With my local movie theater charging $12.50 per ticket, and with all of the expenses that come with planning my upcoming nuptials (as I commented below on C.J.'s post, I wish we had opted to elope), I’m determined to avoid the cinema this summer.  Instead, I’m raiding the public library for every 1940s and 50s film I can get my hands on and plan to write a series over at Acculturated on the selections I watch.  While plenty has changed in the sixty to seventy years since these films were produced, the basic human themes of love, truth, happiness, meaning, forgiveness, and mutual understanding are as relevant now as ever.

My first selection, which I write about here, was the 1947 film Gentleman's Agreement, directed by Elia Kazan and starring Gregory Peck.  It's a great movie, if at times a bit on the preachy side, that treats the subject of anti-Semitism.  Not the blatant, kill-the-Jews strain of anti-Semitism of Hitler's Germany or Ahmadinejad's Iran, but rather the passive and incredibly pernicious strain of anti-Semitism prevalent in postwar America. 

My next selection will be on the 1950 film Sunset Boulevard, starring William Holden and Gloria Swanson.   Member Adrian has already sold me on Elia Kazan's On the Waterfront, which I plan on reviewing as part of my series, but I welcome your recommendations for other outstanding films from the 1940s and 50s that stand the test of time and remain relevant for today's generation.

Comments:


Brasidas
Joined
Mar '12
Brasidas

Haven't read the comments, so these were probably listed already, but I like The Third Man and Citizen Kane.  

Keith Preston
Joined
May '10
Keith Preston

Gotta second Best years of our Lives.  It deserves all the accolades.  A perfect screenplay. P E R F E C T.  I think Mr. Long weighed in on that once...

JeanVianney
Joined
Feb '12
Charles723

Oops!  How could I forget "Hail the conquering hero!"(1944). ' Awright, Capra.  When it comes to comedy, you ain't got nothin' on Preston Sturges!'  What a grand comedy!  

dogsbody
Joined
Sep '10
dogsbody

Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949) - a wonderful British comedy, with Alec Guinness playing nine different roles.


Joined
Jan '12
Jeffrey L.

Look to Japan for cinematic perfection:  Late Spring (1949), Early Summer (1951), and Tokyo Story (1953), all directed by Yasujiro Ozu, "the quiet master."

Glenn the Iconoclast
Joined
Apr '11
Glenn the Iconoclast

To Have and Have Not, the semi-sequel to Casablanca, is brilliant.

Bacall: Give her my love.

Bogart: If she wore that dress, I'd give her my own.

We're No Angels, with Bogart, Ustinov, Aldo Ray, Basil Rathbone, one of the Bennett sisters, certainly proved Bogart could do comedy.  He always looked a little lost, to me, in Beat the Devil.  Of course, for the guys, it has Lollobrigida.

Kind of obscure (for a long time it wasn't available on video) is The Young Lions.  Brando, Montgomery Clift, Dean Martin (back when he wanted to be a serious actor) ... I may be misremembering, but I think Ms. Dietrich made a cameo appearance.

Umbra Fractus
Joined
Nov '10
Umbra Fractus

I cannot recommend Arsenic and Old Lace enough. I first read the play when I was of single digit age, and the movie is still one of the funniest things I've seen in decades, even if Carey Grant does overact a bit (but it works!)

That, The Return of the Pink Panther and Murder by Death (both from the 70's) are the three movies we all default to when my family cannot agree on which movie to watch.

Edited on July 12, 2012 at 11:42pm
Diane Ellis

Oh my gosh, I just saw Preston Sturges's The Great McGinty (1940) last night.  Hilarious because it presciently depicts the state of the rotten, corrupt Democratic Party of 2012.  It's also oddly comforting to know that some things just never change.

John Marzan
Joined
Oct '10
John Marzan

Steven Den Beste of USS Clueless recommended the anime series Mouretsu Pirates. He gave it 4/4 stars. I'm watching the series right now.


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