Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

A surprising choice for cinema’s greatest year

- By Lee D. Mitgang

What was the greatest year in cinema history?

Among film fans and critics, 1939 has long been a favorite pick.

Hollywood’s studio system was at its peak that year and cranked out an astonishin­g number of crowd-pleasing, star-studded films, including “The Wizard of Oz,” “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington,” “Ninotchka,” “Stagecoach” and “Dark Victory.” At the top of that formidable heap was “Gone With the Wind,” which won eight Oscars, including best picture.

A new history by Los Angeles film critics and scholars Stephen Farber and Michael McClellan offers a different and, for many, surprising alternativ­e.

In their audaciousl­y titled “Cinema ’62: The Greatest Year at the Movies,” they argue that the early ’60s in general — and 1962 in particular — deserve recognitio­n not just for big-wave beach movies, but also for new-wave films from abroad and for the emergence of a generation of American auteurs who were fashioning a mold-breaking new Hollywood.

Strictly by numbers, 1962 may not have produced as many enduring classics as 1939, a year that placed 19 films on the Library of Congress’ prestigiou­s National Film Registry, more than twice the eight such films from 1962. But 1962’s importance rests on the artistic daring of its films, and on the unpreceden­ted willingnes­s of filmmakers to tackle taboo subjects at a time when the production codes and the censorious Legion of Decency still wielded influence on Hollywood producers and American audiences.

Echoing the emerging civil rights spirit of the early ’60s, for example, “To Kill a Mockingbir­d” poignantly indicted racial injustice, though not without objections from film raters for its frequent use of the “N-word.” “Lolita” depicted an older man’s obsession with a preadolesc­ent girl. The British import “A Taste of Honey” offered an unusually adult portrayal of homosexual­ity and scored well with audiences. Bosley Crowther, The New York Times’ powerful film critic, called it the year’s best film.

Hollywood’s studio system may have been declining in 1962, but reliable stars such as Doris Day, John Wayne, James Stewart and Bette Davis still churned out an impressive number of hit films. Wayne and Stewart starred in director John Ford’s “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.” Screen veteran Rosalind Russell put an indelible stamp on the lead role of Rose in “Gypsy.” Davis and Joan Crawford gave unforgetta­bly creepy performanc­es in the psychologi­cal thriller “Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?”

From abroad, filmmakers were drawing American audiences as never before with movies that broke new artistic ground. Among them were Federico Fellini (“La Dolce Vita”), Francois Truffaut (“Jules et Jim”), Tony Richardson (“The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner”), Pietro Germi (“Divorce Italian Style”) and Michelange­lo Antonioni (“La Notte”).

The authors add spice and credibilit­y to their history with interviews with survivors of 1962 filmmaking, including Mariette Hartley, who made her debut in director Sam Peckinpah’s “Ride the High Country”; Shirley Knight, who starred with Paul Newman in the sexually charged “Sweet Bird of Youth”; and Angela Lansbury, who gave a deliciousl­y villainous performanc­e in director John Frankenhei­mer’s “The Manchurian Candidate.”

The book ends with a chapter-long appraisal of David Lean’s “Lawrence of Arabia,” 1962’s most honored, commercial­ly successful and technicall­y dazzling film. It featured a sophistica­ted plot replete with political chicanery, colonialis­m and a subtle depiction of the title character’s homosexual­ity, and a superb cast of old hands such as Claude Rains as well as relative newcomers Peter O’Toole and Omar Sharif. Yet, fascinatin­gly, it drew only mixed reviews.

“Cinema ’62” probably won’t end the “best year in film” debate. But Farber and McClellan serve film fans a briskly written, meticulous­ly researched history that gives an often-overlooked and underrated era in cinema its due. “Our hope,” the authors write, “is that those who still remember where they were in ’62 will relish the journey into the past, and other, younger readers will come to wish they were there, too.”

 ?? Columbia Pictures ?? “Cinema ’62” ends with a chapter-long appraisal of “Lawrence of Arabia,” starring Peter O’Toole.
Columbia Pictures “Cinema ’62” ends with a chapter-long appraisal of “Lawrence of Arabia,” starring Peter O’Toole.
 ??  ?? “Cinema ‘62” by Stephen Farber and Michael McClellan (Rutgers University Press, $34.95)
“Cinema ‘62” by Stephen Farber and Michael McClellan (Rutgers University Press, $34.95)

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