20 Great Years of Movies, Part 11: 1948
- The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (director: John Huston): A simply marvelous film about the power of greed; this is simply a one-of-a-kind movie and one of Bogart's most fascinating characters as he changes from relatable to deplorable.
- Rope (director: Alfred Hitchcock): I like this film a lot more than many, I think - I think it's one of Hitchcock's finest, but others just can't get past the gimmick. The gimmick - that the movie attempts to look as though it were filmed in a single take - is what I love about the film. I love the tricks Hitchcock used to disguise his edits, I love the way the camera moves around the set. It's great achievement in film.
- Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House (director: H.C. Potter): A very amusing comedy about home ownership and all the headaches associated from it, particularly the sense that your money is being pilfered by everyone with an angle.
- The Fallen Idol (director: Carol Reed): A very interesting picture about a boy who thinks he's witnessed a murder committed by a man he admires and isn't sure how to react.
- The Big Clock (director: John Farrow): A very strong thriller where a man is charged with finding a supposed murderer by his employer, but unknown to the employer, the protagonist is the man he's seeking, which creates an awesome dilemma.
- Key Largo (director: John Huston): Claire Trevor received an Oscar for her supporting role as an alcoholic gun moll and he really was brilliant, but boy, Bogart and Robinson were not exactly sleepwalking - this is great film, easily Robinson's last great gangster picture.
- The Snake Pit (director: Anatole Litvak): An interesting look at mental illness as a woman gradually recovers from her issues; it's certainly not what would be considered proper in this day, but I give this movie a lot of credit for at least showing that recovery is a lengthy process with ups and downs.
- Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein (director: Charles Barton): Man, I loved Abbott & Costello as a child - and this was my introduction to them. Yet I approached this like a horror movie - I was genuinely afraid of the Wolfman, Frankenstein's Monster & Dracula. So, props to Universal for making the horror scenes land.
- Oliver Twist (director: David Lean): A very good adaptation of Dickens' novel, although the filmed musical has really eclipsed this film in the public. Alec Guinness is quite the standout as Fagin but the film has a lot more going for it with some moody cinematography in the opener that beats anything found in Wuthering Heights!
- Portrait of Jennie (director: William Dieterle): David O. Selznick really believed in this movie and I'm not quite sure why... but it's an interesting premise about a painter who keeps meeting the same woman but she's grown older at each point in time. An unusual romantic fantasy.
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