Thursday, December 05, 2013

Oh, those sixties movies

Kevin around 2009
People always knock the sixties for turning out so few great movies. These two are not forgotten but rather examples of good movies from the sixties.

I saw two in the last week. POINT BLANK and BONNIE AND CLYDE.

What else makes the sixties list of great movies?

20 comments:

  1. Love POINT BLANK and BONNIE & CLYDE! Clasics!

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  2. THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE.

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  3. Steve Oerkfitz9:38 AM

    Dr. Strangelove, 2001, The Manchurian Candidate, To Kill a Mockingbird, Lawrence of Arabia, The Wild Bunch,Lolita, Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid, 8 1/2,Persona, The Good the Bad & the Ugly, In the Heat of the Night,Repulsion, Rosemary's Baby,Shoot the Piano Player,Psycho, The Graduate,A Hard Days Night,Midnight Cowboy.
    Seems like a lot of good films in the 60's.

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  4. Anonymous9:45 AM

    Patti - Both of those are great movies. I also loved The Graduate.

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  5. I guess the seventies were so strong, it makes the decade before pale a bit. But all of these are A+ movies for sure. A lot of European directors did great work in that decade.

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  6. Anonymous10:09 AM

    Steve has a good list though I would delete a couple - not a fan of 8 1/2 for one. I wouldn't call A Hard Day's Night "great" but very good.

    We watched Midnight Cowboy fairly recently and enjoyed it all over again.

    Favorites? I'm not saying these are "great" but they are favorites. (Understand that some of these I haven't seen since they first came out and others I watch every year)

    Two for the Road
    Charade
    Midnight Cowboy
    To Kill a Mockingbird
    Dr. Strangelove
    Psycho
    Spartacus
    The Guns of Navarone
    The Manchurian Candidate
    The Great Escape
    True Grit
    The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie

    Jeff M.

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  7. Judy has never forgiven me for taking her to 8-1/2. She went to sleep during the second half. I didn't really blame her.

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  8. HUD, LONELY ARE THE BRAVE, THE MAN WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALANCE.

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  9. Steve Oerkfitz2:05 PM

    Another one I forgot-Cool Hand Luke.
    I wouldn't include True Grit-awful performances by Glen Campbell and Kim Darby or The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance-jimmy Stewart was 30 years too old for the part, otherwise a good movie,.

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  10. You've mentioned before this notion of the 1960s product being disparaged, Patti, but I'm not sure where you get that impression. Certainly there was no lack of weaker work in the 1970s, as well.

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  11. Al Tucher4:47 PM

    I watch IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT every few years, and it always holds up.

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  12. Those two are great, but note that what is sometimes referred to as "New Hollywood" started already in 1967. The 1960-1966 period had its moments, though.

    Here are some that have not been mentioned.

    1960-1966:
    Peeping Tom
    Little Shop of Horrors
    The Bad Sleep Well
    Yojimbo
    Knife in the Water
    Cape Fear
    The Intruder
    Carnival Of Souls
    Requiem for a Heavyweight
    High and Low
    The Birds
    The Haunting
    Seven Days in May
    The Killers
    Marnie
    A Fistful of Dollars
    Fail-Safe
    The Naked Kiss
    Hush... Hush, Sweet Charlotte
    The T.A.M.I. Show
    The Ipcress File
    Ride in the Whirlwind
    Cat Ballou
    Faster Pussycat... Kill! Kill!
    The Spy Who Came In from the Cold
    For a Few Dollars More
    The Chase
    Harper
    Fantastic Voyage
    Fahrenheit 451
    Professionals, The
    Funeral in Berlin

    1967-1969:
    Hugo and Josephine
    Madigan
    The Producers
    2001: A Space Odyssey
    Targets
    Night of the Living Dead
    Bullitt
    Once Upon a Time in the West
    The Night of the Following Day
    Z
    Support Your Local Sheriff!
    Medium Cool
    Marlowe
    They Shoot Horses, Don't They?

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  13. Even some of our most overrated directors did their best work in the '60s, as well, such as BREATHLESS for Godard or RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY for Peckinpah...or THE CONFORMIST for Bertolucci, even given it was released in 1970. And then you consider Bergman...I don't care for a few of everyone's long list so far, but I agree with most.

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  14. There's a few I have never seen but not many.

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  15. Mario Bava is among the interesting artists not yet cited. Sidney Lumet another, save for FAIL-SAFE, not my favorite of his for the decade. Certain a lot of people like Samuel Fuller more than I do. Early Robert Altman. The work of Shirley Clarke. Lindsay Anderson. Ed Emshwiller and early Pennebaker.

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  16. And a quick skim over WIKIPEDIA's 1964 page brings back to mind at least two of the best Japanese films I've seen, ONIBABA and WOMAN IN THE DUNES, the surprisingly solid ROBINSON CRUSOE ON MARS, TOPKAPI, SEVEN UP, NOTHING BUT A MAN and NOBODY WAVED GOODBYE...

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  17. Al Tucher10:35 AM

    These lists reminded me that Michael Sarrazin was everywhere in the 60s and 70s. Later he kept working but grew much less visible. I didn't know he died in 2011 until I looked him up just now.

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  18. Todd has made the case for good movies in the sixties.
    I remember him, Al. Too bad.

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  19. Most of those listed above should prove that the sixties produced a plethora of excellent movies.


    Nice captcha: awaysemi

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  20. This was amusing. I just looked up She Wore a Yellow Ribbon. In the right hand column they had photos of the actors and their character names. Over the name Ben Johnson as Sgt. Tyree was a photo of the black track star Ben Johnson.

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