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              |   To Kill A Mockingbird (1962) Starring: Gregory Peck, Mary Badham, Philip Alford, John                Megna
 Director: Robert Mulligan
 A poignant adaptation of Harper Lee's best-selling novel by screenwriter                Horton Foote, set in small-town 1930s Alabama. Narrated by the adult                voice of Kim Stanley, a coming-of-age, autobiographical story, seen                from the perspective of a young southern girl Scout (Badham), the                daughter of a widowed Southern lawyer Atticus Finch (Peck), whose                innocence about racial bigotry and intolerance was changed forever.                The Lincolnesque, compassionate attorney decides to assume the unpopular                stance of defending a black man - Tom Robinson (Brock Peters), falsely                accused of raping a 'white-trash' woman Mayella Violet Ewell (Collin                Wilcox). The film compellingly weaves the children's nightmares,                personified by the mute, mentally-retarded Boo Radley (Robert Duvall                in his screen debut) with the prejudiced hatred of the bigoted townspeople,                led by Mayella's poor redneck father Robert E. Lee (Bob) Ewell (James                Anderson). Academy Award Nominations: 8, including Best Picture,                Best Supporting Actress--Mary Badham, Best Director, Best B/W Cinematography.              Academy Awards: Best Actor--Gregory Peck, Best Adapted Screenplay.
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              |   Top Hat (1935) Starring: Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, Helen Broderick, Edward                Everett Horton, Erik Rhodes, Eric Blore
 Director: Mark Sandrich
 One of the best classic dance/musicals with Fred Astaire and Ginger                Rogers, their third film together from a total of nine. Includes                dancing and singing of a superb Irving Berlin score, with "No Strings,"                "Isn't This a Lovely Day (To Be Caught in the Rain)?", "Top Hat,                White Tie and Tails," and "Cheek to Cheek." A typical amalgum of                romantic comedy, complicated mistaken identity, and stylish Art                Deco surroundings in London and Venice. Dancer Jerry Travers (Astaire)                experiences love at first sight and is amorously attentive toward                the lovely high-society Dale Tremont (Rogers), but she mistakes                him for her best friend Madge Hardwick's (Broderick) husband Horace                (Horton). Academy Award Nominations: 4, including Best Picture,              Best Song ("Cheek to Cheek"), Best Dance Direction.
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              |   Touch Of Evil (1958) Starring: Charlton Heston, Orson Welles, Janet Leigh, Marlene                Dietrich, Joseph Calleia, Akim Tamiroff
 Director: Orson Welles
 An off-beat, twisted, dark and sweaty, film noirish thriller, with                murder, police corruption, kidnapping, betrayal, perversion and                more in a squalid Mexican-American border town. Opens with a daring,                captivating single-take sequence, ending with the explosive, car-bomb                murder of an American businessman on the American side of the border.                A self-righteous narcotics agent 'Mike' Vargas (Heston) becomes                snarled in the local investigation with a grotesque, police captain                Hank Quinlan (Welles), ignoring his honeymooning bride Susan (Leigh)                who is meanwhile being terrorized in an out-of-the-way motel by                a menacing gang. The experienced, old-time cop Quinlan habitually                fabricates evidence to convict the guilty (even though his instincts                are usually correct) and frames a young Mexican for the murder,                putting him into conflict with the narcotics detective. The corrupt,                overweight police captain is finally brought down by Vargas' persistent,                perilous efforts with the cooperation of Quinlan's long-time partner              Sgt. Pete Menzies (Calleia). No Academy Award Nominations.
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              |   The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948) Starring: Humphrey Bogart, Walter Huston, Tim Holt, Alfonso                Bedoya
 Director: John Huston
 Director and screenwriter John Huston's classic adventure film about                three American gold prospectors in the Mexican wilderness - a tale                of lustful greed, treachery, paranoia and suspicion. The three ill-matched                men include an innocent, honest young Curtin (Holt), a wise and                experienced, fast-talking, grizzly, toothless old-timer Howard (Huston,                the director's father), and Fred C. Dobbs (Bogart), a greedy, deranged,                selfish bastard who distrusts everyone. Their gold booty strike                and fortune breeds violence, threatening Mexican bandits led by                Gold Hat (Bedoya), an end to their friendships, and the homicidal                undoing of the avaricious Dobbs when he is killed for his boots                and mule. Ends with an ironic climactic scene when the wind blows                the gold dust away. Academy Award Nominations: 4, including Best                Picture. Academy Awards: 3, including Best Supporting Actor--Walter              Huston, Best Director, Best Screenplay.
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              |   Trouble in Paradise (1932) Starring: Herbert Marshall, Miriam Hopkins, Kay Francis
 Director: Ernst Lubitsch
 Another exquisite, sophisticated, sparkling romantic comedy from                Lubitsch. Two masquerading con artists Gaston Monescu/La Valle (Marshall)                and Lily Vautier (Hopkins) specialize in jewel theft. The pair of                crooks pose as nobility to practice their deceptive occupation among                the gullible, upper-class elite of European society from Venice                to Paris. They scheme to rob a rich, sleek widow Mariette Colet                (Francis) in Paris, posing as her secretary and maid, but romantic                complications ensue. By the time the subtle, wry film ends, they                realize their romantic and amoral affinity for each other. No Academy              Award nominations.
