Monday, Oct. 17, 1949

CURRENT & CHOICE

Pinky. The best, thus far, of the Negro problem firms, with Jeanne Crain (TIME, Oct. 10).

Task Force. The ups & downs, through the years, of U.S. naval aviation, with a factual core of spectacular Navy combat film and fictional trimmings involving Gary Cooper (TIME, Oct. 3).

Germany Year Zero. Roberto Rossellini's grim, graphic story of a twelve-year-old boy among the human, rubble of Germany's occupation (TIME, Sept. 26).

White Heat. James Cagney's comeback in a hurtling drama about a mother-dependent gangster (TIME, Sept. 19).

Jolson Sings Again. Zestful sequel to the film biography of mammy's favorite son, with Larry Parks and Jolson's voice (TIME, Sept. 5).

Madame Bovary. Jennifer Jones in a faithful portrayal of Flaubert's unfaithful French lady (TIME, Aug. 15).

Lost Boundaries. A true story, movingly enacted, of Negroes who "pass" as whites (TIME, July 4).

Sorrowful Jones. The boozy sentiment of Damon Runyon's Broadway, heavily piked with Bob Hope gags (TIME, June 27).

The Window. A boy's-eye view of murder in a Manhattan tenement, with Bobby Driscoll (TIME, May 23).

The Fallen Idol. Author Graham Greene and Director Carol Reed wring suspense from the story of a small boy 'Bobby Henrey) in a world of adult intrigues (TIME, April 4).

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