Though the picture didn’t make it to American shores till ’51 (dubbed and badly truncated), Hollywood film-makers were eager to duplicate its European success in America.  DeMille himself was first off the mark with “Samson and Delilah’ - nowhere near as good as “Fabiola”. But its barn-burning box office success led to the long string of Biblical epics that became monumental staples of 50’s Hollywood.
                Many of the foreign films that made their way to North American shores were already in English – the King’s English to be exact. British movies were not unknown in North America.  In Canada, which - as a member of the British Commonwealth -  had a direct pipeline of films coming from the U.K,  they were already staples. Many in the U.S. had seen prestigious Alexander Korda productions like “The Private Life of Henry VIII” and “The Thief of Bagdad”; also some of Hitchcock’s 30’s thrillers received fairly wide distribution on this side of the Atlantic. But – for the most part – British films were unknown to Americans. During the war, the air in Britain buzzed with an understandable sensation of turbulent  change. The hostilities had sent  Brits abroad in vast numbers  and many came back with a new sense of their place in the world and in society. The wartime atmosphere of urgency certainly affected the artistic community, jump-starting a level of pride and passion in British film that galvanized the industry. Result: a golden age of quality film-making that lasted into the 50’s. Directors like David Lean, Carol Reed, Cavalcanti and Robert Hamer helped spearhead the new movement, producing films whose excellence all but demanded worldwide recognition. Perhaps the most illustrious standard bearers were film-making team extraordinaire Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger. Splendid, artistically ambitious productions like “A Canterbury Tale” gave new stature to the whole industry. And when the team  worked in color, they seemed able to get more brilliance out of that process than anyone had before.  In the midst of all this, Britain’s top studio head, J. Arthur Rank, made no secret of his determination to build a group of stars who could rival Hollywood’s in popularity and glamour. To most people’s surprise, he actually succeeded. Brits embraced a whole new firmament of homegrown superstars -  James Mason, Margaret Lockwood, Stewart Granger, Jean Simmons, Alec Guinness, Phyllis Calvert,  Deborah Kerr, John Mills– many of whom eventually reached positions of great prominence in Hollywood. The artistic boom that had begun during the war was in full, glorious bloom by 1947. Suddenly the British cinema was alive with excitement, classics and near-classics turning up every other month.  “The Wicked Lady” “Great Expectations” “I See a Dark Stranger” “Carnival” "Odd Man Out” “They Made Me a Fugitive”, “It Always Rains on Sunday” “Black Narcissus”, “The End of the River” “The Brothers”, “Daughter of Darkness”, “The Red Shoes”, “The Rocking Horse Winner”. “Kind Hearts and Coronets” and “The Third Man”.  All titles I love -  and it’s a  list that only skims the surface of what British cinema had on offer in the late 40’s. Subjects were wide-ranging, with excellence achieved in every category - hard-hitting crime and social issue pictures, fantasy, period drama and comedy. Universal leased the Rank Organization films for American distribution and many of them generated solid profits stateside. But the two British films that really lit box office fires in North America were Olivier’s Oscar winning “Hamlet” and Powell and Pressburger’s “The Red Shoes”, the passionate ballet film that won over even non ballet fans with its across the board mastery. Though it's not true to say there were no good British films in the 50’s, there was nothing like the proliferation of quality evident in the late 40’s. The biggest British stars were mostly lured to Hollywood – and for the U.K. most proved irreplaceable. Dirk Bogarde, Kenneth More and Norman Wisdom had their staunch fans – but on their own could hardly replace all the names that had repaired to California.  Somehow the atmosphere of excitement and artistic aspiration seemed to have drained from the industry. British cinema was soon defined by Doctor in the House and Carry On comedies and flagwavers reverently rehashing World War 2. Things were to be dramatically recharged in the 60’s – with directors like Tony Richardson, Karel Reisz and Richard Lester emerging , James Bond conquering the world and the rise of a whole new raft of exciting stars; this was the era when giant talents like Albert Finney, Julie Christie, Michael Caine, Vanessa Regrave, Peter Sellers and Peter O’Toole popped into the public consciousness – and stayed there.  But the treasure chest of cinema splendor Britain produced in the late 40’s left a permanent glow - one that still marks the period as a very special time in British cinema history.
