Trio. Another helping of Somerset Maugham short stories; with James Hayter, Nigel Patrick and Jean Simmons (TIME, Oct. 30).
All About Eve. An expert, high-comedy examination of Anne Baxter’s climb, over the bodies of Bette Davis, George Sanders and others, from obscurity to Broadway stardom (TIME, Oct. 16).
State Secret. A British-made thriller about an American (Douglas Fairbanks Jr.) running for his life in a convincingly pictured police state (TIME, Oct. 9).
The Happiest Days of Your Life. Alastair Sim and Margaret Rutherford in a farcical spoof of English public schools (TIME, Oct. 9).
Mister 880. Edmund Gwenn as a lovable old counterfeiter who baffles the Secret Service for ten years; with Burt Lancaster and Dorothy McGuire (TIME, Oct. 2).
The Breaking Point. A stinging melodrama based on Ernest Hemingway’s To Have and Have Not; with John Garfield, Patricia Neal, Phyllis Thaxter (TIME, .Sept. 25).
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).
The Men. Marlon Brando and Teresa Wright in a frank, stirring drama about the mental and physical salvage of paralyzed war veterans (TIME, July 24).
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