Bronislau Kaper Movies

Bronislau Kaper was a composer at MGM for three decades, and although he never achieved the status of his colleague Miklos Rozsa, he did work on many high-profile films. Born in Warsaw, Poland, probably in 1902 (although Kaper himself was never sure of the year), he was a child prodigy at the piano from the age of six. By his teens he was writing music and eventually, after a near-detour into law, he attended the Warsaw Conservatory of Music. He spent the 1920s and early '30s performing and writing popular songs in England, France, and Germany, as well as his native Poland, and in the early and mid-'30s wrote music for films in Germany. Following Hitler's rise to power, Kaper made Paris his base of operations and in 1935 he moved to Hollywood, where he was signed to MGM, partly thanks to studio chief Louis B. Mayer's being a fan of Kaper's, for his song "Ninon." In contrast to his later career, in which he wrote complete instrumental scores, Kaper in his early years at the studio was primarily assigned to write songs, several of which appeared in notable films of the era, including the Marx Brothers' classic A Day at the Races. After 1940, he shifted over to the composition of complete background scores and over the next 20 years Kaper was responsible for music in every kind of vehicle, including satires (Comrade X), romantic comedies (Two-Faced Woman), gangster films (Johnny Eager), and war movies (Bataan). Some of the highest profile work that he did was in movies such as the studio's opulent 1944 remake of Gaslight starring Ingrid Bergman. He was also occasionally loaned out to other studios and to independent producers, which was how Kaper ended up writing the score for Orson Welles's thriller The Stranger, made for Sam Spiegel, and for Gordon Douglas's groundbreaking 1954 horror chiller Them! at Warner Bros.. The latter followed by one year Kaper's winning of an Academy Award for the score for the MGM musical Lili, which contained the popular tune "Hi-Lili, Hi-Lo." Despite his success with Lili, Kaper was never a major contributor to the studio's biggest musical productions -- he had little to do with the so-called "Freed unit," built around producer Arthur Freed -- but he did get bigger and better dramatic film assignments, including Somebody up There Likes Me, Green Mansions, and The Swan, which was Grace Kelly's final film. It was in the 1960s, after three decades at the studio, that Kaper moved by attrition to the top rank of the staff composers at MGM. In 1961, the studio's management was eager for its top composer, Miklos Rozsa (who had just won his third Oscar for Ben-Hur) to write the music for its new, lavish production of Mutiny on the Bounty. Rozsa had no interest in doing that score, however, and was able to contrive to work in Europe on other projects for the studio. Thus, Kaper was assigned Mutiny on the Bounty; the movie, a high profile, enormously expensive epic, was a critical disaster and a box-office failure, but not because of the music, which (along with Richard Harris's performance) was one of the few things that people liked about the movie. That film was followed by several major assignments from Columbia, Warner Bros., and 20th Century Fox, as well as MGM. Kaper had big cinematic canvases on which to work, in Lord Jim, Tobruk, and The Way West, but none of the films was notably successful at the box office. By the end of the 1960s, the kind of movies that called for the large-scale melodic scores in which he specialized were becoming increasingly rare and Kaper retired after working as a songwriter on A Flea in Her Ear at Fox. Over a nearly 40-year career, Kaper could write in any range of idioms, from early 20th century light pop music to large, bold, expansive orchestral scores, and even did a credible job in a Western idiom in The Way West, at the end of his professional life. Most of his music was highly melodic and his lighter material fared best, although his score for Them! stands alone and apart, an ominous, sometimes harsh and disquieting body of music in keeping with its subject: the battle between mankind and a species of giant, mutated ants (and if that sounds silly or predictable, bear in mind that this was the first time that plot was used). Like most of his contemporaries, he was swimming against the tide of public taste, so that by the end of the 1960s he seemed like an anachronism in the film world. At the peak of his abilities, however, Kaper was one of the top talents in Hollywood's second tier of film composers. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
1973  
 