Googie Withers in "It Always Rains on Sunday" - "No, haven't seen him"
                             Reactions to the end of the war were, of course, varied. Some hoped to just forget the massive upheavals and revel quietly in trouble-free times – trying, in effect, to embrace their perception of simpler times and recapture a sense of security and stability. But others, transformed by the decade’s events, felt the need to build a better world, one less marred by hatred and hostility. They sought to right longstanding wrongs. And Hollywood began – to some extent at least – to embrace this trend.  In the immediate post-war years audiences were confronted with several high profile films addressing  topics  up to then all but taboo onscreen –alcoholism, mental illness, anti-Semitism and racism.  Billy Wilder’s “Lost Weekend”, about an alcoholic and the havoc and heartbreak he wreaks, was a sensation in 1945, with Ray Milland, previously tagged as a light romantic comedian, scooping up an Oscar for his startling dramatics. Hollywood’s efforts at tackling mental illness were generally less adroit with   psychiatry often laughably simplified and misrepresented. In picture after picture, triggered memories of a single event, once confronted, provided instant magical cures for abnormal behaviour. Some used psychiatry as a little more than a source of colorful clues and solutions in Agatha Christie type mysteries. Scriptwriters rammed tortured snippets of Freud into dialogue that sounded absurd, no matter how much dignity Leo Genn or Morris Carnovsky intoned it with. Hitchcock’s “Spellbound” mixed dime-store Freud with visual injections of Dali, the result big boxoffice  but intellectually worthless.  Pictures like “The Locket” and “Dishonored Lady” positioned psychiatric analysis as little more than an exotic accessory for glamorous leading ladies.  Darryl Zanuck, head of 20th Century Fox, was motivated to create something a little more substantial in the way of social problem films. Better than anyone else, he managed to find a balance between serious exploration of controversial subjects and solid, entertaining drama. Fox produced three social issue films in the late 40’s that all attracted major critical and commercial success. “Gentleman’s Agreement” offered Gregory Peck as a reporter investigating deeply entrenched anti-Semitism in postwar America -  effectively underscoring the fact that one of the key tenets of Nazism was far from absent in America. The film may seem timid by today’s standards but for late 40’s audiences it was an explosive eye-opener – and doubtless did much to help eradicate that particular brand of prejudice. Zanuck’s 1948 film about mental illness,” The Snake Pit”, with Olivia de Havilland, was another enormous hit, though – looking back – it’s hardly better than other studios’ melodramatic attempts to grapple with psychiatry. But perhaps the film’s massive distribution did help lessen the stigma attached to mental illness.  Which is, of course, a good thing. In 1949 Zanuck addressed anti-black racism with “Pinky”. Modern commentators tend to focus on the film’s drawbacks rather than its achievements. I think it’s excellent. Some tend to mock the unlikely casting of Jeanne Crain, Fox’s resident girl next door, as a young black woman passing for white.  Ignoring the fact that, under Elia Kazan’s direction, she gave the performance of her career (Oscar nominated, too). The film’s taut, intelligent script puts its heroine through the wringer, forcing her to make tough but credible decisions.  “Pinky” was a brave project to undertake.  But it turned into one of the studio’s great financial successes. And – judging from the fact that it’s still a compelling watch (and was seen by such a wide audience in its day) – it seems certain “Pinky” must have awakened a lot of minds to the harrowing injustice of racial prejudice. The film’s main cast was essentially female – with Ethel Barrymore and Ethel Waters billed second and third behind Crain – all three playing strong, determined women. So the film also functioned as something of an ode to female empowerment. Other studios entered the fray with “Lost Boundaries” and “Intruder in the Dust”(starring the great Juano Hernandez), both  excellent. And though neither found audiences quite as wide as “Pinky”, all did an admirable job spreading an important message.