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              |   2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) Starring: Keir Dullea, Gary Lockwood, HAL 9000
 Director: Stanley Kubrick
 Kubrick's metaphoric, thought-provoking, grandiose, science-fiction                landmark film, with space travel to Jupiter, the mysterious appearance                of enigmatic monoliths, and the presence of the film's major protagonist                - an omniscient super-computer. A three-act, visionary, visually                dazzling, wide-screen masterpiece, with mind-blowing special effects.                The first monolith appears to prehistoric ape-men, awakening them                to the use of tools as killing weapons. Further monoliths on the                Moon and floating in space somewhere near Jupiter, seem to coax                humankind to make evolutionary leaps and transcend bodily and technological                limits. A team of robotic-like astronauts Bowman (Dullea) and Poole                (Lockwood), during a voyage to Jupiter to investigate a radio transmission,                are terrorized by the arrogant, humanistic, on-board computer HAL                9000 (voice of Douglas Rain). With the mission aborted and following                a psychedelic light-show, Bowman is reborn within an embryonic divine                life form that floats in space. Academy Award Nominations: 4, including                Best Director, Best Story and Screenplay. Academy Awards: 1, Best              Special Visual Effects.
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              |   Vertigo (1958) Starring: James Stewart, Kim Novak, Barbara Bel Geddes, Tom                Helmore
 Director: Alfred Hitchcock
 Arguably Hitchcock's most complex, most analyzed, compelling masterpiece,                involving a man's compulsive obsession to exploitatively manipulate                and transform a woman to match his fantasy. Vertigo-suffering, acrophobic                detective John 'Scottie' Ferguson (Stewart) trails an old college                friend Gavin Elster's (Helmore) wife as she wanders around San Francisco                - a cool, blonde named Madeleine (Novak). Meanwhile, Scottie's friend                'Midge' Wood (Bel Geddes) expresses unrequited love for him. Madeleine's                obsession with a tragic ancestor Carlotta Valdez intrigues Scottie,                and after saving her from a suicidal jump into the Bay, he falls                in love with her. When she falls to her death from a tower in an                assumed suicide, he spirals down into a deep depression. Haunted                and obsessed with the dead woman, he meets her lower-class double                Judy (Novak again) and manipulates her into changing into the dead                Madeleine's image - with mad consequences in the uncompromising                conclusion. Academy Award Nominations: 2, including Best Art Direction/Set              Decoration, Best Sound.
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              |   West Side Story (1961) Starring: Natalie Wood, Richard Beymer, Rita Moreno, Russ                Tamblyn, George Chakiris
 Director: Robert Wise, Jerome Robbins
 An energetically-choreographed musical that is loosely based on                Shakespeare's tale of ill-fated lovers, Romeo and Juliet.                A landmark, highly-honored, ground-breaking Broadway musical transposed                to the big screen and set on location in 1950s New York on the Upper                West Side. With a memorable musical score from Leonard Bernstein                and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim. Includes such popular songs as "The                Jet Song," "America," "Cool," "I Feel Pretty," "Something's Coming,"                "Tonight," "One Hand, One Heart," and "Maria." Two rival teenaged                gangs, the Puerto Rican Sharks, led by Bernardo (Chakiris) and the                white Jets, led by Riff (Tamblyn) rumble with each other for turf                on the sidewalks and streets of the city. Two young people on opposing                sides, Polish Jet member Tony (Beymer) and Bernardo's sister Maria                (Wood) become 'star-crossed' lovers. His attempts at peace-making                during a rumble accidentally lead to the deaths of both gang leaders                and further tragic circumstances in a tear-stained scene set on                an outdoor basketball court. Academy Award Nominations: 11, including                Best Adapted Screenplay. Academy Awards: 10, including Best Picture,                Best Supporting Actor--George Chakiris, Best Supporting Actress--Rita              Moreno, Best Director, Best Sound, Best Musical Score.
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              |   Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) Starring: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, George Segal,                Sandy Dennis
 Director: Mike Nichols
 Nichol's debut film as director - of an adaptation of Edward Albee's                scathing, dark, and vitriolic play - with a bold use of expletives.                Real-life married couple Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor portray                a dysfunctional couple's abusive, sado-masochistic, deteriorating                marriage - as a weary, tortured, disillusioned academic professor                George and his frumpy, alcoholic, foul-mouthed, seductive and abrasive                wife Martha. The two invite a young teacher Nick (Segal) and his                mousy wife Honey (Dennis) to their home for a bitter and relentless                evening of brutal, acerbic, verbal games that increase the hateful                intensity of their mismatched, love-hate relationship. Academy Award                Nominations: 13, including Best Picture, Best Actor--Richard Burton,                Best Supporting Actor--George Segal, Best Director. Academy Awards:                5, including Best Actress--Elizabeth Taylor, Best Supporting Actress--Sandy              Dennis.