The ninth and final season of ABC's longest-running adventure series The F.B.I marks the first time since Season Three that a new actor has been added to the cast. Efrem Zimbalist Jr. remains top-billed as Federal Inspector Lew Erskine, with Philip Abbott still on hand as Erskine's main associate, Agent Arthur Ward. Missing from the scene is William Reynolds as Agent Tom Colby; his replacement is Agent Chris Daniels, portrayed by Shelly Novack. The series' valedictory season gets under way with the episode "The Big Job", followed by "The Confession", the latter featuring pre-stardom appearances by Tom Selleck and Hal Linden. Other guest stars this season include Jackie Cooper in "The Break-In", Susan Oliver in "Fatal Reunion", John Marley (the recipient of the severed horse's head in The Godfather) in "Rules of the Game", Leslie Nielsen in "Fool's Gold Raub", Lloyd Nolan and Anna Lee in "The Killing Truth", Elizabeth Ashley in "Diamond Run", and Harvey Keitel in "Deadly Ambition". The series' 239th and last episode is "Survival", featuring a young Dabney Coleman. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Efrem Zimbalist, Jr.Philip Abbott, (more)
1972  
 
The longest-running adventure series on the ABC network, The F.B.I continues to go strong in its eighth season on the air. Returning to the fold are Efrem Zimbalist Jr. as Inspector Lew Erskine, Philip Abbott as Agent Arthur Ward, and William Reynolds as Agent Tom Colby. The season opener, "The Runner", features a guest-star turn by future Spenser for Hire leading man Robert Urich. Other well-known actors appearing this season are Dina Merrill and Daniel J. Travanti in "The Franklin Papers", Ross Martin in "The Wizard", Mark Miller (the father of Penelope Ann Miller) in "Holiday with Terror", Sondra Locke in "Dark Christmas", Martin Sheen in "The Disinherited", Vic Morrow in "Desperate Journey" and Mariette Hartley in "The Double Play". Despite the public's growing disenchantment with governmental agencies in the wake of Vietnam and Watergate, not to mention the recent death of longtime Federal Bureau of Investigation director J. Edgar Hoover, The F.B.I. continued to post decent ratings in its familiar Sunday-night timeslot, ending its eighth season as America's 29th most watched program. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Efrem Zimbalist, Jr.Philip Abbott, (more)
1971  
 
Efrem Zimbalist Jr. continues to bring Federal offenders to heel in the role of Inspector Lew Erskine in Season Seven of ABC's longest-running adventure series The F.B.I.. Also back for more action are Phillip Abbott and William Reynolds, respectively cast as FBI agents Arthur Ward and Tom Colby. As in previous years, the seventh season of The F.B.I. offers an abundance of familiar names in the guest-star rosters. Former Leave It to Beaver regular Barbara Billingsley and onetime movie "Mike Hammer" Ralph Meeker are seen in "Recurring Nightmare"; real-life husband and wife John McIntire and Jeanette Nolan costar in "The Last Job"; Ed Begley Jr. makes one of his first TV appearances in "The Deadly Gift";Deanna Martin, daughter of Rat Packer Dean Martin, shows up in the two-part "The Mastermind"; future M*A*S*H star Wayne Rogers is cast along with future McGyver regular Dana Elcar in "Superstition Rock"; onetime "Doctor No" Joseph Wiseman and veteran movie tough guy Cameron Mitchell appear in "Bitter Harbor"; the ubiquitous Stefanie Powers is cast in "The Buyer"; Donna Mills of Knots Landing fame has a good role in "The Break-up"; John Davidson plays a mob-dominated singer in "Judas Goat"; and Lindsey Wagner, still several years removed from her Bionic Woman stardom, is featured in "Dark Journey". Having achieved a ratings peak as America's 10th most popular series during its sixth season, The F.B.I dropped down to 17th place in Season Seven, though it still outperformed such venerable programs as Bonanza and Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Efrem Zimbalist, Jr.Philip Abbott, (more)
1970  
 
