JULY ON TCM

STAR OF THE MONTH: TONY CURTIS (MONDAYS IN JULY)

The life and trims of Tony Curtis – Channel 4 News

Tony Curtis finally gets his chance to be Turner Classic Movies’ Star of the Month this July.  He was an early advocate and friend to TCM.

Tony Curtis was born Bernie Schwartz on June 3, 1925, the oldest of three sons to European immigrants.  Curtis’s brother Julius was killed when he was struck by a car.  A few years later, Tony enlisted in the Navy and was honorably discharged at the end of WWII.  He took advantage of the GI Bill and enrolled at the City College of New York and then attended The New School where he studied acting with such luminaries as Bea Arthur, Rod Steiger, and Harry Belafonte.

A meeting with an agent led to a contract with Universal Pictures.  Curtis made his film debut in the film noir Criss Cross in 1949.  Tony Curtis would go on to make such films as Trapeze (July 6 @ 8PM/7PM), where he co-starred with Burt Lancaster; The Defiant Ones (July 6 @ 10PM/9PM), where he co-starred with Sidney Poitier and received his only Oscar nomination; The Vikings (July 6 @ 11:45PM/10:45PM) and Spartacus (July 20@ 8PM/7PM), where he co-starred with Kirk Douglas; Taras Bulba (July 20 @ 3:45AM/2:45AM), co-starring Yul Brynner and where he met his second wife, who was seventeen during filming; Some Like it Hot (July 13 @ 8PM/7PM), Curtis’ best-remembered performance; The Perfect Furlough (July 13 @ 12:30AM/11:30PM) and  Who Was That Lady? (July 13 @ 2:15AM/1:15AM), where he co-starred with first wife Janet Leigh, who was also in The Vikings; The Boston Strangler (July 20 @ 1:30AM/12:30AM), where Tony was cast against type as alleged serial killer Albert DeSalvo; Sex and the Single Girl (July 27 @ 8PM/7PM ), co-starring Natalie Wood, Henry Fonda, and Lauren Bacall; and Don’t Make Waves (July 27 @ 10PM/9PM), a counter-culture comedy.

Tony Curtis would continue to make films until his death on September 25, 2010.


TCM SPOTLIGHT: FEEL-GOOD CLASSICS (WEDNESDAYS IN JULY)

Latest Singin In The Rain GIFs | Gfycat

Let’s face it: 2020 has SUCKED SO HARD (it’s why I’ve capitalized for emphasis), and it’s only July!  The folks over at TCM recognized this and curated a month of escapist fare.  Hopefully, viewers will crack a smile or two.  Some of the films include Singin’ in the Rain (July 2 @ 8PM/7PM), Annie (10PM/9PM), Harvey (July 9 @ 8PM/7PM), Bringing Up Baby (July 9 @ 10PM/9PM), A Night at the Opera (July 9 @ midnight/11PM), Meet Me in St. Louis (July 15 @ 10:30PM/9:30PM), His Girl Friday (July 22 @ 1AM/midnight), It Happened One Night (July 15 @ 5AM/4AM), The Thin Man (July 29 @ 8PM/7PM), and The Lady Eve (July 29 @ 12:30AM/11:30PM).  So sit back and laugh this month because we all need it.

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TCM SPECIAL THEME: DIRECTED BY JOHN FORD (FRIDAYS IN JULY)

