Best Movie Year Ever?
1951
Harry Truman was still in the White House, the Korean War was at its worst, and 17 films worth seeing premiered.
An American in Paris won the Oscar for best picture, and it's hard to think of a better musical. Gene Kelly is at his gracefully athletic peak; the dancing and photography are superb and the music is by Gershwin. A joyous delight! Only a half-step back is another wonderful musical, Show Boat. Howard Keel, Kathryn Grayson and North Carolina's Ava Gardner are all fine. William Warfield's rendition of Old Man River sets the standard and raises goose bumps every time. The wonderful dancing Champions, Marge and Gower, make a rare and delightful appearance. Some of Fred Astaire's very best dancing is the attraction in Royal Wedding, including a dance with a hat rack and dancing on the ceiling. Jane Powell isn't Ginger Rogers, but is a surprisingly good partner.
Alfred Hitchcock weighed in with Strangers on a Train, a particularly menacing and creepy suspenser about two strangers who each want someone rather permanently removed and make a deal to help each other out. Robert Walker and Farley Granger are the participants, with a good supporting cast. The merry-go-round climax is justly famous. Classic Hitchcock!
Of all the many versions of Arthur Miller's American legend, Death of a Salesman, the 1951 version may be the best. Frederic March as Willy Loman is joined by Mildred Dunnock, Kevin McCarthy and Cameron Mitchell. The play won the Pulitzer Prize and defined a society. The failure of the dream and the definition of a man's worth by his job ring particularly true in our time. Another top-of-the-line version of a much produced classic is 1951's A Christmas Carol. Alastair Sim IS Scrooge. Faithful to Dickens' story and too good to only watch at Christmas.
Disney's animated Alice in Wonderland is a joy and one of that studio's finest. The bite and wit of Lewis Carroll's wacky characters are only slightly diminished; not as prettified as many Disney versions of classics.
The African Queen, about a bible-thumping spinster being rescued by a bleary-eyed souse on an old tramp steamer in World War I, has snappy dialogue, great photography and a good story. Katherine Hepburn and director John Huston were nominated for Oscars, and Humphrey Bogart won for best actor. A Streetcar Named Desire, Elia Kazan's faithful adaptation of Tennessee Williams' play, won Oscars for Vivian Leigh, Karl Malden and Kim Hunter, but it is Marlon Brando you remember. The British produced two superb Alec Guiness comedies in 1951: The Man in the White Suit has Guiness as a befuddled inventor who has developed a fabric that will never wear out and that nobody wants to market, and The Lavender Hill Mob features Guiness as a timid bank clerk who plans the funniest caper in the movies. The Magic Box is a magical film about the invention of the movies. It is a wonder. Robert Donat and Maria Schell star in an absolutely splendid screen play. There is no better movie about movies.