The sixth season of The F.B.I finds Efrem Zimbalist Jr. still on the job as diligent, no-nonsense Federal Inspector Lew Erskine. Likewise, Philip Abbott and William Reynolds return to the familiar roles as FBI agents Ward and Colby. The first of Season Six's many guest stars are Martin Sheen and Joan Van Ark, appearing in the season opener "The Condemned." Other well-known performers appearing throughout the year are Monte Markham and Billy Dee Williams in "The Architect", Larry Blyden and Lois Nettleton in "The Innocents", Robert Loggia in "The Deadly Past", Mariette Hartley in "The Impersonator", William Shatner in "Antennae of Death", Fabian in "The Unknown Victim", Vic Morrow and Gary Collins in "Center of Peril", Dana Elcar, Sorrell Booke and Barbara Billingsley in "The Fatal Connection", Anne Archer in "Downfall", and Michael Douglas and Donna Mills in "The Hitchhiker". This season yielded The F.B.I.'s best-ever ratings, with the series scoring as America's 10th most popular program. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Efrem Zimbalist, Jr.Philip Abbott, (more)
1969  
 
Efrem Zimbalist Jr. as Inspector Lew Erskine continues to hunt down and ensnare the most dangerous and elusive of Federal criminals in Season Five of The Fugitive. Likewise returning for more derring-do are Erskine's stalwart coworkers, Agents Ward (Philip Abbott) and Colby (William Reynolds. Although the season's opening episode, "Target of Interest", is surprisingly light on "big" names in the guest star cast, the rest of Season Five is festooned with familiar faces. Among these are Robert Duvall in "Nightmare Road", Vera Miles in "The Swindler", Carl Betz and Jeff Bridges in "Boomerang", Cicely Tyson in "Silent Partners", Laraine Day in "Gamble with Death", Dabney Coleman and Larry Linville in "Flight", Billy Dee Williams and Lola Falana in "The Sanctuary", Harrison Ford in "Scapegoat", Josephine Hutchinson in "The Doll Courier", Barry Nelson in "Tug-of-War", David Cassidy in "Fatal Impostor", Nina Foch in "The Dealer", Anne Francis in "Deadfall", and the husband-wife team of Christopher George and Lynda Day George in "Return to Power". The F.B.I. capped its fifth season as the 24th most-watched program in the U.S., easily outrating its Sunday-night competition The Ed Sullivan Show. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Efrem Zimbalist, Jr.Philip Abbott, (more)
1968  
 
Taken from the 1907 comedy play by Georges Feydeau, A Flea In Her Ear is a comedic sex romp about a wife suspicious of her husband's activities away from home. Gabrielle (Rosemary Harris) is convinced her attorney husband Victor (Rex Harrison) is seeing another woman because of his inattention to her amorous needs. Gabrielle sets up a meeting with her husband at a bordello-hotel, and he is completely unaware that the woman he is going to meet will be his own wife. She soon discovers just who is being unfaithful to their wives after meeting a number of lovers and both faithful and unfaithful husbands. Louis Jourdan and Rachel Roberts also star in this light situation comedy containing turn-of the-century-sensibilities that appear somewhat dated in 1968. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Rosemary HarrisLouis Jourdan, (more)
1968  
 
