Monday, Aug. 25, 1947
CURRENT & CHOICE
The Secret Life of Walter Mltty. Variations on a theme by James Thurber, featuring Danny Kaye, some home-grown harridans, some international jewel thieves, and some elegantly kidded daydreams (TIME, Aug. 18).
The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer. Shirley Temple loves Gary Grant who loves Myrna Loy who thinks she loves Rudy Vallee, with fun & games for all (TIME, Aug. 11).
Welcome Stranqer. Drs. Bing Crosby and Barry Fitzgerald lounge around in a nice, mild, easy comedy (TIME, Aug. 11).
Crossfire. A terrifying melodrama about some drunken soldiers and a murdered Jew, with a notable performance by Robert Ryan (TIME, Aug. 4).
Perils of Pauline. Betty Hutton in a brassy, amusing biography of Pearl White, queen of the silent serials (TIME, July 7).
Ivy. Joan Fontaine as an elegant Edwardian housewife who kills to get on in the world (TIME, July 7).
They Won't Believe Me. Robert Young, Rita Johnson and Susan Hayward are respectively expert as a kept husband, his keeper and the girl who doesn't get away with him (TIME, June 23).
Miracle on 34th St. A clever, sure-fire comedy about a man (Edmund Gwenn) who thinks he is Santa Claus (TIME, June 9).
Great Expectations. Britain's Director David Lean & colleagues do for Dickens what Laurence Olivier did for Shakespeare (TIME, May 26).
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