1950s

  • Elia Kazan – Baby Doll (1956)

    Drama1951-1960ComedyElia KazanUSA

    Quote:
    A child bride holds her husband at bay while flirting with a sexy Italian farmer.

    When the film was released in 1956, it was enormously controversial for its extremely risqué subject matter. The Catholic Legion of Decency condemned the film for its “carnal suggestiveness”. Cardinal Francis J. Spellman condemned the film in a stunning attack from the pulpit of St. Patrick’s Cathedral two days before the film opened. He said that the film had been “responsibly judged to be evil in concept” and would “exert an immoral and corrupting influence on those who see it”. He exhorted all Catholics to refrain from patronizing the film “under pain of sin”. Cardinal Spellman’s condemnation of the film led to the Legion of Decency’s first-ever nationwide boycott of an American-made major studio film. All over the country, almost 20 million Catholics protested the film and picketed theaters that showed it. Read More »

  • Emile Degelin – Dock (1954)

    1951-1960BelgiumEmile DegelinShort Film

    Synopsis:
    “In Dock Emile Degelin shoots a floating dock and follows its journey on the Scheldt River.”
    – CinematekRead More »

  • Orson Welles – The Tragedy of Othello: The Moor of Venice [European Version] (1952)

    1951-1960DramaOrson WellesUSAWilliam Shakespeare

    Winner of Grand Prix du Festival International du Film 1952 Festival de Cannes

    Criterion Collection writes:
    Gloriously cinematic despite its tiny budget, Orson Welles’s Othello is a testament to the filmmaker’s stubborn willingness to pursue his vision to the ends of the earth. Unmatched in his passionate identification with Shakespeare’s imagination, Welles brings his inventive visual approach to this enduring tragedy of jealousy, bigotry, and rage, and also gives a towering performance as the Moor of Venice, alongside Suzanne Cloutier as the innocent Desdemona, and Micheál MacLiammóir as the scheming Iago. Shot over the course of three years in Italy and Morocco and plagued by many logistical problems, this fiercely independent film joins Macbeth and Chimes at Midnight in making the case for Welles as the cinema’s most audacious interpreter of the Bard.Read More »

  • Jean-Pierre Melville – Deux hommes dans Manhattan AKA Two Men in Manhattan (1959)

    1951-1960Film NoirFranceJean-Pierre MelvilleThriller

    Synopsis:
    A French UN delegate has disappeared into thin air, sending reporter Moreau (Jean-Pierre Melville) and hard drinking photographer Delmas (Pierre Grasset) on an assignment to find him. Their only lead is a picture of three women.Read More »

  • Ted Tetzlaff – The White Tower (1950)

    USA1941-1950AdventureClassicsTed Tetzlaff

    Synopsis:
    The White Tower, a Matterhorn-like mountain in the Swiss Alps, has never been climbed. Carla Alten’s father, a famous mountaineer, died in a long-ago attempt. Now, Carla, determined to fulfill her father’s dream, has assembled an unusual climbing party to tackle the nearly-impossible ascent.Read More »

  • Henry King – Wait Till the Sun Shines, Nellie (1952)

    1951-1960ClassicsDramaHenry KingUSA

    From anttialanenfilmdiary.blogspot.com
    Ben Halper sets up his barber’s shop at the turn of the century in Sevillinois and watches the town grow around him. Thinking it is for the best, he tries to shield his wife Nellie from the worries of the world. She finally rebels while he is away at war and takes a fateful trip to Chicago. This turns out to be the first of a number of critical family crises for Ben.Read More »

  • Yasuki Chiba – Tôkyô no koibito AKA Tokyo Sweetheart (1952)

    1951-1960ComedyDramaJapanYasuki Chiba

    Following the Second World War, the lives of various people in a poverty-stricken area of Tokyo are entertwined. Pachinko parlor girls, shoeshine boys, a maker of replica jewelry, and a streetcorner artist all struggle to make their livings and to find happiness in difficult surroundings.Read More »

  • Henry Hathaway – The Desert Fox: The Story of Rommel (1951)

    1951-1960ClassicsHenry HathawayWar

    Synopsis:
    Field Marshal Erwin Rommel (James Mason) leads the German troops against the Allied forces in World War II. Rommel’s virtuosity on the battlefield makes him a national hero and earns the begrudging respect of his foes, but his tactics also infuriate Adolf Hitler. Rommel’s close friend Dr. Strölin (Cedric Hardwicke) asks him to take part in a plan to assassinate the Führer; when Hitler learns of Rommel’s involvement in the scheme, the field marshal is given a chilling ultimatum.Read More »

  • Ralph Thomas – Venetian Bird (1952)

    1951-1960ActionRalph ThomasThrillerUnited Kingdom

    Private detective Edward Mercer goes to Venice at the request of a French insurance company to locate a brave Italian whom they wish to reward for his part in the rescue of an Allied airman shot down during the war. At least, that is what Mercer thinks as he steps off the steamer at the Piazza San Marco and is greeted by a smiling street photographer, Cassana. Mercer makes his way to a shop and finds his first contact dead from a knife stab, and the trail leads him to Adrianna. He faces danger from police chief Spaloni and also from a group of foreign patriots, led by Count Borian and Lieutenant Longo, who want to use him as a stool-pigeon for a planned Coup d’Etat. A hectic race across the roof tops, high above the great square, brings Mercer to grips against his unknown enemy.Read More »

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