The fourth season of The F.B.I. is also the first season without any major cast changes. Back for more cops-and-robbers action are Efrem Zimbalist Jr. as FBI Inspector Lew Erskine, Philip Abbott as Agent Arthur Ward, and William Reynolds as Agent Tom Colby. As in previous years, the main selling card of this season's crop of episodes is manifested in the choice of guest stars. Among those appearing are Louis Jourdan in the season opener "Wind It Up and It Betrays You", Susan Strasberg and Suzanne Pleshette in "The Quarry", Ron Howard in "The Runaways", Daniel J. Travantiin "Death of a Fixer", Cicely Tyson in "The Enemies", Bruce Dern in "The Nightmare", Robert Duvall in "The Harvest", Maurice Evans, Monte Markham and Georg Stanford Brown in "The Intermediary", Ralph Bellamy in "The Butcher", Marie Windsor in "The Flaw", Patrick Wayne (son of John) in "The Widow", Billy Dee Williams in "Eye of the Storm", Hal Holbrook in "The Fraud", Harrison Ford in "Caesar's Wife" and Gene Tierney in "Conspiracy of Silence". The season finale "Moment of Truth" features veteran actor Richard Carlson, best known for his role as a Federal undercover agent on the 1950s TV series I Led Three Lives, as a thoroughly corrupt loan shark! Continuing to thrive in a Sunday-night timeslot opposite The Ed Sullivan Show, The F.B.I. ended its fourth season as America's 18th most popular program. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Efrem Zimbalist, Jr.Philip Abbott, (more)
1967  
 
Season Three of The F.B.I. finds hard-working Inspector Lew Erskine (Efrem Zimbalist Jr. and his main sidekick, Agent Arthur Ward (Philip Abbott), continuing to hunt down and capture Federal criminals, using the latest in crimefighting technology--and a healthy supply of common sense and intuition. Gone from the series this year is Erskine's young assistant Agent Jim Rhodes; in his place is Agent Tom Colby, played by William Reynolds. The season begins with "The Gold Card", featuring in its supporting cast such familiar faces as western actor L.Q. Jones, movie leading lady Joanna Moore (the mother of Tatum O'Neal), and radio perennial Vic Perrin. As the season progresses, the viewer is treated to guest appearances by the likes of Viveca Lindfors in "The Sleeper Wakes", Martha Scott in "Overload", Victor French and Carol Lynley in "False Witness", Martin Sheen and Edward Asner (cast as brothers!) in "The Dynasty", Burt Reynolds in "Act of Violence", Richard Kiley in "The Homecoming", Anne Baxter in "Region of Peril", and future teen idol Bobby Sherman in "The Mechanized Accomplice." An intriguing bit of casting occurs in the episode "The Legend of John Rim", in which one of the stars of the movie version of M*A*S*H, Tom Skerritt, appears with one of the stars of the M*A*S*H TV series, Wayne Rogers. Still comfortably installed in its familiar Sunday-evening timeslot, The F.B.I. climbed from 29th to 22nd place in the overall ratings during its third season. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Efrem Zimbalist, Jr.Philip Abbott, (more)
1967  
 
The beauty of classical music confronts the ugliness and treachery of war in this unusual drama. Lionel Evans (Charlton Heston) is the director of a well-respected symphony orchestra touring European concert halls in 1944. In the midst of one concert, the city where they are playing is attacked by German troops, and as Evans and his musicians try to escape, they are captured by Nazi soldiers led by Col. Arndt (Anton Diffring). Evans and the orchestra are taken to a castle where they are to bide their time before being executed; but it turns out that Arndt's superior, Gen. Schiller (Maximilian Schell), is a classical music buff. Schiller commands Evans and his symphony to prepare a special concert for the Nazis, but Evans realizes that the moment the concert is over, he and his musicians will be killed. The orchestra's performances, which include works by Tchaikovsky, Beethoven, Brahms, Wagner, and Schubert, were performed by the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Charlton HestonMaximilian Schell, (more)
1967  
 
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Senator William J. Tadlock (Kirk Douglas) enlists the help of veteran scout Dick Summers (Robert Mitchum) to lead a wagon train of settlers from Missouri to Oregon in this plodding, routine western. A scared settler accidently shoots an Indian boy who is mistaken for a wolf, prompting Summers to order newlywed triggerman Johnny Mack (Michael Witney) to be hanged to avoid an Indian attack. Sally Field appears in her first big-screen role as the slatternly Mercy McBee. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Kirk DouglasRobert Mitchum, (more)
1966  
 
