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The Leopard (Italian: Il Gattopardo, lit. 'The Serval') [3] is a 1963 epic historical drama film directed by Luchino Visconti.Written by Visconti, Suso Cecchi d'Amico, Enrico Medioli, Pasquale Festa Campanile, and Massimo Franciosa, the film is an adaptation of the 1958 novel of the same title by Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa.
In 1963, Lancaster traveled to Italy to star as an Italian prince in the epic period drama The Leopard. In 1964, he played a US Air Force general who, opposed by a colonel played by Kirk Douglas, tries to overthrow the president in Seven Days in May. Then, in 1966, he played an explosives expert in the western The Professionals.
April 1963 3 April It Happened at the World's Fair; My Six Loves; Nine Hours to Rama; The Ugly American; 4 April Bye Bye Birdie; Call Me Bwana; 8 April The Sadist; 13 April Critic's Choice; 17 April The Man from the Diners' Club; 21 April Youth of the Beast ; 24 April Free, White and 21; 29 April Flaming Creatures; May 1963 May 12 Lord of the ...
A Child Is Waiting is a 1963 American drama film directed by John Cassavetes, produced by Stanley Kramer, and written by Abby Mann based on his 1957 Studio One teleplay of the same name. It stars Burt Lancaster and Judy Garland as, respectively, the director of a state institution for intellectually disabled and emotionally disturbed children ...
Kirk Douglas starred in seven films across the decades with Burt Lancaster: I Walk Alone (1948), Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957), The Devil's Disciple (1959), The List of Adrian Messenger (1963), Seven Days in May (1964), Victory at Entebbe (1976) and Tough Guys (1986), which fixed the notion of the pair as something of a team in the public ...
Title Director Cast Genre Note 13 Frightened Girls: William Castle: Murray Hamilton, Joyce Taylor: Thriller: Columbia: 4 for Texas: Robert Aldrich: Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Anita Ekberg, Ursula Andress, Charles Bronson
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The Train is a 1964 war film directed by John Frankenheimer [1] and starring Burt Lancaster, Paul Scofield and Jeanne Moreau.The picture's screenplay—written by Franklin Coen, Frank Davis, and Walter Bernstein—is loosely based on the non-fiction book Le front de l'art by Rose Valland, who documented the works of art placed in storage that had been looted by Nazi Germany from museums and ...