                Beyond any other genre, the one most firmly associated with the 40’s is Film Noir. That name came from film enthusiasts in France and only decades later took hold in America.  But it’s certainly an adroit, poetic capsule description for the wave of fatalistic dramas that dominated late 40’s screens. Light and shadow criss-cross dramatically, as implacable forces chase men and women toward doom-laden, violent fates. The Depression, followed by the War had produced a generation for whom the world seemed anything but a safe place. One false move and the earth was likely to open up and swallow you. Noir scripts were laced with cynicism and uncertainty. Trust was something unlikely to be rewarded. Even sunny suburbs were vulnerable to the threatening tentacles of crime and depravity. Following the lead of the neo-realists, studios began shooting on real locations, giving crime sagas  a verisimilitude heretofore unknown. The tacky production values and woebegone locations used by Poverty Row studios often worked in their favour. With no studio largesse to conjure up lush settings and magazine cover fashions, the tawdriness – seen today – seems to deliver a truer picture of how people really lived in the era.  Yet, Noir worked at both ends of the scale. Big studio cameramen, taking the principles of German expressionism as a jumping off point, created masterpieces of light and shadow, chiaroscuro lighting adding infinite levels of hypnotic, doom-laden potency to the best noirs of the period. Even encumbered by the presence of Robert Cummings - always inappropriate in drama – Arthur Ripley's labyrinthine "The Chase" successfully used camera movement, production design, vivid supporting performances and sheer atmosphere to enthrall. Top level scripts in the right hands produced masterpieces like “Nightmare Alley”, “Cry of the City”, “Act of Violence” “The Naked City”, “They Live By Night”, “Criss Cross” and “The Third Man” – stunning looking and emotionally profound.   Noir’s heyday extended into the 50’s.  Its influence – on film and on the public’s consciousness - has been permanent. The settings may be specific to the years when they were filmed – but the feelings and fears inspired by the genre remain permanently relevant and powerful.

Now on with the continuing list:


PART 4: 1945-1949

456. Bells of Rosarita(’45)  Frank McDonald
              Roy Rogers,Dale Evans,George “Gabby” Hayes
457. the Bullfighters(’45)     Malcolm St. Clair
              Stan Laurel,Oliver Hardy,Richard Lane
458. Confidential Agent(’45) Herman Shumlin
              Charles Boyer,Lauren Bacall,Wanda Hendrix
459. the Corn is Green(’45)   Irving Rapper
              Bette Davis,John Dall,Rosalind Ivan
460. Danger Signal(’45)              Robert Florey
              Faye Emerson,Zachary Scott,Mona Freeman
461. Detour(’45)                Edgar G. Ulmer
              Tom Neal,Ann Savage
462. the Great Flamarion(’45)         Anthony Mann
               Erich von Stroheim,Mary Beth Hughes,Dan Duryea
463. Hangover Square(’45)   John Brahm
              Laird Cregar,Linda Darnell,George Sanders,Faye Marlowe
464. Hotel Berlin(’45)         Peter Godfrey
              Raymond Massey,Andrea King,Helmut Dantine
465. the House of Fear(’45)   Roy William Neill
              Basil Rathbone,Nigel Bruce,Aubrey Mather
466. Leave Her to Heaven(’45)     John Stahl
              Gene Tierney,Cornel Wilde,Jeanne Crain
467. Les Enfants du Paradis(’45)  Marcel Carne
              Arletty,Jean-Louis Barrault
468. My Name is Julia Ross(’45)    Joseph H. Lewis
              Nina Foch,Dame May Whitty,George Macready
469. Northwest Trail(’45)    Derwin Abrahams
              Bob Steele,Joan Woodbury,John Litel,Madge Bellamy
470. PURSUIT TO ALGIERS(’45)   Roy William Neill
              Basil Rathbone,Nigel Bruce,Rosalind Ivan
