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Strategic Air Command

Anthony Mann never quite manages to make much of this quasi-documentary film about an air force pilot (James Stewart) in peacetime. Too much of the footage is devoted to military muscle flexing, and the ever-cloying June Allyson helps matters not at all as Stewart’s wife (1955).

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Queen Bee

Joan Crawford as an imperious southern matriarch in a vehicle constructed by Ranald MacDougall (who wrote one of Crawford’s most luridly masochistic roles in Possessed). With Barry Sullivan, Betsy Palmer, John Ireland, and Fay Wray (1955).

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Don Quixote

Grigori Kozintsev’s Russian-language version of Cervantes’s classic is by far the best film adaptation of the novel to reach the screen. Kozintsev uses the Crimea to re-create the dramatic barrenness of the Spanish plateaus; and a magnificent performance from Nicolai Cherkassov as Quixote makes this one not to be missed (1961).

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Fellini Satyricon

The maestro’s 1969 thumb-through of Petronius seems designed as an apology for La dolce vita: by revealing ancient Rome to be as joyless and overheated as modern Rome, he retracts his condemnation of modern life. The problem is not society, but man—who seems to be an intractably ugly, vicious, unhappy sort. But Fellini, in his […]

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Revenge of the Nerds

Ted Field, Marshall’s dashing brother, produced this 1984 teen comedy about a group of college misfits who band together to fight for social justice and plant TV cameras in the girls’ locker room. Jeff Kanew (Eddie Macon’s Run) directed; with Robert Carradine, Anthony Edwards, Ted McGinley, and Bernie Casey. R, 90 min.

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The Criminal Life of Archibaldo de la Cruz

The last film of Luis Buñuel’s “commercial” Mexican period (1955, 89 min.), Archibaldo shows the master working without the complete freedom he was granted later on. But Buñuel is still able to put some bizarre—and very funny—personal touches on this story of a man obsessed with the idea that the music box he owned as […]

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Lonely Hearts

A middle-aged bachelor, left alone when his beloved mother dies, resolves to change his life and joins a lonely hearts club; his first date is with a suspiciously young and beautiful woman. Norman Kaye and Wendy Hughes star in this romantic comedy from Australia; Paul Cox directed (1982).

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Strike Me Pink

Eddie Cantor and Ethel Merman paired up for a Sam Goldwyn musical, costarring Sally Eilers as a token representative of the human race. Harmless enough, I guess, but a little Cantor goes a long way with me. For trivia fans, the film features an appearance by a Greek dialect comedian who performed under the name […]

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Flight of the Eagle

Jan Troell’s 1984 Oscar nominee is based on the true story of a Swedish engineer (Max von Sydow) who entered an international balloon race to the north pole in 1897. Three days after taking off his craft floundered, and he and his two companions were forced to make their way back to civilization through a […]

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Neighbors

A social comedy from China, set in a crowded “temporary” housing facility where the residents spend their time discussing the government’s inclination to construct hotels for tourists rather than homes for workers. Directed by Zheng Dongtian and Xu Guming (1983).