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MOVIES Continued
Albert Schtveitzer hill-anderson
VV'V'V In terms of selflessness and service to humanity, the subject of this movie biography may be the greatest man of our times. Ranging from Europe to the heart of Africa, this straightforward documentary is done with great feeling. A little boy (the only “actor” in the cast) shows how the young Albert may have reacted to the infinite possibilities of life. Touching family photos re-create his background, but the splendidly alive face of the venerable Dr. Schweitzer himself dominates most of the picture. The daily routine of his hospital deep in French Equatorial Africa is shown in sharp detail, with all its hardships and brave improvisations. As an astonishing accompaniment, there is the doctor’s profound devotion to music, philosophy and religion. family
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Gun for a Coward
V'V'V' Without stinting on action, here’s a Western that also plays up character, contrasting three brothers. In effect, steady Fred MacMurray is father to the two younger boys: Jeffrey Hunter, sensitive, cautious, therefore accused of cowardice; Dean Stockwell, rash and thoughtless. A range war between cattlemen and farmer squatters tests the mettle of all three. Romance also divides the brothers, as Janice Rule tires of waiting for Fred and turns to Jeff. The acting is generally earnest, though Josephine Hutchinson doesn’t look quite old enough to be Fred’s mother, and Stockwell, once an excellent child actor, seems here to be doing a distasteful impersonation of the late James Dean, family
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Drango u.a.
V'V'V' Bitterness and threatened violence seething in the South just after the Civil War keep suspense high. For personal reasons. Jeff Chandler feels a sense of dedication when he takes over as “occupation officer” in a hill town once ravaged by Sherman’s men. Joanne Dru hates him because his conciliation policy leads to the lynching of her pro-Union father. As Jeff’s young aide, John Lupton also urges that he get tough. In his desperate campaign to rebuild the wrecked, starving town, Jeff is secretly opposed by Ronald Howard, as a fanatic who won’t admit that the Confederate cause is lost. Brilliant photography points up the drama. family
Hot Summer Night m-c-m
FF Supposedly set in the present day, this suspense movie actually harks hack to the early Thirties, when Dillinger-style bandits hogged the headlines. On his honeymoon with Colleen Miller, unemployed reporter Leslie Nielsen decides to get his job back through an exclusive interview with bandit Robert Wilke. The enterprising newsman winds up as captive in the gang’s Ozarks hide-out, dominated by crazed gunman Paul Richards. family
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