John Ford: A True Film Pioneer | Irish America

John Ford once announced to his colleagues “My name is John Ford.  I make Westerns.”  Yes, Ford did make Westerns, very good Westerns, but he was so much more.  TCM celebrates the only director with four Best Director Oscars every Friday in July.   The fest starts with one of Ford’s personal favorites, Wagon Master (July 3 @ noon/11AM).  Other movies airing July 3 include the first two films of the Calvary trilogy She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (July 3 @ 3:30PM/2:30PM) and Fort Apache (5:30PM/4:30PM).  The evening lineup includes Ford masterpieces Stagecoach (12:15AM/11:15PM) and The Searchers (10PM/9PM).  Some of Ford’s lesser-known films airing this month include one I’ve never even hear of, Flesh (July 10 @ noon/11AM), the American Revolutionary drama Drums Along the Mohawk (July 10 @ 6PM/5PM), the hysterical The Whole Town’s Talking (July 10 @ 8PM/7PM), the medical drama Arrowsmith (July 10 @ 10PM/9PM), another film I’ve never heard of, Gideon of Scotland Yard (July 17 @ noon/11AM), the Spencer Tracy runs for mayor drama The Last Hurrah (July 17 @ 3:15PM/2:15PM).  John Ford shot footage and was actually shot at in The Battle of Midway (July 24 @ 1:30PM/12:30PM).  Also check out Ford’s swan song Seven Women (July 24 @ 12:30AM/11:30PM) and final Western Cheyenne Autumn (July 31 @ 5PM/4PM) which focuses on the plight of Native Americans for once.


THE ESSENTIALS

Check Out Some of Pixar Writer and Director Brad Bird's Favorite Films on TCM's  The Essentials - AllEars.Net

This month’s lineup includes:

  • The Music Man (July 4) starring Robert Preston and Shirley Jones
  • Dr. Strangelove (July 11) starring Peter Sellers, George C. Scott, and Sterling Hayden
  • The Maltese Falcon (July 18) starring Humphrey Bogart and Mary Astor
  • 2001: A Space Odyssey (July 25) starring Keir Dullea and HAL

NOIR ALLEY

Turner Classic Movies: Noir Alley Premieres Tomorrow At New Saturday Time -  Join Us Saturdays at Midnight! | Milled

July’s month of noir includes:

The Sign of the Ram (July 4 & 5) starring Susan Peters and Alexander Knox

Bodyguard (July 11 & 12) starring Lawrence Tierney and Priscilla Lane (in her final film role)

Three Strangers (July 18 & 19) starring Geraldine Fitzgerald, Peter Lorre, and Sydney Greenstreet

The Breaking Point (July 25 & 26) starring John Garfield, Patricia Neal, and Phyllis Thaxter

Continue reading “JULY ON TCM”

MARCH ON TCM

We are back with our regularly scheduled programming with a first-timer for Star of the Month, films focusing on the sea, a 24-hour memorial tribute to Kirk Douglas, a weekend starring the Mankiewicz brothers, and tributes for Women’s History Month including a night of films directed by pioneer Alice Guy-Blanche and the 100th anniversary of the passing of the 19th Amendment which finally gave women the right to vote.

STAR OF THE MONTH: JOE E. BROWN (WEDNESDAYS IN MARCH)

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Joseph Evans Brown is March’s Star of the Month.  Today’s viewers probably couldn’t pick him out of a lineup, even though he said one of the funniest lines in film history-“Nobody’s perfect” from Some Like it Hot (March 25 @ 8PM/7PM).  Surprisingly, Brown was one of the top 10 box-office stars in the mid-1930s.  His films were made cheaply and always made back their money which afforded his studio, Warner Bros., to make more financially-riskier movies.

Joe E. Brown was born in Holgate, Ohio on July 28, 1891.  He spent most of his childhood in Toledo, OH and eventually joined a circus tumbling troupe called the Five Marvelous Ashtons.  Brown would later joke that he was the only kid who ran away to join the circus with the blessing of his parents.

Joe also had a talent for baseball and apparently turned down a chance to play for the New York Yankees because he wanted to be an entertainer!  Still, he loved the sport so much that he made several baseball-themed films, including his “pastime trilogy” he made during the mid-1930s, which all three will be airing on March 11.  They are Fireman Save My Child (8PM/7PM), Elmer the Great (9:15PM/8:15PM), and Alibi Ike (10:45PM/9:45PM), co-starring a young Olivia de Havilland.  Brown also would organize a studio baseball team and was a sometime announcer for Yankees games during the 1950s.