Arthur Hiller directed this exciting World War II drama starring Rock Hudson as Major Donald Craig of the British North African Army. In 1942, Craig is captured by the Vichy French, rescued by Palestinian Jews, and taken to the headquarters of Col. John Harker (Nigel Green). Harker explains that since Craig is an expert on the desert, he has been recruited to mount a suicidal raid upon the fuel bunkers at Rommel's key source of supplies at Tobruk. In order to get to Tobruk, a band of Palestinian Jews, commanded by Captain Kurt Bergman (George Peppard), will pose as German soldiers escorting a group of British prisoners. Making their way across the Libyan desert, the band endures a series of close calls until two Nazis spies are captured. When the spies suddenly escape, Harker and Craig realize someone in their group is a traitor. But by this point they have reached their destination and have to table the problem of the traitor as they battle the Germans around the fuel depot at Tobruk. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Rock HudsonGeorge Peppard, (more)
1966  
 
Released theatrically in Europe, Cosa Nostra, Arch Enemy of the FBI originated as "The Executioner", a two-part episode of the weekly TV series The FBI. The series' usual stars Efrem Zimbalist Jr., Philip Abbott and Stephen Brooks are joined on this occasion by guest artists Walter Pidgeon, Celeste Holm, Telly Savalas and Susan Strasberg-and, way down on the cast list, Robert Duvall. The story concerns double-crosses within the inner circles of La Cosa Nostra. The story concludes as mob boss Pidgeon orders the death of witness Holm-with the victim's nephew Savalas as the hit man! "The Executioner" first aired on two consecutive Sundays: March 12 and 19, 1967. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1966  
 
Despite the formidable competiton of CBS' The Ed Sullivan Show and NBC's Walt Disney anthology, the ABC series The F.B.I. proved popular enough with action fans to warrant a second season in the same Sunday-evening timeslot. But while fans enjoyed the show and were fond of series star Efrem Zimbalist Jr. as Inspector Lew Erskine, they had not responded well to the decision during Season One to provide the hard-working Erskine with a home life, replete with a pretty daughter named Barbara (Lynn Loring). Apparently, the viewers preferred to see Erskine on the job rather than at home, so Barbara was written out of the show--an act which would eventually result in the elimination of Erskine's young assistant Agent Jim Rhodes (Stephen Brooks), whose primary function was to have been as Barbara's love interest. But though Rhodes would exit the series at the end of Season Two, his slightly more mature colleague, Agent Arthur Ward (Philip Abbott), remained with the show until its cancellation in 1974. The Season Two opener "The Price of Death" provides a juicy role for young Robert Blake as a neurotic kidnapper. Other guests stars this season include Dean Jagger, William Windom and Ted Knight in "The Assassin"; Jack Lord in "Collision Course"; Fritz Weaver in "The Camel's Nose"; Suzanne Pleshette in "List for a Firing Squad"; Gene Hackman in "The Courier"; Michael Rennie and Phyllis Thaxter in "The Conspirators"; Jessica Walter, Louis Jourdan and Peter Graves in "Rope of Gold"; Charles Grodin in "Sky on Fire"; James Franciscus in "Force of Nature"; and Robert Duvall, Telly Savalas, Walter Pigeon, Susan Strasberg and Celeste Holm in the two-part "The Executioners". One prescient episode, "Anatomy of a Prison Break", features William Reynolds as Special Agent Kendall Lisbon, one year before he joined the regular F.B.I. cast in the role of Agent Tom Colby. The F.B.I closed out its second season as the 29th most-watched program in America, sharing this honor in a three-way tie with The CBS Thursday Night Movie, I Spy and My Three Sons. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Efrem Zimbalist, Jr.Stephen Brooks, (more)
1965  
NR  
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Joseph Conrad's cerebral, philosophical novel Lord Jim is streamlined and simplified by producer/director/writer Richard Brooks for the action-and-adventure crowd. Peter O'Toole plays the first officer of a tramp steamer, who, during a hurricane, cravenly abandons ship, leaving the passengers to drown. Disgraced, O'Toole seeks out ways to redeem himself--not only in the eyes of the British maritime commission, but in his own eyes. He signs on to deliver a shipment of dynamite to a tribe of natives somewhere in the uncharted Orient. He also joins the natives' fight against feudal warlord Eli Wallach, hoping perhaps to die in their service, thus purging himself from shame (and, in true Messianic fashion, becoming a martyr in the process). Despite the impressive star lineup of O'Toole, Wallach, Jack Hawkins, Curt Jurgens and Paul Lukas, most press coverage went to leggy leading lady Daliah Lavi--including the 1964 Saturday Evening Post article about the making of Lord Jim, written by Richard Brooks himself. Filmed in Cambodia and Hong Kong, Lord Jim isn't precisely the Conrad novel, but fans weaned on O'Toole's Lawrence of Arabia will be satisfied. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Peter O'TooleJames Mason, (more)
1965  
 
