I nominate Have Sword, Will Travel (1969)
Watch clip:
Classic Shaw Bros.
I nominate Have Sword, Will Travel (1969)
Watch clip:
Classic Shaw Bros.
And I second Seven Days in May
This is probably another long shot, but a really unique film, tough criminally rarely seen or talked about:
Viy (1967)
Georgiy Kropachyov and Konstantin Ershov
Watch trailer:
It's actually streaming free on Tubi: https://tubitv.com/movies/506587/viy
How about the moving story of Hellen Keller, with Patty Duke in the lead role and Anne Bancroft as her teacher. Over 10 Oscar nominations and a win for Bancroft as Annie Sullivan.
Film: The Miracle Worker
Director: Arthur Penn
Year: 1962
Trailer:
I will second Coogan's Bluff, a very underrated Clint Eastwood flick.
And I'll second The Miracle Worker.
I nominate Tokyo Drifter (1966)
Watch clip:
The plot of this Yakuza revenge tale gets boxed into corners here and there, but the sheer style of the movie is certainly worth a watch. From Wikipedia:
"Nikkatsu bosses had been warning Suzuki to tone down his bizarre visual style for years and drastically reduced Tokyo Drifter's budget in hopes of getting results. This had the opposite effect in that Suzuki and art director Takeo Kimura pushed themselves to new heights of surrealism and absurdity. The studio's next move was to impose the further restriction of filming in black and white on his next two films, which again Suzuki met with even greater bizarreness culminating in his dismissal for 'incomprehensibility.'"
And I second Playtime.
Long Day's Journey Into Night (1962)
Sidney Lumet
Watch trailer:
I'll second Tokyo Drifter.
Targets - Peter Bogdanovich
seconded
sk
We now have only ten spots remaining
Not sure how I missed this one, especially with an orangutan as the inspiration for my name...who could forget King Louie!
Film: The Jungle Book
Director: Wolfgang Reitherman
Year: 1967
Trailer:
The Pit and the Pendulum (1961)
Roger Corman
Watch trailer:
I will second Pit and the Pendulum - it was still on my list
I'll second Shame.
Sounds like you need some catching up! What were the other three?
Hearts are tough, she said, most times hearts don't break, and I'm sure that's right . . . but what about then? What about who we were then? What about hearts in Atlantis?
I have a feeling Mary Poppins could go far, though.