Brown’s film career waned during the 1940s but spent a lot of the time entertaining the troops during WWII.  He also suffered a loss when his son, Dan, was killed in an airplane crash in 1942.  As noted above with Hot, Joe appeared in several A-movies during the 1950s and 1960s such as Around the World in 80 Days (March 25 @ 5:30AM/4:30AM) and It’s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World (1AM/midnight).

Joe E. Brown died in 1973.


TCM SPOTLIGHT: LIFE AT SEA (MONDAYS IN MARCH)

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March’s TCM spotlight focuses on films set on or around the high seas.  Every Monday this month is devoted to movies separated into eight categories starting with OCEAN WONDERS during the daytime hours of March 9 including the Technicolor documentary The Sea Around Us (6:15AM/5:15AM), The Most Dangerous Game (12:15PM/11:15AM), and the box-office disaster sequel Beyond the Poseidon Adventure (3:30PM/2:30PM).  The evening hours are filled with DISASTERS AT SEA starting with The Poseidon Adventure (8PM/7PM), the 1941 adaptation of Jack London’s novel The Sea Wolf (10:15PM/9:15PM), the film where they sunk a real liner, The Last Voyage (12:15AM/11:15PM), and Britain’s take on the Titanic disaster, A Night to Remember (2AM/1AM).

March 16 starts with SEA ADVENTURES such as Spencer Tracy’s Oscar-winning role in Captains Courageous (8:15AM/7:15AM) and the Battleship Potemkin (11:45AM/10:45AM), which the most famous scenes take place on land.  The evening is all about PIRATE TALES beginning with Errol Flynn’s star-making role Captain Blood (8PM/7PM), followed by Flynn in The Sea Hawk (10:15PM/9:15PM).

March 23 starts with ACTION ON THE SEA, mostly set in WWII with films such as Mister Roberts (6AM/5AM) and They Were Expendable (8:15AM/7:15AM).  The evening goes underwater with SUBMERGED starting with Destination Tokyo (8PM/7PM), followed by Torpedo Run (10:30PM/9:30PM), then Ice Station Zebra (12:30AM/11:30PM), and Operation Pacific (3:15AM/2:15AM).

Finally, on March 30, we start with LOVE AT SEA.  What is it about the sea that makes people want to fall in love?  Is it the air?  Films on the docket include Buster Keaton’s The Navigator (6AM/5AM), the romance One Way Passage (1PM/noon), and Doris Day’s film debut in Romance on the High Seas (6PM/5PM).  In the evening hours, we go back underwater with UNDER THE SEA with Beneath the 12-Mile Reef (midnight/11PM) and the Don Knotts comedy The Incredible Mr. Limpet (10PM/9PM).


 

NOIR ALLEY (SATURDAY NIGHTS @ midnight/11PM & ENCORES ON SUNDAY @ 10AM/9AM)

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Noir Alley makes it return with a new season

On March 21 and 22, Noir Alley crosses over with TCM Imports during the early hours of Sunday morning (technically, Monday morning-TCM’s schedule runs from 5AM to 5AM) for two nights of international noir films including the French noir Elevator to the Gallows (March 21 @ midnight/11PM) the Spanish noir Death of a Cyclist (March 22 @ 2AM/1AM), and the Japanese noir Pale Flower (March 22 @ 3:45AM/2:45AM).

The American noir films airing this month are Ride the Pink Horse (March 7), I Wake Up Screaming (March 14), and Crime Wave (March 28).


HAPPY BIRTHDAY JEAN HARLOW (MARCH 3-DAYTIME)

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March 3rd is the 109th anniversary of Jean Harlow’s birth.  Sadly, she was taken from us too soon at the age of 26 from kidney failure.  Who knows what her career would have been like if she had lived longer.