The first season of ABC's longest-running adventure series The F.B.I is slightly different in content from future seasons, in that viewers were permitted a few glimpses of the personal life of hard-working F.B.I. Inspector Lew Erskine (Efrem Zimbalist Jr.). It is explained that Erskine's wife was killed in a shootout with a felon, leaving Lew to raise his pretty daughter Barbara (Lynn Loring) all by himself. In several of the earliest episodes, it is established that Barbara is the girlfriend of Erskine's handsome young coworker, Agent Jim Rhodes (Stephen Brooks). Also introduced during Season One is another of Erskine's frequent sidekicks, Agent Arthur Ward (Philip Abbott). The first of the season's 31 episodes is "The Monster", guest starring Jeffrey Hunter as escaped Federal Prisoner Francis Jerome. Subsequent guest stars of note include Jack Klugman in "Image in a Cracked Mirror", Dabney Coleman and Lee Meriwether in "Slow March Up a Steep Hill", Robert Duvall in "The Giant Killer", Beau Bridges in "An Elephant is Like a Rope", Leslie Nielsen in "Pound of Flesh", Kevin McCarthy in "The Spy Master", Colleen Dewhurst in "The Baby Sitter", Wayne Rogers and Kurt Russell in "The Tormentors", Charles Bronson and James Doohan in "The Animal", and Dana Wynter and Paul Lukas in the two-part "The Defector". Closing out Season One is "The Bomb That Walked Like a Man", directed by Christian Nyby of The Thing fame. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Efrem Zimbalist, Jr.Stephen Brooks, (more)
1964  
 
Behind every great woman, there's a man who isn't so sure he's happy to be there -- or at least that's the state of affairs in this gender-switch comedy. Leslie McCloud (Polly Bergen) makes history when she becomes the first woman elected to the office of President of the United States. However, while Leslie's achievement is a great step forward for women, her husband Thad McCloud is less enthusiastic about his own role in closing the gender gap. Thad soon finds his daily schedule is filled with meeting women from garden clubs, his official quarters are still filled with pink and frilly furniture from the previous resident, and Leslie's extremely busy schedule is putting a severe crimp in their love life. While Thad stews over his lowly status as a male "First Lady," Leslie is attempting to avoid an international incident by negotiating with Latin dictator Valdez (Eli Walach), who develops a less-than-diplomatic interest in the Leader of the Free World. Kisses For My President also features Arlene Dahl, Edward Andrews, and Ana Capri. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Fred MacMurrayPolly Bergen, (more)
1962  
 