471. Roughly Speaking(’45)   Michael Curtiz
              Rosalind Russell,Jack Carson,Robert Huttton
472. San Antonio(’45)         David Butler
              Errol Flynn,Alexis Smith,S.Z. Sakall
473. Scarlet Street(’45)      Fritz Lang
              Edward G. Robinson,Joan Bennett,Dan Duryea
474. the Spanish Main (’45)   Frank Borzage
              Maureen O’Hara,Paul Henreid,Walter Slezak
475. State Fair(’45)            Walter Lang
              Jeanne Crain,Dana Andrews,Dick Haymes.Vivian Blaine
476. Sudan(’45)                  John Rawlins
              Maria Montez,Turhan Bey,Jon Hall,Andy Devine
477. Thrill of a Romance(’45)     Richard Thorpe
              Esther Williams,Van Johnson,Lauritz Melchior
478. the Voice of the Whistler(’45)   William Castle
              Richard Dix,Lynn Merrick,Rhys Williams
479. a Walk in the Sun, A(’45)    Lewis Milestone
              Dana Andrews,Richard Conte,John Ireland
480. the Wicked Lady (’45)          Leslie Arliss
              Margaret Lockwood,James Mason,Patricia Roc
481. Yolanda and the Thief(’45)   Vincente Minnelli
              Fred Astaire,Lucille Bremer
482. Zombies on Broadway(’45)    Gordon Douglas
               Wally Brown,Alan Carney,Bela Lugosi,Anne Jeffreys
483. the Best Years of Our Lives(’46)   William Wyler
              Fredric March,Dana Andrews.Myrna Loy.Virginia Mayo
484. the Big Sleep(’46)                Howard Hawks
              Humphrey Bogart,Lauren Bacall,Martha Vickers
485. Caravan(’46)                     Arthur Crabtree
              Stewart Granger,Dennis Price,Anne Crawford,Jean Kent
486. Carnival(’46)                            Stanley Haynes
              Sally Gray,Michael Wilding,Stanley Holloway
487. Centennial Summer(’46)        Otto Preminger
              Jeanne Crain,Linda Darnell,Cornel Wilde,Walter Brennan
488. the CHASE('46)                   Arthur Ripley
              Robert Cummings,Michele Morgan,Steve Cochran
489. Dragonwyck(’46)                Joseph L. Mankiewicz
              Gene Tierney,Vincent Price,Glenn Langan,Walter Huston
490. Duel in the Sun(’46)           King Vidor
              Jennifer Jones,Gregory Peck,Joseph Cotten,Lillian Gish
491. Enamorada(’46)                  Emilio Fernandez
              Maria Felix,Pedro Armendariz
492. Etoile sans Lumiere(’46)       Marcel Blistene
              Edith Piaf,Serge Reggiani,Yves Montand,Mila Parely
493. Gilda(’46)                         Charles Vidor
              Rita Hayworth,Glenn Ford,George Macready
494. Great Expectations(’46)       David Lean
              John Mills,Jean Simmons,Valerie Hobson,Martita Hunt
495. the Harvey Girls(’46)           George Sidney
               Judy Garland,John Hodiak,Angela Lansbury
496. Home in Oklahoma(’46)        William Witney
              Roy Rogers,Dale Evans,George “Gabby” Hayes
497. Humoresque(’46)                 Jean Negulesco
               Joan Crawford,John Garfield,Paul Cavanagh
498. I See a Dark Stranger(’46)   Frank Launder
              Deborah Kerr,Trevor Howard,Raymond Huntley
499. La Belle Et La Bete(46)                Jean Cocteau 
              Jean Marais, Josette Day
500. Mysterious Intruder(’46)             William Castle
              Richard Dix,Helen Mowery,Barton MacLane
501. Nobody Lives Forever(’46)     Jean Negulesco
              John Garfield,Geraldine Fitzgerald,George Coulouris
502. Notorious(’46)                   Alfred Hitchcock
              Cary Grant,Ingrid Bergman,Claude Rains,Leopoldine Konstantin
503. Of Human Bondage(’46)        Edmund Goulding
              Eleanor Parker,Paul Henried,Janis Paige
504. Rainbow Over Texas(’46)     Frank McDonald
              Roy Rogers,Dale Evans,George “Gabby” Hayes
505. the Razor’s Edge(’46)           Edmund Goulding
              Tyrone Power,Gene Tierney,Clifton Webb,Anne Baxter
