Quote:
“The elegance and indisputable hard punch of Naruse’s storytelling become immediately clear the moment the lovers kiss and the director cuts, midclinch, to an almost identical shot of them kissing in the past, an edit that suggests this is a passion that transcends even time and space.”
– Manohla Dargis, New York Times (October 28, 2005)Read More »
1950s
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Mikio Naruse – Ukigumo AKA Floating Clouds (1955)
Drama1951-1960JapanMikio NaruseRomance -
Nelson Pereira dos Santos – Rio Quarenta Graus aka Rio 40ºC (1955)
Drama1951-1960BrazilClassicsNelson Pereira dos Santos

Banned by Brazil’s Federal Department of Public Safety, “Rio, 40 Grau”s is a landmark film that ushered in the wave of Neorealist cinema in Brazil – Cinema Novo. The film chronicles a day in the life of five peanut vendors from the favelas (shanty towns) of Rio de Janeiro. Other subplots involving characters they meet along the way are interspersed. This was one of the first Brazilian films to address the issues of race, poverty, and class. These themes would continue to be examined by dos Santos throughout his career.Read More »
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Stanley Kramer – On the Beach (1959)
1951-1960DramaStanley KramerUSAWarIn 1964, nuclear war wipes out humanity in the northern hemisphere; one American submarine finds temporary safe haven in Australia, where life-as-usual covers growing despair. In denial about the loss of his wife and children in the holocaust, American Captain Towers meets careworn but gorgeous Moira Davidson, who begins to fall for him. The sub returns after reconnaissance a month (or less) before the end; will Towers and Moira find comfort with each other?Read More »
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Jules Dassin – Night and the City [+Extras] (1950)
1941-1950CrimeFilm NoirJules DassinUnited KingdomSynopsis
Two-bit hustler Harry Fabian (Richard Widmark) aches for a life of ease and plenty. Trailed by an inglorious history of go-nowhere schemes, he stumbles upon a chance of a lifetime in the form of legendary wrestler Gregorius the Great (Stanislaus Zbyszko). But there is no easy money in this underworld of shifting alliances, bottomless graft, and pummeled flesh-and soon Fabian learns the horrible price of his ambition. Luminously shot in the streets of London, Jules Dassin’s Night and the City is film noir of the first order and one of the director’s crowning achievements.Read More » -
Andrei Tarkovsky – Segodnya uvolneniya ne budet (Сегодня увольнения не будет) AKA There Will Be No Leave Today (1958)
Drama1951-1960Andrei TarkovskyThrillerUSSR

Quote:
During earthworks, the utility crew discovers a German ammunition depot left over from the war. 30 tons of explosives lay in the ground for 15 years. According to the instructions, it is impossible to demine – it is dangerous to touch them. But it is also impossible to blow up – there are residential areas around. The case is entrusted to the group of Captain Galich. By 10 a.m. the next day, the entire population is evacuated to the outskirts of the city, and in the ominous pit, seven people begin a game with death.Read More » -
Budd Boetticher – Wings of the Hawk (1953)
USA1951-1960Budd BoetticherWesternSynopsis
Gringo miner Gallager is caught up in the Mexican revolution of 1910-11 when corrupt administrator Ruiz appropriates his mine. Gallager saves the life of guerilla leader Raquel, then finds there’s a price on his head; he becomes romantically involved with her in the course of a series of rescues and ambushes, leading up to Orozco’s march on Ciudad Juarez.Read More » -
Kon Ichikawa – Enjo aka The Temple of the Golden Pavilion (1958)
1951-1960AsianJapanKon IchikawaPhilosophy
Enjô (1958) 
Quote:
Yukio Mishima’s acclaimed 1956 novel Kinkakuji (The Temple of the Golden Pavilion) was inspired by an actual incident in 1950 when a disturbed monk burned down one of Kyoto’s most beautiful temple buildings. The temple requested that the name be changed to Shukakuji for this adaptation, which opens out the book’s internal monologue, structuring the anguished protagonist’s progress towards final conflagration through flashbacks as the police piece together their investigation. Raizo Ichikawa’s central performance attracts sympathy for this stuttering temple acolyte from a broken family, who sees in the Golden Pavilion a purity of beauty in direct contrast to his own imperfect existence. It’s a purity in danger of being defiled, however, as post-war occupation and reconstruction open the site to tourism, so he resolves to destroy pavilion in order to preserve it. Ichikawa’s fragmented direction draws together this awful logic, leaving the audience dangling exquisitely between understanding and outright horror as flames obliterate a priceless cultural monument. The director’s favourite among his own films.Read More » -
Aldo Fabrizi – La famiglia Passaguai AKA The Passaguai Family (1951)
Comedy1951-1960Aldo FabriziClassicsItaly
PLOT SYNOPSIS:
From the comedy “Cabin 27”, by Anton Germano Rossi.
One Sunday at the beach of Ostia of cavalier Peppe Passaguai with his wife and three children.
A machine of Roman comicality that has its ascendency in the repertory of dialectal theater, of variety show, and in the humor of the Weekly Travaso of the ’30s, enriched by more cinematic gags and costume notations on the small bourgeoisie. Especially in the first half, there is no lack of good gags and colorful caricatures.
(Morandini)Read More » -
Byron Haskin – The Boss (1956)
1951-1960Byron HaskinFilm NoirThrillerUSA

Noir and sci-fi specialist Byron Haskin (I Walk Alone, The War of the Worlds) takes on The Boss in this gritty crime classic. Following World War I, ruthless veteran Matt Brady (John Payne, 99 River Street) inherits the clout of his political kingpin brother and climbs the ladder of corruption all the way to the top of the state. His amoral practices and sheer arrogance lead to broken friendships (William Bishop, The Redhead from Wyoming) and romances (model-turned-actress Doe Avedon and Gloria McGehee, A Child Is Waiting) along the way. Based on the real-life scandal of Kansas City politico Tom Pendergast, The Boss is celluloid dynamite from the pen of Dalton Trumbo (Spartacus, Lonely Are the Brave), originally uncredited due to Hollywood’s blacklisting.Read More »




