On this date- June 7

Today James Ivory is 90, Ken Osmond is 75, Bill Hader is 40, and Michael Cera is 30. Today is also the birthday of Liam Neeson, Karl Urban, Tom Jones, William Forsythe, Colleen Camp, Tom McCarthy, Mick Foley, Ronald Pickup, Bear Grylls, Dave Navarro, Iggy Azalea, Fetty Wap, Mike Pence, and the late Dean Martin, Jessica Tandy, Prince, Bonnie Lee Bakley, Hope Summers, and Dolores Gray. Jean Harlow died 81 years ago in 1937 at age 26. ZaSu Pitts died 55 years ago in 1963 at age 69. Judy Holliday died 53 years ago in 1965 at age 43. Christopher Lee died three years ago in 2015 at age 93.

On this date- June 6

Today Danny Webb is 60. Today is also the birthday of Paul Giamatti, Jason Isaacs, Robert Englund, Sandra Bernhard, Colin Quinn, Harvey Fierstein, Max Casella, Ellie Kendrick, Hirokazu Koreeda, Jonathan Nolan, Danny Strong, Natalie Morales, and the late Billie Whitelaw, Chantal Akerman, Maria Montez, Sam Simon, Judith Barsi, Thomas Mann, and Kenneth Connor, who would be 100. Jack Haley died 39 years ago in 1979 at age 81. Anne Bancroft died 13 years ago in 2005 at age 73. Esther Williams died five years ago in 2013 at age 91.

On this date- June 5

Today Peggy Stewart is 95, and Nick Kroll is 40. Today is also the birthday of Mark Wahlberg, Jeff Garlin, Ron Livingston, Susan Lynch, Chad Allen, Kenny G, Liza Weil, Laurie Anderson, Suze Orman, Troye Sivan, Pete Wentz, Lisa Cholodenko, Kathleen Kennedy, Roger Michell, David Hare, and the late Tony Richardson, Jacques Demy, Spalding Gray, Robert Lansing, William Boyd, Warren Frost, Daniel von Bargen, John Abbott, Herb Vigran, Henry Levin, and Pancho Villa. Vito Scotti died 22 years ago in 1996 at age 78. Mel Tormé died 19 years ago in 1999 at age 73. Ronald Reagan died 14 years ago in 2004 at age 93. Ray Bradbury died six years ago in 2012 at age 91.

On this date- June 3

Today is the birthday of Imogen Poots, Anderson Cooper, Penelope Wilton, Jason Jones, James Purefoy, Bill Paterson, Sebastian Armesto, Irma P. Hall, Masami Nagasawa, Larry McMurtry, Daniela Vega, Tate Taylor, and the late Tony Curtis, Josephine Baker, Paulette Goddard, Leo Gorcey, Chuck Barris, Allen Ginsberg, Curtis Mayfield, Ellen Corby, Maurice Evans, Colleen Dewhurst, Alain Resnais, Robert Z’Dar, Edward Winter, John Kellogg, Roy Glenn, Melissa Mathison, Anthony Harvey, and Herk Harvey. Franz Kafka died 96 years ago in 1924 at age 40. Ozzie Nelson died 43 years ago in 1975 at age 69. Roberto Rossellini died 41 years ago in 1977 at age 71. Robert Morley died 26 years ago in 1992 at age 84. Anthony Quinn died 17 years ago in 2001 at age 86. David Carradine died nine years ago in 2009 at age 72. Rue McClanahan died eight years ago in 2010 at age 76. James Arness died seven years ago in 2011 at age 88. Muhammad Ali died two years ago in 2016 at age 74.