506. the Stranger(’46)                Orson Welles  
              Edward G. Robinson,Orson Welles,Loretta Young,Richard Long
507. Suspense(’46)                     Frank Tuttle
              Belita,Barry Sullivan,Albert Dekker,Bonita Granville
508. Temptation(’46)                  Irving Pichel
              Merle Oberon,George Brent,Paul Lukas
509. Three Little Girls in Blue(’46)     Bruce Humberstone
               June Haver,Vivian Blaine,Vera-Ellen,George Montgomery
510. Three Strangers(’46)           Jean Neguelsco
               Sydney Greenstreet,Peter Lorre,Geraldine Fitzgerald
511. the Verdict(’46)                   Don Siegel
              Sydney Greenstreet,Peter Lorre,Rosalind Ivan
512. Young Widow(’46)               Edwin L. Marin
              Jane Russell,Louis Hayward,Faith Domergue
513. Ziegfeld Follies(’46)      Vincente Minnelli
              Fred Astaire,Lucille Bremer,Judy Garland,Kathryn Grayson
514. the Beginning or the End(’47) Norman Taurog
              Robert Walker,Tom Drake,Brian Donlevy
515. Black Narcissus(’47)      Michael Powell,Emeric Pressburger
              Deborah Kerr,David Farrar,Kathleen Byron,Sabu,Jean Simmons
516. Born to Kill(’47)         Robert Wise
               Claire Trevor,Lawrence Tierney,Walter Slezak
517. the Brothers(’47)          David MacDonald
               Patricia Roc,Maxwell Reed,Finlay Currie
518. Calendar Girl(’47)        Allan Dwan
              Jane Frazee,William Marshall,Gail Patrick,Kenny Baker
519. Captain from Castile(’47)      Henry King
              Tyrone Power,Jean Peters,Cesar Romero,John Sutton
520. Cheyenne(’47)                           Raoul Walsh
              Dennis Morgan,Jane Wyman,Janis Paige,Alan Hale
521. Daisy Kenyon(’47)               Otto Preminger
               Joan Crawford,Henry Fonda,Dana Andrews,Ruth Warrick
522. Dancing with Crime(’47)       John Paddy Carstairs
               Richard Attenborough,Sheila Sim,Garry Marsh,Diana Dors
523. the Devil Thumbs a Ride (’47) Felix E. Feist
               Lawrence Tierney,Ted North,Nan Leslie
524. Dishonored Lady(’47)           Robert Stevenson
              Hedy Lamarr,Dennis O’Keefe,William Lundigan
525. Dual Alibi(’47)                   Alfred Travers
              Herbert Lom,Phyllis Dixey,Terence De Marney
526. the End of the River(’47)      Derek N. Twist
               Sabu,Bibi Ferreira,Esmond Knight,Robert Douglas
527. the Exile(’47)               Max Ophuls
              Douglas Fairbanks Jr.,Paule Croset,Maria Montez
528. the Farmer’s Daughter(’47)    H.C. Potter
              Loretta Young,Joseph Cotten,Ethel Barrymore
529. the Foxes of Harrow(’47)      John M. Stahl
              Rex Harrison,Maureen O’Hara,Hugo Haas,Patricia Medina
530. Frieda(’47)                        Basil Dearden
              Mai Zetterling,David Farrar,Flora Robson,Glynis Johns
531. Gentleman’s Agreement(’47)   Elia Kazan
              Gregory Peck,Dorothy McGuire,John Garfield
532. the Ghost and Mrs. Muir(’47) Joseph L. Mankiewicz
              Gene Tierney,Rex Harrison,George Sanders,Natalie Wood
533. Good News(’47)                  Charles Walters
              June Allyson,Peter Lawford,Joan McCracken,Mel Torme
534. Holiday Camp(’47)              Ken Annakin
              Dennis Price,Flora Robson,Jack Warner,Esma Cannon
535. I Wonder Who’s Kissing Her Now(’47)  Lloyd Bacon
              June Haver.Mark Stevens.Martha Stewart
536. It Always Rains on Sunday(’47)    Robert Hamer
              Googie Withers,Susan Shaw,John mCCallum,Jack Warner
537. Kiss of Death(’47)                   Henry Hathaway          
              Victor Mature,Coleen Gray,Richard Widmark
538. LES MAUDITS('47)                 Rene Clement 
              Henri Vidal,Marcel Dalio,Michel Auclair,Florence Marly
539. Lighthouse(’47)                  Frank Wisbar
