Monday, Sep. 20, 1948
CURRENT & CHOICE
Rope. Alfred Hitchcock's blood-freezer about two bright young men who murder for fun; with John Ball, Farley Granger and James Stewart (TIME, Sept. 13).
The Loves of Carmen. It isn't art and it isn't Bizet, but it is Rita Hayworth in Technicolor (TIME, Sept. 6).
Mine Own Executioner. Perceptive melodrama, with Burgess Meredith as a preoccupied psychiatrist, and Kieron Moore as the patient that got away (TIME, Aug. 30).
That Lady in Ermine. The late Ernst Lubitsch's easygoing Graustarkian spoof, with Betty Grable, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Technicolor and music (TIME, Aug. 23).
Street with No Name. A skillful, conventional semi-documentary about G-men and young criminals, with Richard Widmark and Mark Stevens (TIME, Aug. 9).
Key Largo. A veteran recovers his self-respect fighting gangsters. Humphrey Bogart, Edward G. Robinson, Lionel Barrymore, Claire Trevor & others do fine work in John Huston's adaptation of a Maxwell Anderson play (TIME, Aug. 2).
Fury at Furnace Creek. A western with Victor Mature, Reginald Gardiner and some highly skillful suspense (TIME, July 5).
The Time of Your Life. William Saroyan's woozy salute to alcoholics unanimous, with James Cagney, James Barton and an enthusiastic following (TIME, June 14).
Another Part of the Forest. Dirty doings in the deep South as Lillian Hellman's Little Foxes cut their eyeteeth. Well filmed and well acted, especially by Fredric March and Florence Eldridge (TIME, May 31).
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