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SNAM Video Trailer Collection Alphabetical Listing
Video Trailers from picks on TVOntario's Saturday Night at the Movies
Entries in 1950s movies (11)
Bad Day at Black Rock Video Trailer (1955)
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"Bad Day at Black Rock" (1955) INDb Spencer Tracy shows up as a mysterious one-armed stranger in an isolated desert town. It soon becomes clear that people have something to hide. Ernest Borgnine, Lee Marvin and Walter Brennan are just some of the shady (or should we say "in shades of grey") characters that inhabit the town. An interesting study of group dynamics and social problems in the post-war era.
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Compulsion (1959) Video Trailer

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East of Eden (1955)

They were at it again - my two munchkins brawling in the backseat: “She did it to me first!” – “But he said that I was a . . .” – “She has her stuff on my side!” – And on and on it goes. Often enough it comes to blows before the emotions of the moment blow over. Sibling rivalry, common enough phenomenon that it is, can be so draining for a parent. . . .
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Video preview from TVO here.
Catch the video trailer for "East of Eden" here.


Father of the Bride (1950) Video Trailer
"Father of the Bride" (1950) IMDb
with Spencer Tracy and Elizabeth Taylor provides an interesting look
into the subject of marriage, weddings and father/daughter
relationships. Joan Bennett plays the bride to be's mother and Don
Taylor the prospective groom. A very young Liz Taylor makes for a
convincing first-time bride while Tracy hams it up in the role of the
doting daddy. While
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I Confess (1953)
“I Confess” (1953) with Montgomery Clift, Anne Baxter, and Karl Malden makes for a rather melodramatic situation where the real murderer uses the silence of the confessional as the perfect cover-up for his crime. Alfred Hitchcock’s direction on site in Quebec City gives this film a bit of a different perspective. Once you realize that the setting is supposed to be Quebec City during the 1950’s in the pre-Vatican II Duplessis era, it all starts to make a little more sense – the film, that is, not the murder mystery plot. The murder, cover-up, romance, blackmail and dénouement are all very predictable. What else can we expect when two excruciatingly
beautiful people such as Anne Baxter and Montgomery Clift are caught up in a thoroughly impossible situation? It is all completely incomprehensible and implausible in today’s world until you remember that this is supposed to be Quebec in the 1950’s. The prominent landmarks and buildings seen in the film are still there today. (Our family visits quite regularly.) The social and religious landscapes that make this film believable are not. C’est quoi encore le dicton en anglais? “Much Ado About Nothing”?
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See the film trailer for "I Confess" (1953).