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              |   The Wild Bunch (1969) Starring: William Holden, Ernest Borgnine, Warren Oates,                Ben Johnson, Robert Ryan, Emilio Fernandez
 Director: Sam Peckinpah
 A controversial, brutally-violent, late 60s Western about the demise                of a desperate, small gang of aging outlaws in the early 1900s that                still clings to codes of honor, loyalty, and courage. Pike Bishop                (Holden), leader of the 'wild bunch,' is hired for their final job.                In the stunning opening sequence, the gang - disguised as US Cavalry                soldiers, ride into a Texas town and rob the railway office's bank.                The boss of the railroad hires a mercenary, bounty-hunting posse,                led by Pike's former buddy Deke Thornton (Ryan) to pursue them,                as the gang flees into Mexico, during the revolution of 1914. They                are double-crossed by an anti-revolutionary dictator/Generalissimo                Mapache (Fernandez) after the hijacking of weapons from a US ammunitions                train. Attempting to redeem themselves by opposing an entire corrupt                Mexican platoon, they are massacred in the famous, ultra-violent,                slow-motion, colorful bloodbath finale. Academy Award Nominations:              2, including Best Story and Screenplay, Best Original Score.
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              |   The Wizard of Oz (1939) Starring: Judy Garland, Ray Bolger, Jack Haley, Bert Lahr,                Margaret Hamilton, Frank Morgan, Billie Burke
 Director: Victor Fleming
 The ultimate fantasy, the perennial musical adventure film based                on L. Frank Baum's 1900 book. With most characters playing dual                roles, both in Kansas and in Oz. Kansas farm girl Dorothy (Garland)                and her dog Toto are transported from her home by a whirling tornado                to the magical, Technicolor Land of Oz, where she encounters little                people Munchkins, Glinda (Burke) - the Good Witch of the North,                a Yellow Brick Road, a brainless, talking Scarecrow (Bolger), a                heartless Tin Woodsman (Haley), a Cowardly Lion (Lahr), the Wicked                Witch of the West (Hamilton) and a marvelously deceitful Wizard                (Morgan) of Emerald City. Her wishes to return home ("There's                no place like home") are granted after she outwits and vanquishes                the Witch. Includes marvelous songs: "Over the Rainbow,"                "Ding Dong, The Witch is Dead," and "If I Only Had                a Brain." Academy Award Nominations: 6, including Best Picture,                Best Color Cinematography, Best Special Effects. Academy Awards:              2, including Best Song ("Over the Rainbow"), Best Original Score.
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              |   Wuthering Heights (1939) Starring: Merle Oberon, Laurence Olivier, David Niven, Geraldine                Fitzgerald
 Director: William Wyler
 The greatest melodramatic, brooding screen adaptation of Emily Bronte's                1847 romantic Victorian novel of doomed lovers with inseparable                spirits, set on the windy Yorkshire moors of pre-Victorian England.                Orphaned gypsy Heathcliff (Olivier) is adopted by Mr. Earnshaw on                the streets of London and brought home to be the stable boy, where                he falls in love with the young daughter Cathy (Oberon). Their love                is thwarted and abandoned when Cathy marries a wealthy, refined                neighbor Edgar Linton (Niven). After leaving for America, the financially-successful                but dark and troubled Heathcliff returns years later and seeks revenge                by marrying and mistreating Edgar's sister Isabella (Fitzgerald).                The long-hindered, passionate love of Cathy and Heathcliff emerges                in death. Academy Award Nominations: 8, including Best Picture,                Best Actor--Laurence Olivier, Best Supporting Actress--Geraldine                Fitzgerald, Best Director, Best Screenplay. Academy Awards: 1, B/W              Cinematography--Gregg Toland.
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              |   Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942) Starring: James Cagney, Joan Leslie, Walter Huston, Rosemary                DeCamp
 Director: Michael Curtiz
 The rousing, morale-boosting, flag-waving musical biography of legendary                American composer/song-writer and entertainer George M. Cohan. Includes                his memorable tunes "Over There," "You're a Grand Old Flag," "Give                My Regards to Broadway," and the film's rousing title number. The                film, presented in flashback, follows the vaudevillian Cohan family,                led by father Cohan (Huston) and mother (DeCamp) from its early                days, with the energetic Irishman Cohan (Cagney) as the triumphant                song-and-dance man, and his marriage to Mary (Leslie). A White House                visit with FDR salutes his career, when he wins the Congressional                Medal of Honor and subsequently dances down the White House staircase.                Academy Award Nominations: 8, including Best Picture, Best Supporting                Actor--Walter Huston, Best Director. Academy Awards: 3, including              Best Actor--James Cagney, Best Sound, Best Musical Score.
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