Greatest Films of the 1960s
Greatest Films of the 1960s


Greatest Films of the 1960s
1960 | 1961 | 1962 | 1963 | 1964 | 1965 | 1966 | 1967 | 1968 | 1969

1963

Title Screen Film Genre(s), Title, Year, (Country), Length, Director, Description

America America (1963) (aka The Anatolian Smile), 174 minutes, D: Elia Kazan

The Birds (1963), 119 minutes, D: Alfred Hitchcock
Another modern Hitchcock thriller/masterpiece - his first film with Universal Studios. Loosely based upon a short story by Daphne Du Maurier, it is the apocalyptic story of a northern California coastal town (Bodega Bay) filled with an onslaught of seemingly unexplained, arbitrary and chaotic attacks of ordinary birds - not birds of prey. Ungrammatical advertising campaigns emphasized: "The Birds Is Coming." The dark film hinted that the bird attacks were punishment for the failings of the relationships between the main characters. This Technicolor feature came after Psycho (1960) - another film filled with 'bird' references. The film's technical wizardry was extraordinary, especially in the film's closing scene (a complex, trick composite shot) - the special visual effects of Ub Iwerks were nominated for an Academy Award (the film's sole nomination), but the Oscar was lost to Cleopatra (1963). Hundreds of birds (gulls, ravens, and crows) were trained for use in some of the scenes, while mechanical birds and animations were employed for others. The film's non-existent musical score was replaced by an electronic soundtrack (including simulated bird cries and wing-flaps), with Hitchcock's favorite composer Bernard Herrmann serving as a sound consultant. Hitchcock introduced a 'fascinating new personality' for the film - his unknown successor to Grace Kelly - a cool, blonde professional model named 'Tippi' Hedren (the mother of Melanie Griffith), in her film debut in a leading role.

Bye Bye Birdie (1963), 112 minutes, D: George Sidney
The Broadway hit show of 1960, Bye Bye Birdie, was adapted for the screen by Irving Brecher and directed by George Sidney - it was the first Broadway musical to include rock songs. In its lampooning or parody of hip-gyrating rock-and-roll idol Elvis "The King" Presley (who was drafted into the Army in 1958), it told about an Elvis Presley-styled pop star named Conrad Birdie (Jesse Pearson). Conrad was a beer-drinking hillbilly who caused swooning chaos among teens upon his arrival in the midwestern town of Sweet Apple, Ohio. In the star-making opening credits sequence, Ann-Margret (as high-schooler Kim, in her film debut) flipped her skirt and tossed her hair as she sang the title song before a blue-screen and in a wind tunnel.
Dick Van Dyke reprised his role in the film as a talented chemist and struggling song-writer Albert Peterson (he sang the memorable "Put on a Happy Face" to his secretary-fiancee Rosie DeLeon (Janet Leigh)), who had a manipulative and domineering mother, Mama Mae Peterson (Maureen Stapleton). 22 year-old Ann-Margret appeared as nubile 16 year-old vibrant Ohio high-schooler Kim McAfee - as a member of Birdie's fan club, she was the lucky one chosen to receive a farewell kiss ("One Last Kiss") from the rock idol (just before he was drafted into the military) on the popular weekly TV variety program, The Ed Sullivan Show (although fictitious in the film), to be partly aired live from Ohio. Throughout the film, Albert had to manipulate his way around Kim's protective father Harry McAfee (Paul Lynde), and restrictions imposed by the TV show. In the conclusion, Albert and Rosie were able to slip an amphetamine into the milk glass of an Russian ballet conductor (to speed up the next-to-last ballet performance on the show), to allow them time for their Birdie finale. However, Kim's jealous boyfriend Hugo Peabody (singing idol Bobby Rydell) wrecked the scene by punching Birdie in the face, before the singer was able to plant "one last kiss" on Kim before singing Albert's song. Also memorable were these two numbers: the split-screen, gossipy musical telephone sequence (with live action and animation) titled "The Telephone Hour," and Kim's father Harry singing "Kids" in the family kitchen with the familiar lyric: "What's the matter with kids today?"

Charade (1963), 113 minutes, D: Stanley Donen

Cleopatra (1963), 243 minutes, D: Joseph L. Mankiewicz

Contempt (1963, Fr./It.) (aka Le Mépris, or Il Disprezzo), 103 minutes, D: Jean-Luc Godard

8 1/2 (1963, It./Fr.), 135 minutes, D: Federico Fellini

From Russia With Love (1963, UK), 110 minutes, D: Terence Young

The Great Escape (1963), 169 minutes, D: John Sturges

The Haunting (1963, UK/US), 112 minutes, D: Robert Wise

High and Low (1963, Jp.) (aka Tengoku to jigoku) (Heaven and Hell), 143 minutes, D: Akira Kurosawa

Hud (1963), 112 minutes, D: Martin Ritt

It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), 192 minutes, D: Stanley Kramer

The Leopard (1963, It./Fr.) (aka Il Gattopardo), 187 minutes, D: Luchino Visconti

Lilies of the Field (1963), 94 minutes, D: Ralph Nelson

The Nutty Professor (1963), 107 minutes, D: Jerry Lewis

The Pink Panther (1963), 113 minutes, D: Blake Edwards

The Servant (1963, UK), 112 minutes, D: Joseph Losey

Shock Corridor (1963), 101 minutes, D: Samuel Fuller

This Sporting Life (1963, UK), 134 minutes, D: Lindsay Anderson

Tom Jones (1963, UK), 129 minutes, D: Tony Richardson

Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow (1963, It.) (aka Leri, Oggi, Domani), 119 minutes, D: Vittorio De Sica


Previous Page Next Page