Tag Archives: Shirley Jones

Retro Movie Review: Oklahoma! (1955)

The 1955 film version of Oklahoma! opens the way all great American myths should: with a handsome man on horseback singing into the sunrise like he invented daylight. Gordon MacRae’s Curly is the kind of leading man Hollywood minted on an assembly line—square‑jawed, syrup‑voiced, and entirely convinced that starting a movie with an unbroken, three‑minute pastoral croon is the most natural thing in the world. And somehow, it is. Rodgers & Hammerstein’s frontier fable, directed by Fred Zinnemann and shot twice—once in CinemaScope and once in the ultra‑luxurious 70 mm format—feels like the dawn of the widescreen musical, a genre learning it could stretch its legs across an entire horizon.

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Retro Review of The Music Man (1962)

The Music Man is a musical that oozes charm, humor, and heart, an absolute gem from 1962. Directed by Morton DaCosta, this cinematic adaptation of Meredith Willson’s 1957 Broadway hit has stood the test of time with its unforgettable tunes, colorful characters, and irresistible performances. It’s the kind of film that you watch with a smile plastered on your face, humming “Seventy-Six Trombones” for days afterward.

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Retro Film Review: Elmer Gantry (1960)

Directed by Richard Brooks and based on the novel by Sinclair Lewis, Elmer Gantry (1960) is a searing critique of hypocrisy and ambition wrapped in the guise of a dynamic drama. The film’s central character, Elmer Gantry, is a fast-talking, charm-laden traveling salesman who discovers the lucrative potential in evangelism, manipulating faith for profit. The film not only casts a sharp eye on the manipulative power of religion but also explores the human desire for fame, power, and redemption.

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