              June Lang,Don Castle,John Litel
540. the Macomber Affair(’47)             Zoltan Korda
              Gregory Peck,Joan Bennett,Robert Preston,Jean Gillie
541. the Man I Love(’47)                    Raoul Walsh
              Ida Lupino,Robert Alda,Bruce Bennett,Dolores Moran
542. Mother Wore Tights(’47)     Walter Lang
              Betty Grable,Dan DaileyMona Freeman
543. My Wild Irish Rose(’47)             David Butler
              Dennis Morgan,Arlene Dahl,Alan Hale,Andrea King
544. Nightmare Alley(’47)           Edmund Goulding
              Tyrone Power,Coleen Gray,Joan Blondell,Helen Walker
545. Northwest Outpost(’47)              Allan Dwan
              Nelson Eddy, Ilona Massey,Hugo Haas.Joseph Schildkraut
546. Odd Man Out(’47)               Carol Reed
              James Mason,Kathleen Ryan,Robert Newton,Fay Compton
547. The Paradine Case(’47)        Alfred Hitchcock
              Gregory Peck,Alida Valli,Ann Todd,Louis Jourdan
548. Pirates of Monterey(’47)      Alfred L. Werker
              Maria Montez,Rod Cameron,Gilbert Roland,Phillip Reed
549. They Made Me a Fugitive(’47)              Cavalcanti
              Trevor Howard,Sally Gray,Griffith Jones,Vida Hope
550. This Time for Keeps(’47)             Richard Thorpe
              Esther Williams,Johnny Johnston,Lauritz Melchior
551. Welcome Stranger(’47)         Elliott Nugent
              Bing Crosby,Barry Fitzgerald,Joan Caulfield
552. Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein(’48) Charles Barton
               Bud Abbott,Lou Costello,Bela Lugosi,Lon Chaney Jr.
553. Accused, The(’48)                William Dieterle
              Loretta Young,Robert Cummings,Wendell Corey
554. Act of Violence(’48)           Fred Zinnemann
              Van Heflin,Robert Ryan,Janet Leigh,Mary Astor
555. Albuquerque(’48)                Ray Enright
              Randolph Scott,Barbara Britton,George “Gabby” Hayes
556. Another Part of the Forest(’48)  Michael Gordon
              Fredric March,Ann Blyth,Edmond O’Brien,Dan Duryea,
557. Black Bart(’48)           George Sherman
              Yvonne De Carlo,Dan Duryea,Jeffrey Lynn
558. Blanche Fury(’48)        Marc Allegret
              Valerie Hobson,Stewart Granger,Michael Gough
559. Bonnie Prince Charlie(’48)    Anthony Kimmins
              David Niven,Margaret Leighton,Jack Hawkins
560. Chandralekha(’48)              S.S. Vasan
              T.R. Rajkumari,M.K. Radha,Ranjan
561. Cry of the City(’48)     Robert Siodmak
               Victor Mature,Richard Conte,Hope Emerson,Barry Kroeger
562. Daughter of Darkness(’48)   Lance Comfort
              Siobhan McKenna,Maxwell Reed,Anne Crawford,Honor Blackman
563. Esther Waters(’48)             Ian Dalrymple,Peter Proud
              Kathleen Ryan,Dirk Bogarde
564. Eyes of Texas(’48)              William Witney
              Roy Rogers,Jane Frazee,Nana Bryant
565. Germania Anno Zero(’48)      Roberto Rossellini
              Edmund Moeschke
566. Gun Smugglers(’48)                    Frank McDonald
              Tim Holt,Gary Gray,Martha Hyer,Douglas Fowley
567. He Walked By Night(’48)     Alfred L. Werker
              Richard Basehart,Scott Brady,John McGuire
568. Here Come the Huggetts(’48) Ken Annakin
              Jack Warner,Kathleen Harrison,Petula Clark,Diana Dors
569. Inner Sanctum(’48)              Lew Landers
              Charles Russell,Mary Beth Hughes,Billy House
570. Iron Curtain(’48)                William Wellman
              Dana Andrews,Gene Tierney,Barry Kroeger
571. Johnny Belinda(’48)              Jean Negulesco
              Jane Wyman,Lew Ayres,Charles Bickford,Jan Sterling
572. the Kissing Bandit (’48)         Laslo Benedek
              Frank Sinatra,Kathryn Grayson
573. the Lady from Shanghai(’48)  Orson Welles
              Rita Hayworth,Orson Welles,Glenn Anders,Everett Sloane