TCM starts the celebration with Bombshell (8AM/7AM), based on an unproduced play about a star who is exploited by her family.  The play was a tragedy, but the film is a comedy.  Next is Red-Headed Woman (9:45AM/8:45AM), a comedy about a homewrecker.  Other films airing today include the shockingly violent The Beast of the City (11:15AM/10:15AM), the screwball comedy Libeled Lady (12:45PM/11:45AM), and her final film, Saratoga (6PM/5PM).


AAFCA PRESENTS: THE BLACK EXPERIENCE ON FILM (MARCH 3-EVENING)

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TCM once again partners up with the African-American Film Critics Association (AAFCA) for a night of documentaries featuring the Oscar-nominated documentary Freedom on My Mind (8PM/7PM)Crisis: Behind a Presidental Commitment (10PM/9PM), which focuses on the decision to integrate the University of Alabama, the TCM premiere of Say Amen, Somebody (11:30PM/10:30PM),which tells the story of the gospel music scene, and You Got to Move (1:30AM/12:30AM), where a group of individuals fight to desegregate the South.


KIRK DOUGLAS MEMORIAL TRIBUTE (MARCH 5)

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One of the last surviving stars of Hollywood’s Golden Age left this world on February 5.

Kirk Douglas was born Issur Danielovitch on December 9, 1916, to Russian Jewish immigrants Herschel and Bryna (whom he named his production company after), the only boy of seven siblings.  The family anglicized its name to Demsky.  Herschel worked as a junk dealer and the Demsky family lived in abject poverty as detailed in Douglas’ autobiography The Ragman’s Son, published in 1988.  Douglas managed to land a wrestling scholarship to St. Lawrence University and then received another scholarship to the American Academy of Dramatic Arts where his classmates included actress Lauren Bacall and his future first wife, Diana Dill.  WWII interrupted Douglas’ career and he enlisted in the Navy.  He married Dill in 1943 and they had two sons, Michael (who would win Oscars for producing and acting) in 1944 and Joel in 1947.  The couple divorced in 1951 due to Douglas’ chronic infidelity.  In 1954, Douglas married producer Anne Buydens and they had two sons, Peter in 1955 and Eric in 1958.  Eric would predecease his parents in 2004.  The Douglases were married for 65 years until Kirk’s death.

TCM celebrates the actor with 11 films and one documentary.  Highlights include Out of the Past (2PM/1PM), Lust for Life (5:45PM/4:45PM), the anti-war Paths of Glory (8PM/7PM), and his iconic role, Spartacus (9:45PM/8:45PM).


UNAPPRECIATED SONGWRITERS (MARCH 10)

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Friend of TCM Michael Feinstein hosts a night of films featuring songwriters who many don’t know about.  First, we start with the TCM premieres of It’s Love Again (8PM/7PM) and Three Little Girls in Blue (10PM/9PM)


REMEMBERING ANNE FRANK (MARCH 13)

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This April it will be 75 years since Anne Frank became one of the six million Jews murdered in the Holocaust.  TCM remembers her with the 1959 film The Diary of Anne Frank (8PM/7PM) and then with the TCM premiere of the award-winning documentary Anne Frank Remembered (11:15PM/10:15PM).


ST. PATRICK’S DAY (MARCH 17)

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TCM celebrates St. Paddy’s day with their annual airing of John Ford’s The Quiet Man (8PM/7PM) and Young Cassidy (6PM/5PM).


DIRECTED BY ALICE GUY-BLANCHE (MARCH 24)

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TCM celebrates the first female to direct a film (also one the first of either sex to direct a narrative film) with a night of her films and the TCM premiere of the 2018 documentary Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice-Guy Blanche (8PM/7PM) and a night of her film shorts.