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This colorful remake of the 1935 version again concerns the crew and treatment of the HMS Bounty by a cold hearted sadistic captain. Captain Bligh (Trevor Howard) boards the ship in Portsmouth, England, to embark on a mission to bring tropical breadfruit trees to Jamaica. Fletcher Christian (Marlon Brando) is the aristocratic second mate who welcomes the new captain aboard. Christian's view of the captain sours with the cruel treatment of the crew and the dangerous decision to round Cape Horn. The Bounty sails into the teeth of a ferocious winter storm which is another in a long line of indignities suffered on the journey. John Mills (Richard Harris) is punished for stealing cheese. A sailor is ordered to stay aloft in the crow's nest, nearly resulting in death. The crew finds temporary paradise in Tahiti before Bligh's behavior becomes intolerable for the once faithful Christian. The crew revolts and sends the captain on his way in a small rowboat. Settling on Pitcairn Island, the crew soon realizes they may never see England again. Mills burns the ship to insure the trip is never made. Christian attempts to save the only means of transportation of their new island home. Lewis Milestone directed the film which was plagued by constant cost overruns to the tune of 18 million dollars. Brando's legendary ego clashed with results as turbulent as the fictitious trip around stormy Cape Horn. The movie retained slightly over half the cost of the production price tag in its initial release. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Marlon BrandoTrevor Howard, (more)
1961  
 
Released in Great Britain as The Spinster, this romantic drama is based on a novel by Sylvia Ashton-Warner. Shirley MacLaine plays Anna Vorontosov, a Pennsylvania-born schoolteacher who has taken a job in rural New Zealand. The permissive habits of the Maori families whose children she teaches continually shock her. Though she is emotionally repressed, Anna is a remarkable teacher who brings innovative classroom methods to her job. Her racially mixed classes are thriving. W.W.J. Abercrombie (Jack Hawkins) is a school administrator who is won over by her methods. Paul Lathrope (Laurence Harvey) is a teacher who longs to be a singer but is lonely and irresponsible. The icy Anna, frightened of men, rebuffs their advances. Her chief aide, Whareparita (Nobu McCarthy), a 15-year-old Maori, becomes pregnant. The Maoris accept this as a natural development. But her baby dies during childbirth. Soon after, Paul crashes his motorcycle and dies. When Anna learns that Paul was the baby's father, she wonders whether the crash was an accident or a suicide, and she blames her rejection of Paul for the pregnancy. ~ Michael Betzold, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Shirley MacLaineLaurence Harvey, (more)
1961  
 
Dean Martin plays an easygoing Southern politician, long on charm but short on brains. Susan Hayward, a poor girl with rich ideas, marries Martin and endeavors to engineer him into the governor's chair. Though no saint herself, Hayward is determined to overcome the good-old-boy corruption infesting the state government. She emerges triumphant after a public showdown with crafty politico Wilfred Hyde-White. Based on a novel by Wirt Williams,Ada was produced by the same team that had guided Susan Hayward to an Oscar nomination for I'll Cry Tomorrow. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Susan HaywardDean Martin, (more)
1960  
 
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A woman who has long been short on feelings falls in love with a married man in this emotional drama. Gloria Wondrous (Elizabeth Taylor) is a model and party girl who lives for pleasure and is willing to take men for what she can get from them. Gloria bounces from man to man, but feels that she can only truly confide in Steve Carpenter (Eddie Fisher), a longtime friend with whom she shares a close but strictly platonic relationship, though his fiancée (Susan Oliver) suspects otherwise. Gloria becomes involved with Weston Liggett (Laurence Harvey), a wealthy but emotionally cold man who is married to Emily (Dina Merrill). Weston shows Gloria precious little respect or kindness at first, but as they share a few bouts with the bottle, they discover that both are desperately lacking in self-confidence and have little happiness in their lives. As Gloria and Weston reveal more about themselves to one another, they fall in love, but Gloria isn't sure if she can commit to one man, while Weston has to decide if he can leave Emily behind. Based on the novel by John O'Hara, Butterfield 8 earned Elizabeth Taylor her first Academy Award (for Best Actress) after four unsuccessful nominations. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Elizabeth TaylorLaurence Harvey, (more)
1960  
 