Every Feature Film I Own That I Have Not Seen

  • The Call of the Cumberlands (Jan. 23, 1916, Julia Crawford Ivers)
  • Where Are My Children? (May 1916, Lois Weber, Phillips Smalley)
  • ’49-’17 (Oct. 15, 1917, Ruth Ann Baldwin)
  • Broadway Love (Jan. 21, 1918, Ida May Park)
  • Back to God’s Country (Oct. 27, 1919, David Hartford, uncred. Nell Shipman)
  • Four Around the Woman (Feb. 3, 1921, Fritz Lang)
  • Too Wise Wives (May 22, 1921, Lois Weber)
  • Destiny (Oct. 6, 1921, Fritz Lang)
  • Die Gezeichneten (Feb. 7, 1922, Carl Theodor Dreyer)
  • Dr. Mabuse: The Gambler (Apr. 27, 1922, Fritz Lang)
  • Der var engang (Oct. 3, 1922, Carl Theodor Dreyer)
  • Salomé (Feb. 15, 1923, Charles Bryant, uncred. Alla Nazimova)
  • The Song of Love (Dec. 24, 1923, Frances Marion and Chester M. Franklin)
  • Die Nibelungen: Siegfried (Feb. 14, 1924, Fritz Lang)
  • Die N: Kriemhild’s Revenge (Apr. 26, 1924, Fritz Lang)
  • Michael (Sept. 26, 1924, Carl Theodor Dreyer)
  • Kino-Eye (Oct. 31, 1924, Dziga Vertov)
  • Whirlpool of Fate (Mar. 20, 1925, Jean Renoir)
  • The Mystic (Aug. 30, 1925, Tod Browning)
  • Master of the House (Oct. 5, 1925, Carl Theodor Dreyer)
  • Body and Soul (Nov. 9, 1925, Oscar Micheaux)
  • The Bride of Glomdal (Jan. 1, 1926, Carl Theodor Dreyer)
  • The Flying Ace (1926, Richard E. Norman)
  • Nana (Apr. 27, 1926, Jean Renoir)
  • Ten Nights in a Bar Room (Dec. 27, 1926, Roy Calnek)
  • The Scar of Shame (1927, Frank Perugini)
  • The Show (Jan. 14, 1927, Tod Browning)
  • The Unknown (May. 29, 1927, Tod Browning)
  • Running Wild (June 11, 1927, Gregory La Cava)
  • Downhill (Oct. 24, 1927, Alfred Hitchcock)
  • Eleven P.M. (1928, Richard Maurice)
  • The Last Command (Jan. 15, 1928, Josef von Sternberg)
  • Spies (Mar. 22, 1928, Fritz Lang)
  • Champagne (Aug. 20, 1928, Alfred Hitchcock)
  • The Docks of New York (Sept. 15, 1928, Josef von Sternberg)
  • The Manxman (Jan. 21, 1929, Alfred Hitchcock)
  • Linda (Apr. 1, 1929, Dorothy Davenport Reid)
  • Woman in the Moon (Oct. 15, 1929, Fritz Lang)
  • People on Sunday (Feb. 4, 1930, Robert Siodmak, Edgar G. Ulmer)
  • The Blue Angel (Apr. 1, 1930, Josef von Sternberg)
  • Murder! (July 31, 1930, Alfred Hitchcock)
  • Morocco (Nov. 14, 1930, Josef von Sternberg)
  • The Skin Game (Feb. 26, 1931, Alfred Hitchcock)
  • Honor Among Lovers (Feb. 28, 1931, Dorothy Arzner)
  • Dishonored (Mar. 5, 1931, Josef von Sternberg)
  • Tabu (Mar. 18, 1931, F.W. Murnau)
  • The Front Page (Mar. 19, 1931, Lewis Milestone)
  • Man of the World (Mar. 28, 1931, Richard Wallace)
  • Enthusiasm (Apr. 2, 1931, Dziga Vertov)
  • The Exile (May 16, 1931, Oscar Micheaux)
  • An American Tragedy (July 25, 1931, Josef von Sternberg)
  • La Chienne (Nov. 20, 1931, Jean Renoir)
  • Mädchen in Uniform (Nov. 27, 1931, Leontine Sagan, Carl Froelich)
  • Rich and Strange (Dec. 10, 1931, Alfred Hitchcock)
  • The Girl from Chicago (1932, Oscar Micheaux)
