DCSIMG
 
 

Owen Berry Movies

1967  
 
Add Far From the Madding Crowd to Queue Add Far From the Madding Crowd to top of Queue  
This 1967 version of Thomas Hardy's novel should have done better at the box office than it did, given the star power of Julie Christie and the visual and aural fidelity to its source material. Julie Christie plays Bathsheba Everdene, a country heiress who is loved by three different men: Terence Stamp, Peter Finch and Alan Bates. Convinced that she is the intellectual superior of all three, Bathesheba loses many early opportunities for lasting happiness. Finally shedding herself of her haughty attitude, Bathsheba unconditionally accepts the love of Bates. The euphoric exuberance of Nicolas Roeg's photography is matched by the direction of John Schlesinger and the screenplay by Frederick Raphael. Only the nittiest of nitpickers would complain that some of the medium shots don't match the closeups (watch Terence Stamp's clown makeup in one scene). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Julie ChristieTerence Stamp, (more)
 
1960  
 
In this British crime thriller, a wheelchair bound crook leads a ring of jewel thieves. To do his latest heist, he hires an ace safecracker to do his stuff during an international exposition. He almost succeeds until the police appear, and kill one of the henchmen. The safecracker is then captured by a rival gang leader who informs him that the other leader killed his father many years ago in Chicago. The safecracker then goes to exact his revenge. He is cheated when the mother of another gang member shoots the leader first. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Eric PohlmannPeter Reynolds, (more)
 
1956  
 
This silly British-made space opera finds distant ancestors of the lost civilization of Atlantis -- all of them nubile young ladies, of course, and starved for male company -- residing for some unexplained reason on the thirteenth moon of Jupiter, where they are discovered by an Earth exploration team headed by Anthony Dexter. The Earthmen offer to help the Atlantean cuties return home and re-establish their fallen city, but only manage to rescue one of them after they come under attack from a cheesy monster known as the "Black God." The film's camp highlight comes when the maidens perform an interpretive dance to the music of Borodin. ~ Cavett Binion, Rovi

 Read More