Monday, Sep. 18, 1950

CURRENT & CHOICE

Beaver Valley. The second in Walt Disney's series of nature documentaries; a Technicolored look at the heroes and villains inhabiting the animal world of a Rocky Mountain beaver pond (TIME, Sept. 4).

Difficult Years. Director Luigi (To Live in Peace) Zampa explores the effects of Fascism's last ten years on a simple Sicilian family (TIME, Aug. 28).

No Way Out. Hollywood's most outspoken and pertinent Negro-problem movie; with Sidney Poitier, Richard Widmark and Linda Darnell (TIME, Aug. 21).

Sunset Boulevard. How a faded movie star (Gloria Swanson) attempts a comeback with the help of her kept man (William Holden); a sardonic commentary on Hollywood manners & morals (TIME, Aug. 14).

Panic in the Streets. Director Elia Kazan's thriller about a New Orleans manhunt for a criminal who is also an unwitting plague-carrier; with Richard Widmark and Paul Douglas (TIME, Aug. 14).

Mystery Street. Harvard joins the police in some scientific crime detection that makes for absorbing melodrama; with Ricardo Montalban (TIME, Aug. 7).

The Men. Marlon Brando and Teresa Wright in a frank, stirring drama about :he mental and physical salvage of paralyzed war veterans (TIME, July 24).

The Lawless. A lowbudget, high-voltage treatment of mob violence in a small U.S. town; with Macdonald Carey and ail Russell (TIME, July 3).

Kind Hearts and Coronets. An impudent, witty British comedy about a well->red murderer; with Alec Guinness (play-ng eight roles) and Dennis Price (TIME, Julys)

City Lights. After 19 years, Charlie Chaplin's first movie of the talkie era is still silent, yet seems more eloquent than ever (TIME, April 17).

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