  • Shanghai Express (Feb. 4, 1932, Josef von Sternberg)
  • Number 17 (July 18, 1932, Alfred Hitchcock)
  • Blonde Venus (Sept. 14, 1932, Josef von Sternberg)
  • Night After Night (Oct. 29, 1932, Archie Mayo)
  • 42nd Street (Feb. 23, 1933, Lloyd Bacon)
  • Laughing Heirs (Mar. 6, 1933, Max Ophüls)
  • Gold Diggers of 1933 (May 26, 1933, Mervyn LeRoy)
  • Design for Living (Nov. 22, 1933, Ernst Lubitsch)
  • The Wedding of Palo (Mar. 5, 1934, Friedrich Dalsheim)
  • The Scarlet Empress (May 9, 1934, Josef von Sternberg)
  • We’re Not Dressing (Apr. 25, 1934, Norman Taurog)
  • Imitation of Life (Oct. 1934, John M. Stahl)
  • The Good Fairy (Jan. 31, 1935, William Wyler)
  • The Devil Is a Woman (Mar. 15, 1935, Josef von Sternberg)
  • G-Men (Apr. 18, 1935, William Keighley)
  • Goin’ to Town (Apr. 25, 1935, Alexander Hall)
  • Mark of the Vampire (Apr. 26, 1935, Tod Browning)
  • The Informer (May 9, 1935, John Ford)
  • Steamboat Round the Bend (Sept. 6, 1935, John Ford)
  • Hands Across the Table (Oct. 18, 1935, Mitchell Leisen)
  • The Bohemian Girl (Feb. 14, 1936, James W. Horne, Charley Rogers)
  • Love Before Breakfast (Mar. 9, 1936, Walter Lang)
  • Show Boat (May 14, 1936, James Whale)
  • The Princess Comes Across (May 22, 1936, William K. Howard)
  • Bullets or Ballots (May 26, 1936, William Keighley)
  • Mary of Scotland (July 28, 1936, John Ford)
  • Go West Young Man (Nov. 13, 1936, Henry Hathaway)
  • San Quentin (May 24, 1937, Lloyd Bacon)
  • Easy Living (July 7, 1937, Mitchell Leisen)
  • Drôle de Drame (Oct. 20, 1937, Marcel Carné)
  • True Confession (Dec. 24, 1937, Wesley Ruggles)
  • A Slight Case of Murder (Feb. 26, 1938, Lloyd Bacon)
  • Thanks for the Memory (Nov. 11, 1938, George Archainbaud)
  • Hotel du Nord (Dec. 10, 1938, Marcel Carné)
  • Birthright (1939, Oscar Micheaux)
  • Young Mr. Lincoln (May 30, 1939, John Ford)
  • Each Dawn I Die (July 21, 1939, William Keighley)
  • The Hunchback of Notre Dame (August 31, 1939, William Dieterle)
  • The Story of the Last Chrysanthemum (Oct. 10, 1939, Kenji Mizoguchi)
  • The Cat and the Canary (Oct. 27, 1939, Elliott Nugent)
  • There’s No Tomorrow (Dec. 1939, Max Ophüls)
  • Remember the Night (Dec. 31, 1939, Mitchell Leisen)
  • They Drive by Night (July 26, 1940, Raoul Walsh)
  • City for Conquest (Sept. 19, 1940, Anatole Litvak)
  • Time Out of Rhythm (June 5, 1941, Sidney Salkow)
  • Nothing But the Truth (Oct. 10, 1941, Elliott Nugent)
  • Les Visiteurs du Soir (Dec. 5, 1942, Marcel Carné)
  • Air Force (Feb. 3, 1943, Howard Hawks)
  • The Ox-Bow Incident (May 8, 1943, William A. Wellman)
  • The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (June 10, 1943, Michal Powell, Emeric Pressburger)
  • The Seventh Victim (Sept. 21, 1943, Mark Robson)
  • Sahara (Sept. 2, 1943, Zoltan Korda)
  • Lassie Come Home (Oct. 7, 1943, Fred M. Wilcox)
  • Cobra Woman (Apr. 19, 1944, Robert Siodmak)
  • Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo (Nov. 15, 1944, Mervyn LeRoy)
  • Murder, My Sweet (December 14, 1944, Edward Dmytryk)
  • The Clock (Mar. 22, 1945, Vincente Minnelli)
  • Two People (Mar. 23, 1945, Carl Theodor Dreyer)
  • Rockin’ in the Rockies (Apr. 17, 1945, Vernon Keays)
  • Mildred Pierce (Sept. 28, 1945, Michael Curtiz)
  • Dirty Gertie from Harlem U.S.A. (1946, Spencer Williams)
  • She-Wolf of London (May 17, 1946, Jean Yarbrough)
  • Courage of Lassie (July 24, 1946, Fred M. Wilcox)
  • A Matter of Life and Death (Nov. 11, 1946, Michal Powell, Emeric Pressburger)
  • Cynthia (July 23, 1947, Robert Z. Leonard)
  • Gentleman’s Agreement (Nov. 11, 1947, Elia Kazan)
  • The Lady from Shanghai (Dec. 24, 1947, Orson Welles)
  • The Paradine Case (Dec. 30, 1947, Alfred Hitchcock)
  • The Emperor Waltz (Apr. 30, 1948, Billy Wilder)
  • A Date with Judy (July 29, 1948, Richard Thorpe)
  • Command Decision (Dec. 23, 1948, Sam Wood)
  • Caught (Wild Calendar) (Feb. 17, 1949, Max Ophüls)
  • Le Silence de la Mer (Apr. 22, 1949, Jean-Pierre Melville)
  • She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (July 26, 1949, John Ford)
  • Conspirator (July 29, 1949, Victor Saville)
  • Under Capricorn (Sept. 8, 1949, Alfred Hitchcock)
  • The Reckless Moment (Oct. 13, 1949, Max Ophüls)
  • Stromboli (Feb. 15, 1950, Roberto Rossellini)
  • When Willie Comes Marching Home (Feb. 17, 1950, John Ford)
  • I Love Lucy: Season 1(1951)
  • Miracle in Milan (Feb 8, 1951, Vittorio De Sica)
  • Westward the Women (Dec. 16, 1951, William A. Wellman)
  • Ivanhoe (June 12, 1952, Richard Thorpe)
  • What Price Glory (July 25, 1952, John Ford)
  • Europe ’51 (Sept. 12, 1952, Roberto Rossellini)
  • Love Is Better Than Ever (Feb. 23, 1953, Stanley Donen)
  • The Girl Who Had Everything (Mar. 27, 1953, Richard Thorpe)
  • The Earrings of Madam De… (Sept. 16, 1953, Max Ophüls)
  • Rhapsody (Feb. 19. 1954, Charles Vidor)
  • Journey to Italy (Sept. 7, 1954, Roberto Rossellini)
  • The Last Time I Saw Paris (Nov. 18, 1954, Richard Brooks)
  • The Long Gray Line (Jan. 4, 1955, John Ford)
  • East of Eden (Mar. 9, 1955, Elia Kazan)
  • Revenge of the Creature (Mar. 29, 1955, Jack Arnold)
  • Journey to the Beginning of Time (Aug. 5, 1955, Karel Zeman)
  • The Violent Years (1956, William Morgan)
  • The Creature Walks Among Us (Apr. 26, 1956, John Sherwood)
  • The Tall T (Mar. 25, 1957, Budd Boetticher)
  • 3:10 to Yuma (Aug. 7, 1957, Delmer Daves)
  • Man of a Thousand Faces (Aug. 13, 1957, Joseph Pevney)
  • Decision at Sundown (Oct. 31, 1957, Budd Boetticher)
  • The Tarnished Angels (Nov. 21, 1957, Douglas Sirk)
  • Gideon’s Day (Mar. 21, 1958, John Ford)
  • Invention for Destruction (June 27, 1958, Karel Zeman)
  • Buchanan Rides Alone (Aug. 6, 1958, Budd Boetticher)
  • Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (Aug. 23, 1958, Richard Brooks)
  • I Married a Monster from Outer Space (Oct. 1958, Gene Fowler Jr.)