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William Humphrey's novel Home From the Hill is compressed into 150 minutes for this MGM all-starrer. Robert Mitchum plays Capt. Wade Hunnicutt, a Texas millionaire, married to Hannah (Eleanor Parker). The Hunnicutts have two children of approximately the same age: Wade's biological son, Theron (George Hamilton in one of his earliest film roles), and his illegitimate son, Rafe (George Peppard). As the story opens, Wade conducts an extramarital affair; meanwhile, Theron (George Hamilton), disturbed by his parents' dysfunctional relationship, is not anxious to marry his true love, Libby Halstead (Luana Patten). The vicious cycle threatens to continue when Libby gives birth to Theron's out-of-wedlock son, but it is Rafe who turns Libby into an "honest woman" by acting as father to the child. Vincente Minnelli directs his material operatically, which is as it should be given the larger-than-life character and emotional entanglements he has to deal with. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Robert MitchumEleanor Parker, (more)
1960  
 
This is an indecisive, ultimately unconvincing wartime drama set in the 1930s when Spain was caught in a bloody civil war, a situation that is never clearly delineated in that the story supports the fascists without specifically saying so. The hero is a voluntarily defrocked priest, Arturo Carrera (Dirk Bogarde) who is being hunted by the leftist, anti-clerical, and anti-fascist forces. While on the run himself, he encounters a beautiful prostitute, Soledad (Ava Gardner) and as sure as the sun rises, the two fall in love and stay together. Eventually, they are both caught by the anti-Franco fighters who are trying to get their hands on a precious holy relic. The ex-priest is trapped into making a no-win decision between his love for Soledad and his love for the church while she has a similar but more tragic decision to make on her own. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Ava GardnerDirk Bogarde, (more)
1959  
 
In this uneven but well-acted mystery story with a few gaps in the plot here and there, Alec Guiness plays a double role. He is John Barratt, a British teacher on vacation in France who is conned into taking on another identity. The identity he assumes is that of his double, Count Jacques de Gue, who has none of John's upright, moral character. Once ensconced as the Count, John discovers that the Count's mother (Bette Davis) is addicted to morphine, his wife (Irene Worth) believes he is out to kill her, and the Count's brother-in-law (Peter Bull) is embezzling funds away from the family business. And those are just a few of his problems, alleviated somewhat by his mistress (Nicole Murray). Once John realizes how decadent and immoral the Count really is he feels duty-bound to challenge him to a duel. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Alec GuinnessNicole Maurey, (more)
1959  
 
This romantic drama set in a Venezuelan jungle is based on a novel by W.H. Hudson about Rima, a mythical "bird-woman" and her love for Abel, a man running from political assassination. In this adaptation, Rima (Audrey Hepburn) is a real woman living in the jungle with her adopted grandfather Nuflo (Lee J. Cobb). Abel (Anthony Perkins) escapes his pursuers and meets Rima after a local tribe has taken him under their wing. The unlikely couple fall in love but Abel is haunted by his desire to go back into his world to avenge his father's murder at the hand of his political rivals. While he is struggling with his own dilemma, the local tribe is beginning to believe that Rima is an evil spirit they must destroy. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Audrey HepburnAnthony Perkins, (more)
1958  
 
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Auntie Mame began as a novel by Patrick Dennis (aka Ed Fitzgerald), then was adapted into a long-running Broadway play by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee. This 1958 film version permits Rosalind Russell to recreate her stage role as Mame Dennis, the flamboyant, devil-may-care aunt of young, impressionable Patrick Dennis. Left in Mame's care when his millionaire father drops dead, young Patrick (Jan Handzlik) is quickly indoctrinated into his aunt's philosophy that "Life is a banquet--and some poor suckers are starving to death." Social-climbing executor Dwight Babcock (Fred Clark) does his best to raise Patrick as a stuffy American aristocrat, but Mame battles Babcock to allow the boy to be as free-spirited as she is. In 1974, Auntie Mame was remade as the filmmusical Mame with Lucille Ball. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Rosalind RussellForrest Tucker, (more)

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