A MANKIEWICZ FAMILY WEEKEND (MARCH 27-29)

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The final weekend in March will be taken over by the Mankiewicz family.  Ben (grandson of Herman) co-hosts with cousin(?) Alex Mankiewicz (daughter of Joseph) and Sydney Ladensohn Stern, who wrote the 2019 biography The Brothers Mankiewicz: Hope, Heartbreak, and Hollywood Classics.  Friday night focuses on the brothers’ early successes such as Joseph’s early story Million Dollar Legs (March 27 @ 8PM/7PM), Herman’s Dinner at Eight (9:15PM/8:15PM), and Joe’s Manhattan Melodrama (11:15PM/10:15PM).

Saturday, March 28, is all about Joseph’s directorial career with A Letter to Three Wives (8PM/7PM), where he won the Best Director Oscar and People Will Talk (10PM/9PM), starring Cary Grant.

Herman gets his day on Sunday evening with the classic Citizen Kane (8PM/7PM) and The Pride of the Yankees (10:15PM/9:15PM).


CELEBRATING 100 YEARS OF THE 19TH AMENDMENT (MARCH 31)

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100 years ago, groups of brave women fought for their right to vote.  TCM honors the anniversary with a night of films featuring suffragettes such as Betty Grable in TCM premiere of The Shocking Miss Pilgrim (8PM/7PM), Shirley Temple in Adventures in Baltimore (9:45PM/8:45PM), and Olivia de Havilland in The Strawberry Blonde (11:30PM/10:30PM).

31 DAYS OF OSCAR: DAY 3 SCHEDULE

The first half of today’s programming mostly focuses on musicals before going into a Marilyn Monroe double feature this evening.  Marilyn was never nominated for an Oscar.

Born to Dance (6:30AM/5:30AM)

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Broadway Melody of 1936 (8:30AM/7:30AM)

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Lady Be Good (10:45AM/9:45AM)

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Married songwriting duo make up and break up repeatedly.


Neptune’s Daughter (12:45PM/11:45AM)

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This is where “Baby It’s Cold Outside” comes from.

 


On the Town (2:30PM/1:30PM)

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First Hollywood film to partially shoot on location.  They shot for 5 days at locations such as the Statue of Liberty and Rockefeller Center.  See for yourself.


The Tender Trap (4:15PM/3:15PM)

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Playboy Sinatra tries to seduce innocent Debbie Reynolds.


The Bachelor Party (6:15PM/5:15PM)

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Carolyn Jones plays a character called “The Existentialist” and she got an Oscar nomination for it!


Bus Stop (8PM/7PM)

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Marilyn goes Method.


Some Like it Hot (9:45PM/8:45PM)

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Nobody’s perfect.


The Great Race (midnight/11PM)

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Jack Lemmon also plays the villain.


Pocketful of Miracles (2:45AM/1:45AM)

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Frank Capra’s final film is a remake of his 1933 movie Lady for a Day.


Cimarron (5:15AM/4:15AM)

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The remake of the 1930 Best Picture winner.

 

SUMMER UNDER THE STARS: KIRK DOUGLAS

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Here we are.  The final day of 2019’s Summer Under the Stars festival.  The last star is Kirk Douglas, who is also one of the last surviving actors of Hollywood’s Golden Age.  He will be 103 on December 9 (fingers crossed!).  His wife of 65 years, Anne, turned 100 on April 23.

Kirk Douglas was born Issur Danielovitch to Bryna (who he named his production company after) and Herschel Danielovitch as the only son of seven children.  The Douglas family adopted the surname “Demsky” sometime later and Kirk became known as “Izzy Demsky” until changing his name to Kirk Douglas before entering WWII.

During high school, Douglas became interested in acting.  Even though he couldn’t afford the tuition, Kirk managed to get a loan from St. Lawrence University which he paid back by working as a school janitor and gardener.  Douglas was noticed by the Academy of Dramatic Arts and they gave him a scholarship to attend.  His classmate was Lauren Bacall, who helped Kirk land his first role in Hollywood.