  • The Last Hurrah (Oct. 22, 1958, John Ford)
  • The Hidden Fortress (Dec. 28, 1958, Akira Kurosawa)
  • Night of the Ghouls (1959, Ed Wood)
  • Ride Lonesome (Feb. 1, 1959, Budd Boetticher)
  • The Diary of Anne Frank (Mar. 18, 1959, George Stevens)
  • The Tingler (July 29, 1959, William Castle)
  • The Doctor’s Horrible Experiment (Aug 31, 1959, Jean Renoir)- TV movie
  • Comanche Station (Jan. 31, 1960, Budd Boetticher)
  • Wild River (May 22, 1960, Elia Kazan)
  • Sergeant Rutledge (May 25, 1960, John Ford)
  • 13 Ghosts (July 18, 1960, William Castle)
  • Hell to Eternity (Aug. 1, 1960, Phil Karlson)
  • Black Sunday (Aug. 12, 1960, Mario Bava)
  • Rocco and His Brothers (Sept. 6, 1960, Luchino Visconti)
  • BUtterfield 8 (Nov. 2, 1960, Daniel Mann)
  • The Misfits (Jan. 31, 1961, John Huston)
  • Night Tide (June 20, 1961, Curtis Harrington)
  • Homicidal (June 9, 1961, William Castle)
  • Mr. Sardonicus (Oct. 8, 1961, William Castle)
  • Paris Belongs to Us (Dec. 13, 1961, Jacques Rivette)
  • Jules and Jim (Jan. 23, 1962, François Truffaut)
  • Boccaccio ’70 (Feb. 22, 1962, Vittorio De Sica, Federico Fellini, Mario Monicelli, Luchino Visconti)
  • The Elusive Corporal (May 23, 1962, Jean Renoir)
  • The Fabulous Baron Munchausen (July 1962, Karel Zeman)
  • Bluebeard (Jan. 25, 1963, Claude Chabrol)
  • 13 Frightened Girls (Apr. 18, 1963, William Castle)
  • The Haunted Palace (Aug. 28, 1963, Roger Corman)
  • The V.I.P.s (Sept. 1, 1963, Anthony Asquith)
  • Dementia 13 (Sept. 25, 1963, Francis Ford Coppola)
  • Dog Star Man (1964, Stan Brakhage)
  • Strait-Jacket (Jan. 8, 1964, William Castle)
  • Woman in the Dunes (Feb. 15, 1964, Hiroshi Teshigahara)
  • Diary of a Chambermaid (Mar. 4, 1964, Luis Buñuel)
  • Before the Revolution (May 9, 1964, Bernardo Bertolucci)
  • The Masque of Red Death (June 24, 1964, Roger Corman)
  • Marnie (July 9, 1964, Alfred Hitchcock)
  • The Train (Sept. 23, 1964, John Frankenheimer)
  • Cheyenne Autumn (Oct. 3, 1964, John Ford)
  • 36 Hours (Nov. 26, 1964, George Seaton)
  • The Hill (May 22, 1965, Sidney Lumet)
  • The Sandpiper (June 23, 1965, Vincente Minnelli)
  • Mickey One (Sept. 1, 1965, Arthur Penn)
  • Bunny Lake Is Missing (Oct. 3, 1965, Otto Preminger)
  • The Round-Up (Jan. 6, 1966, Miklós Jancsó)
  • The Chase (Feb. 17, 1966, Arthur Penn)
  • Masculin Féminin (Mar. 22, 1966, Jean-Luc Godard)
  • Seconds (May 16, 1966, John Frankenheimer)
  • Torn Curtain (July 14, 1966, Alfred Hitchcock)
  • Les créatures (Sept. 3, 1966, Agnès Varda)
  • The Deadly Bees (Dec. 23, 1966, Freddie Francis)
