A grand decade for Disney, the 1960s included some of my all-time
favorite movies, as well as a lot of flicks that are highly watchable
once, with limited replay value. All of my top ten are ones I'd be
happy to sit through multiple times. And have.
Peter Pan (1960) - Though
I'm not a fan of the Disney version of the J. M. Barrie classic about a
boy who stays forever young on a magical isle called Never-Neverland, I
love this version, a television adaptation of the musical starring Mary
Martin. She is endearingly spunky, and I never seem to mind much that
she's a girl. Perhaps that softens Peter's bravado; even when he's
bragging up a storm with I Gotta Crow, I don't find him nearly as
obnoxious as the animated Disney imp. I love the songs throughout the
film, and the performance of Cyril Ritchard as sinister but silly
Captain Hook / ineffective Mr. Darling is the most entertaining aspect
of the whole movie.
Swiss Family Robinson (1960) -
Two words: ostrich races. Not to mention the treehouse of my dreams and
what may have been the beginning of my love affair with stories about
folks shipwrecked on seemingly uninhabited islands.
The Sword in the Stone (1963) -
I can trace my love of King Arthur back to this Disney cartoon, in
which he is a scrawny kid known as "the Wart" living under the thumb of
his corpulent uncle and brutish cousin. Merlin serves as a wise but
comical mentor, with some help from the requisite animal sidekick,
Archimedes, who bears a strong resemblance to the owl from Bambi. Sticking with the fairly light-hearted portion of T. H. White's The Once and Future King,
heightening the slapstick and doing a lot of simplifying, it's among
the funniest animated Disney films, even if it was less successful than
most.
Mary Poppins (1964) - A
real contender for my all-time favorite movie. The songs showcase the
Sherman Brothers at their best, from peppy classics like Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious to my personal favorite, the compassionate, religiously loaded Feed the Birds.
The cast is wonderful, especially Julie Andrews as eccentric but
exceptional Mary and Dick Van Dyke as irrepressibly jolly Bert. An
engrossing tale of magic, imagination and parents and children coming to
appreciate each other, it's also the movie that made me fall in love
with London.
Cinderella (1965) -
I've seen many versions of this story, but this television adaptation
of the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical, starring Leslie Anne Warren,
will always be my favorite. She makes such a perfect Cinderella, sweet
and starry-eyed, dutifully doing her chores amid abuses by her absurd
step-mother and step-sisters but taking time to imagine better things.
The prince is dreamy, with loads more personality than the Disney
version, and Cinderella's step-family is hilarious. The step-sisters
even evoke some sympathy, as the lady of the house is scarcely any
kinder to her own daughters. It's all very low-frills, with scarcely any
props at all, but the story and the fantastic songs more than make up
for it. This is my second-favorite Rodgers and Hammerstein musical.
The Sound of Music (1965) - This,
naturally, tops the list. Rodgers and Hammerstein's crowning
achievement, it's another movie starring Julie Andrews as an unusual
nanny who swoops in to repair a family with unruly children and a
distant father. But in this case, she plays an aspiring nun who hadn't
bargained on falling in love with the dashing captain so excellently
portrayed by Christopher Plummer. The sweeping cinematography, the
iconic songs, the historical backdrop, the religious overtones, the
humor, the romance... It all blends perfectly for a movie I can watch
over and over again with rapt enjoyment.
The Russians are Coming, the Russians are Coming (1966) - Quite
possibly the funniest movie of the decade. Of course, by the time I saw
this, Russians no longer seems a great threat, so I never had much
reason to see Alan Arkin's merry band of accidental invaders as
antagonists. I just reveled in the relentless slapstick and silly
one-liners. But I've also come to think of it as an inspiring tale
underneath all that comedy, one that dares to hope that people who are
supposedly enemies can be united by a common goal and can overcome
suspicions to form unlikely friendships.
The Graduate (1967) -
It took a couple of viewings for me to really appreciate this movie,
which stars a hilariously awkward Dustin Hoffman as confused young
college graduate Benjamin, who is lured into an affair with the wife of a
family friend. But now that I've been in Benjamin's shoes - as an
aimless college grad, that is, not someone who channeled that
aimlessness in such an unhealthy direction - the film seems very apt.
And what kind of Simon and Garfunkel fan would I be if I left this off
the list?
The Jungle Book (1967) -
Another triumph for the Sherman Brothers, this story of a boy raised by
wolves features an intriguing array of creatures, each with a distinct
personality. No-nonsense panther Bagheera, sibilant snake Kaa, haughty
elephant Colonel Hathi, lackadaisical bear Baloo, ambitious orangutan
King Louie, sinister tiger Shere Khan and a hapless quartet of vultures
all make an impact on Mowgli's journey. With the exception of the cats,
they all have a song, too, each in a different style. Kaa has a hypnotic
lullaby, Hathi a crisp march, Louie a jazzy scatfest, the vultures a
Beatles-esque harmonious ode. Baloo, of course, gets one of the
bounciest numbers in Disney history. A simple story magnificently told,
with lush animation every step of the way.
The Love Bug (1969) -
I just love WV bugs, and this is why. Herbie, the little white beetle
with the number 53 on his side, is more lovable than any car ought to
be. He doesn't talk; he simply uses a series of mechanical noises to
communicate emotion, and he maintains control over his own steering.
This is the first of his adventures. Though Dean Jones, David Tomlinson
and especially Buddy Hackett make terrific co-stars, this little
automobile is clearly the star.
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