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The year 1965 in film involved several significant events, with The Sound of Music topping the U.S. box office and winning five Academy Awards. Fox Film (now 20th Century-Fox ), Universal City, California and Universal Studios Lot will celebrated their 50th anniversaries.
Title Director Cast Genre Note The Family Jewels: Jerry Lewis: Jerry Lewis, Sebastian Cabot, Donna Butterworth: Comedy: Paramount: Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Russ Meyer: Tura Satana, Haji, Lori Williams
In Harm's Way is a 1965 American epic historical romantic war film produced and directed by Otto Preminger [2] and starring John Wayne, Kirk Douglas, and Patricia Neal, with a supporting cast featuring Henry Fonda in a lengthy cameo, Tom Tryon, Paula Prentiss, Stanley Holloway, Burgess Meredith, Brandon deWilde, Jill Haworth, Dana Andrews, and Franchot Tone. [3]
The Bedford Incident is a 1965 British-American Cold War film directed by James B. Harris, starring Richard Widmark and Sidney Poitier, and produced by Harris and Widmark.. The cast also features Eric Portman, James MacArthur, Martin Balsam, and Wally Cox, as well as early appearances by Donald Sutherland and Ed Bis
The Chasers (1965 film) Chettathi; Chhoti Chhoti Baten; The Chicken (film) Chronicle of a Boy Alone; The Cincinnati Kid; Circus Angel; City of Fear (1965 film) The City of Masters; City Under the Sea; Clarence, the Cross-Eyed Lion; Clay (1965 film) Clean Ponds (film) Climax (1965 film) Coast of Skeletons; Code Name: Jaguar; A Coffin for the ...
This is a list of films which placed number one at the weekly box office in the United States during 1965 per Variety's weekly National boxoffice survey. The results are based on a sample of 20-25 key cities and therefore, any box office amounts quoted may not be the total that the film grossed nationally in the week.
Fanatic (U.S. title: Die!Die! My Darling!) is a 1965 British horror thriller film directed by Silvio Narizzano, and starring Tallulah Bankhead, Stefanie Powers, Peter Vaughan, Yootha Joyce, Maurice Kaufmann and Donald Sutherland. [1]
In his book 1965: The Year Modern Britain Was Born, cultural commentator Christopher Bray views Help! as "one of the central surrealist texts" of the 1960s, and the film that best captures the "magical weirdness" of London before the commercialisation that accompanied its international recognition as the world's "Swinging City".