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THE PAWNBROKER đœ (1964)
âŁA Jewish pawnbroker, victim of Nazi persecution, loses all faith in his fellow man until he realizes too late the tragedy of his actions.
Director: Sidney Lumet
Writers: Morton S. Fine (screenplay), David Friedkin (screenplay),
Stars: Rod Steiger, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Brock Peters
In 2008, The Pawnbroker was selected for preservation in the US National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". đź đź
The Silence (the precursor to The Pawnbroker)
https://www.brighteon.com/0dd5....c6a7-2cb5-4221-93c3-
The Silence (Swedish: Tystnaden) is a 1963 Swedish drama film written and directed by Ingmar Bergman and starring Ingrid Thulin and Gunnel Lindblom. The plot focuses on two sisters, the younger a sensuous woman with a young son, the elder more intellectually oriented and seriously ill, and their tense relationship as they travel toward home through a fictional Central European country on the brink of war.
This was the precursor to the Production Code 's destruction by advent of the film The Pawnbroker.
https://listverse.com/2021/01/....27/10-films-that-ski
From 1934 to 1968, the Motion Picture Production Code, more commonly known as the Hays Code, provided guidelines to American filmmakers concerning what its board members considered acceptable film content. By adopting these guidelines, Hollywood film studios avoided government censorship. The Code provided a list of general prohibitions and cautions concerning uses or depictions of âprofanityâ and âvulgar expression,â ânudity,â drug trafficking, âsex perversion,â âwhite slavery,â âmiscegenation,â âsex hygiene and venereal diseases,â âscenes of actual childbirth,â âsex organs,â âridicule of clergy,â and âwillful offense to any nation, raced, or creed,â as well as an assortment of 25 other âitems that require special care.âThree years after the institution of the Code, director Leo McCareyâs screwball comedy The Awful Truth provided what amounted to âan instruction kitâ by which to circumvent the Codeâs restrictions and prohibitions.
To skirt the guidelines, âlines were rewritten, dishabille scenes adroitly shuffled, and anatomies piquantly draped.âOther films used these and other techniques to evade the Code. Overall, the tactics were quite successful in most cases, and the filmmakers were able to avoid government censorship by adhering to (or appearing to adhere to) the industryâs own voluntary policing of its products. The subterfuges, ruses, tricks, and other maneuvers filmmakers used were often ingenious as well as diverting and, most importantly, from the filmmakersâ perspective, they allowed movies to give audiences what theyâd paid to seeâthe very thrills the Code was supposed to deny them.From 1934 to 1968, the Motion Picture Production Code, more commonly known as the Hays Code, provided guidelines to American filmmakers concerning what its board members considered acceptable film content. By adopting these guidelines, Hollywood film studios avoided government censorship. The Code provided a list of general prohibitions and cautions concerning uses or depictions of âprofanityâ and âvulgar expression,â ânudity,â drug trafficking, âsex perversion,â âwhite slavery,â âmiscegenation,â âsex hygiene and venereal diseases,â âscenes of actual childbirth,â âsex organs,â âridicule of clergy,â and âwillful offense to any nation, raced, or creed,â as well as an assortment of 25 other âitems that require special care.â
Three years after the institution of the Code, director Leo McCareyâs screwball comedy The Awful Truth provided what amounted to âan instruction kitâ by which to circumvent the Codeâs restrictions and prohibitions. To skirt the guidelines, âlines were rewritten, dishabille scenes adroitly shuffled, and anatomies piquantly draped.âOther films used these and other techniques to evade the Code. Overall, the tactics were quite successful in most cases, and the filmmakers were able to avoid government censorship by adhering to (or appearing to adhere to) the industryâs own voluntary policing of its products. The subterfuges, ruses, tricks, and other maneuvers filmmakers used were often ingenious as well as diverting and, most importantly, from the filmmakersâ perspective, they allowed movies to give audiences what theyâd paid to seeâthe very thrills the Code was supposed to deny them.
https://archive.org/details/th....e.-awful.-truth.-193