  • The Oldest Profession (Apr. 7, 1967, Claude Autant-Lara, Mauro Bolognini, Philippe de Broca, Jean-Luc Godard, Franco Indovina, Michael Pfleghar)
  • La Chinoise (July 1967, Jean-Luc Godard)
  • King Kong Escapes (July 22, 1967, Ishirô Honda)
  • Oedipus Rex (Sept. 3, 1967, Pier Paolo Pasolini)
  • Far from the Madding Crowd (Oct. 16, 1967, John Schlesinger)
  • The Story of a Three-Day Pass (Oct. 21, 1967, Melvin Van Peebles)
  • Reflections in a Golden Eye (Oct. 11, 1967, John Huston)
  • The Comedians (Oct. 31, 1967, Peter Glenville)
  • Berserk (Nov. 1967, Jim O’Connolly)
  • The Red and the White (Nov. 4, 1967, Miklós Jancsó)
  • Weekend (Dec. 29, 1967, Jean-Luc Godard)
  • The Belle Star Story (Mar. 15, 1968, Piero Cristofani, Lina Wertmüller)
  • The Bride Wore Black (Mar. 22, 1968, François Truffaut)
  • Witchfinder General (May 15, 1968, Michael Reeves)
  • Hang ‘Em High (May 31, 1968, Ted Post)
  • The Devil Rides Out (July 20, 1968, Terence Fisher)
  • Stolen Kisses (Aug. 14, 1968, François Truffaut)
  • Teorema (Sept. 5, 1968, Pier Paolo Pasolini)
  • The Birthday Party (Dec. 9, 1968, William Friedkin)
  • The Night They Raided Minsky’s (Dec. 21, 1968, William Friedkin)
  • L’amour fou (Jan. 15, 1969, Jacques Rivette)
  • The Confrontation (Feb. 6, 1969, Miklós Jancsó)
  • Winter Wind (May 1969, Miklós Jancsó)
  • Mississippi Mermaid (June 18, 1969, François Truffaut)
  • Porcile (Aug. 30, 1969, Pier Paolo Pasolini)
  • Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (Sept. 17, 1969, Paul Mazursky)
  • Lions Love (… and Lies) (Sept. 20, 1969, Agnès Varda)
  • Medea (Dec. 28, 1969, Pier Paolo Pasolini)
  • Watermelon Man (May 27, 1970, Melvin Van Peebles)
  • The Clowns (Aug. 30, 1970, Federico Fellini)
  • Lovefilm (Aug. 30, 1970, István Szabó)
  • Bed & Board (Sept. 1, 1970, François Truffaut)
  • The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (Oct. 29, 1970, Billy Wilder)
  • Cold Turkey (Feb. 19, 1971, Norman Lear)
  • Death in Venice (Mar. 1, 1971, Luchino Visconti)
  • The Abominable Dr. Phibes (May 18, 1971, Robert Fuest)
  • Drive, He Said (May 24, 1971, Jack Nicholson)
  • Emitaï (July 1971, Ousmane Sembène)
  • Sunday Bloody Sunday (July 1, 1971, John Schlesinger)
  • The Devils (July 16, 1971, Ken Russell)
  • The Last Movie (Aug. 29, 1971, Dennis Hopper)
  • A Safe Place (Oct. 15, 1971, Henry Jaglom)
  • The Seduction of Mimi (Feb. 19, 1972, Lina Wertmüller)
  • Red Psalm (Mar. 9, 1972, Miklós Jancsó)
  • Fat City (May 12, 1972, John Huston)
  • Shaft’s Big Score! (June 20, 1972, Gordon Parks)
  • Don’t Torture a Duckling (Sept. 29, 1972, Lucio Fulci)