574. the Luck of the Irish(’48)     Henry Koster
              Tyrone Power,Anne Baxter,Cecil Kellaway,Jayne Meadows
575. Macbeth(’48)                     Orson Welles
              Orson Welles,Jeanette Nolan,Edgar Barrier,Dan O’Herlihy
576. Mystery in Mexico(’48)        Robert Wise
              William Lundigan,Jacqueline White,Ricardo Cortez
577. the Naked City(’48)                     Jules Dassin
              Barry Fitzgerald,Don Taylor,Dorothy Hart,Howard Duff
578. Noose(’48)                        Edmond T. Greville
              Carole Landis,Joseph Calleia,Nigel Patrick
579. the Pirate(’48)                    Vincente Minnelli
              Judy Garland,Gene Kelly,Walter Slezak
580. Pitfall(’48)                       Andre De Toth
              Dick Powell,Lizabeth Scott,Jane Wyatt,Raymond Burr
581. Red River(’48)                    Howard Hawks
              John Wayne,Montgomery Clift,Walter Brennan
582. the Red Shoes(’48)               Michael Powell,Emeric Pressburger
              Moira Shearer,Anton Walbrook,Marius Goring
583. Return of the Bad Men(’48) Ray Enright
              Randolph Scott,Robert Ryan,Anne Jeffreys,Jacqueline White
584. Road House(’48)                 Jean Negulesco
               Ida Lupino,Cornel Wilde,Richard Widmark,Celeste Holm
585. Shed No Tears(’48)                    Jean Yarbrough
              Wallace Ford,June Vincent,Robert Scott
            
586. Silver River(’48)                Raoul Walsh
              Errol Flynn,Ann Sheridan,Thomas Mitchell,Bruce Bennett
587. Tarzan and the Mermaids(’48)             Robert Florey
              Johnny Weissmuller,Brenda Joyce.Linda Christian,George Zucco
588. Three Daring Daughters(’48) Fred M. Wilcox
              Jeanette MacDonald,Jane Powell,Jose Iturbi
589. Thunder in the Pines(’48)     Robert Gordon
              George Reeves,Ralph Byrd,Denise Darcel,Lyle Talbot
590. Under California Stars(’48)  William Witney
              Roy Rogers,Jane Frazee,Michael Chapin
591. Whispering Smith(’48)          Leslie Fenton
              Alan Ladd,Brenda Marshall,Robert Preston
592. Words and Music(’48)          Norman Taurog
              Mickey Rooney,Tom Drake,Judy Garland,Janet Leigh
593. Abbott & Costello Meet the Killer(’49)       Charles Barton
              Bud Abbott,Lou Costello,Boris Karloff
594. Adam and Evelyne(’49)         Harold French
              Stewart Granger,Jean Simmons,Edwin Stiles,Helen Cherry
595. Adventures of Don Juan(’49) Vincent Sherman
              Errol Flynn,Viveca Lindfors,Alan Hale,Robert Douglas
596. All Over the Town(’49)              Derek N. Twist
              Norman Wooland,Sarah Churchill,Cyril Cusack,Bryan Forbes
597. Beyond the Forest(’49)        King Vidor
              Bette Davis,Joseph Cotten,David Brian,Ruth Roman
598. Black Magic(’49)                Gregory Ratoff
              Orson Welles,Frank Latimore,Nancy Guild
599. the Blue Lagoon (’49)           Frank Launder
               Jean Simmons,Donald Houston.Noel Purcell,James Hayter
600. Border Incident(’49)            Anthony Mann
              Ricardo Montalban,George Murphy,James Mitchell
601. Colorado Territory(’49)              Raoul Walsh
              Joel McCrea,Virginia Mayo,Dorothy Malone,James Mitchell
602. Criss Cross(’49)                 Robert Siodmak
              Burt Lancaster,Yvonne De Carlo,Dan Duryea
603. the Doolins of Oklahoma(’49) Gordon Douglas
              Randolph Scott,Louise Allbritton.Dona Drake
604. Fabiola(’49)                Alessandro Blasetti
              Michele Morgan,Henri Vidal,Massimo Girotti,Michel Simon
                   
605. Fighting Man of the Plains(’49)    Edwin L. Marin
              Randolph Scott,Bill Williams,Victor Jory
606. For Them That Trespass(’49) Cavalcanti
              Richard Todd,Stephen Murray,Rosalyn Boulter
