1960s

  • Doris Wishman – Gentlemen Prefer Nature Girls (1962)

    USA1961-1970Doris WishmanEroticaExploitation
    Gentlemen Prefer Nature Girls (1963)
    Gentlemen Prefer Nature Girls (1963)

    Synopsis:
    Anne and Tom, a married nudist couple, work in a real estate office. When the agency’s owner discovers that Tom is a nudist, he fires him. Unfortunately, Tom was just ready to close a big real-estate deal with Al Jenkins. Tom goes to his favorite nudist camp to take his mind off his problems and discovers that Al Jenkins is also a member of the nudist camp. Together they come up with a plan to get Tom’s wife and their boss to get to the nudist camp so they can close the deal.Read More »

  • Jerzy Stefan Stawinski – Pingwin (1965)

    1961-1970DramaJerzy Stefan StawinskiPolandRomance

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    A story about love and the life of the youth of the sixties. A film saturated with insightful psychological observations and the warm, affectionate relationship of the central character.Read More »

  • Seijun Suzuki – Tantei jimusho 23: Kutabare akuto-domo aka Detective bureau 23 (1963)

    1961-1970AsianCrimeJapanSeijun Suzuki

    Japanese director Seijun Suzuki solidified his growing cult following with this offbeat adaptation of Haruhiko Ooyabu’s crime novel. Jo Shishido stars as Det. Tajima, a smug investigator who nabs a pair of criminal gangs with flamboyant aplomb while the police remain baffled. Suzuki treats the rather hoary plotline as an excuse for dark-humored camp, and young audiences were delighted with his irreverent approach, which made him one of the few distinctive names in the ’60s assembly-line of Nikkatsu Studios. ~ (Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide)Read More »

  • Masahiro Shinoda – Waga koi no tabiji AKA Epitaph to My Love (1961)

    1961-1970DramaJapanMasahiro ShinodaRomance

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    Ishihara Kiyoshi plans to marry the woman he loves, Chiee, a coffee shop girl. After an accident, Chiee loses her memory. A romance movie whose original work by Ayako Sono was made into a melodrama by a combination of Shinoda Masahiro and Terayama Shuji.Read More »

  • Flávio Moreira, Leon Hirszman, Rubens Maia & Luiz Rosemberg Filho – América do Sexo (1969)

    Drama1961-1970BrazilEroticaRubens Maia and Luiz Rosemberg Filho

    Quote:
    Film in four segments: “Colagem”, “Balanço”, “Bandeira Zero” and “Sexta-Feira da Paixão, Sábado de Aleluia”, having in common a strongly allegorical and gross protest tone in the approach of its subjects.Read More »

  • Milos Forman – Lásky jedné plavovlásky AKA Loves of a Blonde (1965)

    1961-1970Amos Vogel: Film as a Subversive ArtComedyCzech RepublicDramaMilos Forman

    The flirtatious title of Milos Forman’s breakthrough comedy Loves of a Blonde says a lot about the film without even trying. Everybody in Forman’s bittersweet film thinks about sex constantly but only in terms of hypothetical scenarios that almost never come to pass. The funny thing about these daydreams of coitus is that they’re not strictly sexy. In fact, most of the time characters in Loves of a Blonde are wringing their hands about sex, even the trio of homely soldiers licking their lips at the thought of seducing a table of bored blondes at a local dance. First they send alcohol to the wrong table and are subsequently unsure of how long they should smile at the girls they plan on getting drunk and taking to the woods (they aren’t even sure if the idea of taking girls to the woods for sex is just a euphemism or not). Sex is comedy here because it breeds nothing but the kind of anxiety that the title of Forman’s film teems with.Read More »

  • Vicente Aranda – Las crueles aka El cadáver exquisito aka The exquisite cadaver (1969)

    Drama1961-1970ArthouseSpainSpanish cinema under FrancoVicente Aranda

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    ,Quote:
    Carlos (Andre Argaud), a well-do-do publisher and family man, receives a severed hand in the mail at work and buries it before going home but once there, his beautiful wife (Theresa Gimpera) reads him a telegram asking if he’d like a forearm. Carlos makes up a lame, work-related explanation but now suspicious, she follows her husband and spots a mysterious woman in black following him as well. That woman is Parker (Capucine), whose lesbian lover, Esther (Judy Matheson), was once Carlos’ mistress who never got over being cast aside. Esther committed suicide but Parker kept the body and, holding Carlos responsible, devises a complicated plan to have him framed for Esther’s murder…Read More »

  • Marcel Moussy – Saint-Tropez Blues (1961)

    Drama1961-1970FranceMarcel Moussy

    Synopsis:
    ‘Anne-Marie goes south with her childhood friend Jean-Paul instead of hitting the books at home. The friends join up with artist-types in Saint Tropez, and though the ambiance is carefree and casual, Anne-Marie manages to survive the hijinks and the ardor of would-be admirers. In the end, she starts to fall for one man in particular.’
    – Eleanor Mannikka Read More »

  • Allan King – Warrendale (1967)

    1961-1970Allan KingAmos Vogel: Film as a Subversive ArtCanadaDocumentary

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    Quote:
    King’s feature debut, Warrendale, about a collection of volatile children from the titular Toronto-based rehabilitation center, has been compared to the works of Pennebaker, Maysles, and Rouch within the cinema vérité and Direct Cinema movements. But King’s approach to capturing the children’s emotional ebbs and flows as they experience anger, guilt, and finally tragedy, seems arguably more human, hypnotically attuned to the delicate sensitivities of people’s movements and sounds. As the adult caregivers attempt to build trust with these damaged children, King focuses on the intimate moments of counseling, reassurance, and discourse structuring the narrative. That these sequences often devolve into hysterical fits and seizures makes the film all the more forceful, showing the dark undercarriage of childhood trauma without any buffer or safety net. The film’s striking emotional centerpiece, a family-style meeting between counselors and children about the sudden death of the house cook, is a breathtaking display of collective heartbreak and rejuvenation that creates a frenzy of repressed rage. In a single moment, King’s camera becomes engulfed in an emotional war zone, pinned down but never overwhelmed by honest, raw expression, always able to capture the small moments on the fringes of the frame.Read More »

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