Search

Anatomy Of A Murder

1959, Movie, NR, 160 mins

starstarstarstarstar
Courtroom histrionics given sizzle and sex by Otto Preminger and Duke Ellington's jazz. Stewart shocked 1950s audiences with his gritty, quirky performance as a confirmed bachelor defense attorney speaking directly about contraceptives, pink panties and rape. Old pros Arden and O'Connell flawlessly support the star performance in a talky tennis game. Gazzarra as a brutal army stud and Remick as his duplicitous, sluttish wife received well-deserved career boosts for their eff... read more leave a comment
Year: 1959
Rated NR

User Rating: (8 ratings)
Add Your Rating: 1 stars2 stars3 stars4 stars5 stars

Cast
James Stewart: Paul Biegler
Lee Remick: Laura Manion
Ben Gazzara: Lt. Frederick Manion
Arthur O'Connell: Parnell McCarthy
Eve Arden: Maida
Kathryn Grant: Mary Pilant

 

more Anatomy Of A Murder cast & details

Small-town lawyer James Stewart gets the case of a lifetime when a military man avenges an...
Free | TCM

Posted: 11/26/2008
Opening credits from Otto Preminger's Anatomy of a Murder (1959) starring James Stewart
Free | TCM

Posted: 9/20/2008
Attorney Paul Biegler (James Stewart) pleads for the court's consideration in Anatomy of a...
Free | TCM

Posted: 9/20/2008
Attorney Paul Biegler (James Stewart) and his friend Parnell McCarthy (Arthur O'Connell) get...
Free | TCM

Posted: 9/20/2008
Loading...

Is Marlon Brando the only ...

Question: Is Marlon Brando the only person who ever refused to accept his Academy Award?


Answer: No. Back in 1936, screenwriter Dudley Nichols refused to accept his best screenplay Oscar for The Informer (1935). The early 1930s were a time of bitter conflicts between the studios and their employees; studio executives were vehemently anti-union and accustomed to forcing actors, writers, composers and crew to work on studio terms or not work at all. Nichols, who later became president of the Screenwriters Guild, refused to accept his award as a protest against what was widely perceived as the Academy's decision to sell out its less powerful members to union-busting studio heads.

By the time George C. Scott read more

Advertisement

Advertisement