607. Grand Canyon(’49)              Paul Landres
              Richard Arlen,Mary Beth Hughes,Olin Howland
608. Hans le Marin(’49)                    Francois Villiers
              Maria Montez,Jean-Pierre Aumont,Lilli Palmer
609. the Heiress(’49)                   William Wyler
              Olivia de Havilland,Montgomery Clift,Ralph Richardson
610. I Shot Jesse James(’49)         Samuel Fuller
               Preston Foster,Barbara Britton,John Ireland
611. Impact(’49)                         Arthur Lubin
              Brian Donlevy,Ella Raines,Helen Walker,Charles Coburn
612. the Interrupted Journey(’49)   Daniel Birt
              Richard Todd,Valerie Hobson,Christine Norden,Tom Walls
613. Kind Hearts and Coronets(’49)      Robert Hamer
              Alec Guinness,Dennis Price,Valerie Hobson.Joan Greenwood
614. Ladri di Bicicletti(’49)          Vittorio de Sica
              Lamberto Maggioranni,Enzo Staiola
615. Late Spring(’49)                  Yasujiro Ozu
              Setsuko Hara,Chishu Ryu
616. Le Silence de la Mer(’49)      Jean-Pierre Melville
              Howard Vernon,Nicole Stephane,Jean-Marie Robain            
617. a Letter to Three Wives(’49) Joseph L. Mankiewicz
              Jeanne Crain,Linda Darnell,Ann Sothern,Kirk Douglas
618. Madame Bovary(’49)             Vincente Minnelli
               Jennifer Jones,Van Heflin,Louis Jourdan
619. Manon(’49)                    Henri-Georges Clouzot
              Cecile Aubry,Michel Auclair,Serge Reggiani
620. Massacre River(’49)     John Rawlins
              Guy Madison,Rory Calhoun,Johnny Sands,Carole Mathews
621. My Dream is Yours(’49) Michael Curtiz
              Doris Day,Jack Carson,Eve Arden,S.Z. Sakall,Eve Arden
622. Obsession(’49)                    Edward Dmytryk
              Robert Newton,Sally Gray
623. an Old-Fashioned Girl(’49)     Arthur Dreifuss
              Gloria Jean,Jimmy Lydon,John Hubbard,Frances Rafferty
624. Pinky(’49)                  Elia Kazan
              Jeanne Crain,Ethel Barrymore,Ethel Waters,William Lundigan
625. Prince of Foxes(’49)     Henry King
              Tyrone Power,Orson Welles,Wanda Hendrix
626. the Reckless Moment(’49)             Max Ophuls
              Joan Bennett,James Mason
627. the Red Menace, The(’49)             R.G. Springsteen
              Robert Rockwell,Hannelore Axman, Betty Lou Gerson
628. Riso Amaro(’49)                 Giuseppe De Santis
              Silvana Mangano,Vittorio Gassman,Doris Dowling,Raf Vallone
629. the Rocking Horse Winner(’49)      Anthony Pelissier
              Valerie Robson,John Howard Davies.John Mills,Ronald Squire
630. Siren of Atlantis(’49)          Greg C. Tallas
              Maria Montez,Jean-Pierre Aumont,Dennis O’Keefe
631. the Small Back Room(’49)      Michael Powell,Emeric Pressburger
              David Farrar.Kathleen Byron
632. Strange Bargain(’49)           Will Price
              Jeffrey Lynn,Martha Scott,Katherine Emery
633. Stray Dog(’49)                  Akira Kurosawa
              Toshiro Mifune,Takashi Shimura
634. Stromboli(’49)                    Roberto Rossellini
              Ingrid Bergman,Mario Vitale
635. Sword in the Desert(’49)     George Sherman
              Dana Andrews,Marta Toren,Stephen McNally
636. Tarzan’s Magic Fountain(’49)         Lee Sholem
              Lex Barker,Brenda Joyce,Evelyn Ankers,Albert Dekker
637. They Live By Night(’49)       Nicholas Ray
              Farley Granger,Cathy O’Donnell,Jay C. Flippen
638. the Third Man (’49)                    Carol Reed
              Joseph Cotten,Alida Valli,Orson Welles,Trevor Howard
639. Too Late for Tears(’49)       Byron Haskin
              Lizabeth Scott,Don DeFore,Dan Duryea
640. the Wolf Hunters(’49)          Budd Boetticher
              Kirby Grant,Jan Clayton,Helen Parrish,Charles Lang

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