Monday, May. 29, 1950

CURRENT & CHOICE

A Ticket to Tomahawk. The first trip of a narrow-gauge ten-wheeler (minus 40 miles of track) in the Colorado Rockies; played for laughs by Dan Dailey and Anne Baxter (TIME, May 15).

The Big Lift. Romance, heavy-handed propaganda and the Berlin airlift, crowded into an overambitious but absorbing film; with Montgomery Clift and Paul Douglas (TIME, May 8).

Riding High. Frank Capra's shrewdly effective comedy about horse racing, with Bing Crosby and a full stable of able character actors (TIME, May 1).

Annie Get Your Gun. Betty Hutton at large in a faithful version of Irving Berlin's musicomedy (TIME, April 24).

City Lights. Charlie Chaplin's 19-year-old but ageless "comedy romance in pantomime" (TIME, April 17).

When Willie Comes Marching Home. A sprightly farce that ribs Army brass and a hero-loving public; with Dan Dailey (TIME, March 6).

The Third Man. Melodramatic skulduggery in postwar Vienna, written by Graham Greene and directed by Carol Reed, with Joseph Gotten, Orson Welles and Valli (TIME, Feb. 6).

This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.