Michael Anderson had the bright idea of collecting hundreds of stars together way before Robert Altman thought of it and here they all are, in glorious technicolour. Niven is suberb, as always, as the impeccable Fogg who, for a wager, tries to circumnavigate the globe in 80 days! Hop on a sailing railroad across The West! Be attacked by fierce prairie Indians! Rescue a Princess in India! Sail a burning Atlantic paddle-wheeler! Fight bulls in Spain! Romp through Paris! Won Best Picture at 1956 Ac
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BATMAN THE MOVIE (1966) (1966)
CertificationU Our Rating
All of Batman's greatest foes combine in a dastardly plot to wreck the noble United Nations. Will civilized life as we know it survive? Can Batman and Robin win through? Holy mackerel... I love it, it's glorious and unashamed tackiness will make it a SMASH HIT with anyone!
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CITY LIGHTS (1931)
CertificationU Our Rating
One of the classic Chaplin feature films in which the little tramp falls in love with a blind flower girl and, through a number of typical exploits, raises the money to pay for an operation. Chaplin's comic genius has rarely, if ever, been bettered and is as fresh now as it was fifty years ago.
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FATHER'S LITTLE DIVIDEND (1951)
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Follow-up to the original Father of the Bride (remade by Steve Martin in 1991). A long-suffering dad (Spencer Tracy), who's only just managed to marry off his daughter, is hit for six when he discovers he's about to become a grandad. Vastly superior to the treacly, rose-tinted remake.
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GREASE (1978)
CertificationPG Our Rating
A high school musical which ripped off everything it could from the 1950s. At the time it was slated, but, in retrospect, it started a trend and is nowhere near as bad as some of the movies which followed it. In fact, one could go as far as to say it's now a bit of a classic...
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HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN (1952)
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Hans Christian Andersen's classic fairy tale of the overly inventive village cobbler gets a delightful musical interpretation with music and Lyrics by Frank Loesser. Oscar nominated for the song ‘Thumbelina' and staring Danny Kaye at his peak, this is quintessential rainy weekend family viewing.
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IT'S A MAD MAD MAD MAD WORLD (1963)
Certification12 Our Rating
A zany chase movie with starring or cameo roles for almost every US comedian of the age...and Terry Thomas. Lots of people have access to a buried treasure map and fight like dogs, in a disaster-plagued race to get there first. Action-packed slapstick which this reviewer loved when aged 8 years old.
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LADY FOR A DAY (1933)
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In letters to her Spanish raised daughter, Apple Annie, a cantankerous New York City fruit peddler, has been pretending that she's a high-society matron. When the now grown up daughter and her aristocratic fiancée plan to visit, Annie panics and turns to her best customer, Dave the Dude, a racketeering gangster who sets about transforming her into the grandest of dames. Based on ‘Guys and Dolls' this 1930s fairytale was Capra's first major success, a charming comedy drama with a razor sharp scri
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MODERN TIMES (1936)
CertificationU Our Rating
Chaplin's inventive and devastating satire on the woes of modern industrialised life, featuring the last appearance of his Little Tramp character and his first use of sound effects. The classic scene, in which he gets sucked into a production line epitomises this film's clever inventiveness.
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PINK PANTHER: A SHOT IN THE DARK (1964)
CertificationPG Our Rating
The inimitable Sellers in the second of the Pink Panther farces. Although the overall standard is high, it would be worth watching just to see Clouseau impersonating a dentist with a wax nose, or to see him get the girl in the end without even taking his socks off.
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