After serving in WWII, Kirk had planned to remain a stage actor, but as stated above, former classmate Lauren Bacall recommended him to producer Hal B. Wallis who was looking for new talent.  Kirk made his film debut in 1946’s The Strange Love of Martha Ivers, co-starring Barbara Stanwyck.  After a few supporting roles, Kirk broke through with the boxing drama Champion, where he scored his first Oscar nomination for Best Actor.  He would be nominated twice more-1952’s The Bad and the Beautiful and 1956’s Lust for Life.  He made seven films with buddy Burt Lancaster starting in 1948 and ending in 1986.

Kirk Douglas officially retired from acting in 2008.

The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946-6AM/5AM)

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Co-starring: Barbara Stanwyck, Van Heflin, and Lizabeth Scott

Kirk’s debut film as a weak D.A. who witnessed a murder as a child.


The Bad and the Beautiful (1952-2PM/1PM)

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Co-starring: Lana Turner, Walter Pidgeon, Dick Powell, Barry Sullivan, and Gloria Grahame

Douglas is a producer who helps and harms the people around him.


Lust for Life (1956-4PM/3PM)

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Co-starring: Anthony Quinn, James Donald, and Pamela Brown

Douglas is artist Vincent Van Gogh.


Spartacus (1960-8PM/7PM)

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Co-starring: Laurence Olivier, Jean Simmons, Charles Laughton, John Gavin, and Peter Ustinov

Kirk Douglas is Spartacus.


The Vikings (1958-11:30PM/10:30PM)

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Co-starring: Tony Curtis, Janet Leigh, and Ernest Borgnine

Douglas loses an eye and Curtis loses a hand in this brutal adventure film.


Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957-1:30AM/12:30AM)

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Co-starring: Burt Lancaster, Rhonda Fleming, Jo van Fleet, and John Ireland

Kirk is Doc Holliday and Burt is Wyatt Earp.

Continue reading “SUMMER UNDER THE STARS: KIRK DOUGLAS”

31 DAYS OF OSCAR-DAY 16

DAYTIME THEME-OUT WEST

THE NAKED SPUR

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OSCAR NOMINATIONS: Best Screenplay

Jimmy Stewart is unnerving as an obsessed bounty hunter trying to bring a murderer to justice.


THE OX-BOW INCIDENT

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OSCAR NOMINATIONS: Best Picture

An intense film about a mob who may lynch three innocent men.



MATCHUP #1: BEST ROAD COMEDY-IT’S A MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD VS. THE GREAT RACE

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OSCAR  NOMINATIONS FOR IT’S A MAD MAD MAD MAD WORLD: Best Color Cinematography, Best Editing, Best Sound, Best Sound Effects (WON), Best Score, Best Original Song

OSCAR NOMINATIONS FOR THE GREAT RACE: Best Color Cinematography, Best Editing,  Best Original Song, Best Sound, Best Sound Effects (WON)

THE CASE FOR IT’S A MAD MAD MAD MAD WORLD: A bunch of people drive from Arizona to California to find a criminal’s $350,000 stash.

THE CASE FOR THE GREAT RACE: A group of people compete in a worldwide race.

VERDICT: It’s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World


MATCHUP #2: LOUIS MALLE-ATLANTIC CITY VS. AU REVOIR LES ENFANTS

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OSCAR NOMINATIONS FOR ATLANTIC CITY: Best Picture, Burt Lancaster (Best Actor), Susan Sarandon (Best Actress), Louis Malle (Best Director), Best Original Screenplay

OSCAR NOMINATIONS FOR AU REVOIR LES ENFANTS: Best Foreign Language Film, Best Original Screenplay

THE CASE FOR ATLANTIC CITY: Malle’s best known American film.

THE CASE FOR AU REVOIR LES ENFANTS: The movie is based on an incident in Malle’s childhood.

VERDICT: Au Revoir Les Enfants