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Title Director Cast Genre Note 13 West Street: Philip Leacock: Alan Ladd, Rod Steiger, Dolores Dorn: Drama: Columbia: The 300 Spartans: Rudolph Maté: Richard Egan, Diane Baker ...
Something's Got to Give (1962, unfinished) Move Over, Darling (1963) My Man Godfrey (1936) My Man Godfrey (1957) My Name Is Julia Ross (1945) Dead of Winter (1987) My Old Dutch (1915) My Old Dutch (1926) My Sister Eileen (1942) My Sister Eileen (1955) This also spawned a brief TV series from 1961-1962. Mystery of the Wax Museum (1933) House of ...
Haynes pays homage to the films of Douglas Sirk (especially 1955's All That Heaven Allows, 1956's Written on the Wind, and 1959's Imitation of Life), and explores race, gender roles, sexual orientation, and class in the context of 1950s America. Far from Heaven received numerous accolades, including four Academy Award nominations.
The film was announced in August 1962 with Ralph Nelson to direct and Robert Webber attached as star. Joan Crawford and Elizabeth Montgomery were being sought for the female lead. [4] Rosalind Russell was offered the part but turned it down. [5] In December 1962, Olivia de Havilland took the leading role. [6] Her fee was $300,000. [7]
The year 1962 in film involved some very significant events, with Lawrence of Arabia winning seven Academy Awards including Best Picture and Best Director. Universal Pictures and Paramount Pictures will celebrated their 50th anniversaries.
Women in the Wind is a 1939 film directed by John Farrow and starring Kay Francis, William Gargan and Victor Jory. The plot concerns women pilots competing in the so-called " Powder Puff Derby ", an annual transcontinental air race solely for women.
Kapitel (For Women: Chapter 1); writer and director: Cristina Perincioli – award-winning documentary fiction on a women's strike in Berlin; 1972 Sambizanga; director: Sarah Maldoror – feature film about the liberation movement in Angola; 1972 The Heartbreak Kid; director: Elaine May; 1972 The Other Side of the Underneath; director Jane Arden
Jock Whitney and his sister Joan Whitney Payson acquired Gone with the Wind, which they resold at a substantial profit to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1944. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] [ 7 ] At the time of the final dissolution in 1943, three features were in production or pre-production, although they were released in 1944 and 1945.