  • The King of Marvin Gardens (Oct. 12, 1972, Bob Rafelson)
  • What the Peeper Saw (Oct. 14, 1972, James Kelley, Andrea Bianchi)
  • Slap the Monster on Page One (Oct. 19, 1972, Marco Bellocchio)
  • Eight Hours Don’t Make a Day (Oct. 29, 1972 – Mar. 18, 1973, Rainer Werner Fassbinder)- TV mini-series
  • Don’t Play Us Cheap (Dec. 11, 1972, Melvin Van Peebles)
  • Love & Anarchy (Feb. 22, 1973, Lina Wertmüller)
  • Schlock (Apr. 11, 1973, John Landis)
  • The Day of the Jackal (May 16, 1973, Fred Zinnemann)
  • The Mother and the Whore (May 17, 1973, Jean Eustache)
  • Female Prisoner Scorpion: Beast Stable (July 29, 1973, Shun’ya Itô)
  • Charley Varrick (Sept. 15, 1973, Don Siegel)
  • World on a Wire (Oct. 14, 1973, Rainer Werner Fassbinder)- TV mini-series
  • The Optimists of Nine Elms (Oct. 18, 1973, Anthony Simmons)
  • Magnum Force (Dec. 13, 1973, Ted Post)
  • Papillon (Dec. 16, 1973, Franklin J. Schaffner)
  • Female Prisoner Scorpion: #701’s Grudge Song (Dec. 29, 1973, Yasuharu Hasebe)
  • All Screwed Up (Feb. 21, 1974, Lina Wertmüller)
  • Céline and Julie Go Boating (May 1974, Jacques Rivette)
  • Arabian Nights (May 20, 1974, Pier Paolo Pasolini)
  • Lady Snowblood 2: Love Song of Vengeance (June 15, 1974, Toshiya Fujita)
  • The Phantom of Liberty (Sept. 11, 1974, Luis Buñuel)
  • Seizure (Nov. 15, 1974, Oliver Stone)
  • Electra, My Love (Dec. 12, 1974, Miklós Jancsó)
  • The Dragon Tamers (Mar. 15, 1975, John Woo)
  • Night Moves (March 18, 1975, Arthur Penn)
  • Hester Street (Mar. 19, 1975, Joan Micklin Silver)
  • Fox and His Friends (May 15, 1975, Rainer Werner Fassbinder)
  • Daguerrotypes (June 24, 1975, Agnès Varda)
  • The Giant Spider Invasion (Oct. 1975, Bill Rebane)
  • The Story of Adele H (Oct. 8, 1975, François Truffaut)
  • The Man Who Would Be King (Nov. 27, 1975, John Huston)
  • The Killer Elite (Dec. 17, 1975, Sam Peckinpah)
  • Next Stop, Greenwich Village (Feb. 4, 1976, Paul Mazursky)
  • Family Plot (Mar. 21, 1976, Alfred Hitchcock)
  • The Outlaw Josey Wales (June 26, 1976, Clint Eastwood)
  • Fellini’s Casanova (Dec. 7, 1976, Federico Fellini)
  • The Enforcer (Dec. 16, 1976, James Fargo)
  • One Sings, the Other Doesn’t (Mar. 9, 1977, Agnès Varda)
  • Ceddo (May 17, 1977, Ousmane Sembène)
  • A Tale of Sorrow and Sadness (May 21, 1977, Seijun Suzuki)
  • That Obscure Object of Desire (Aug. 17, 1977, Luis Buñuel)
  • Julia (Oct. 2, 1977, Fred Zinnemann)
  • Pretty Baby (Jan. 1, 1978, Louis Malle)
  • Straight Time (Mar. 17, 1978, Ulu Grosbard)
  • Convoy (June 10, 1978, Sam Peckinpah)
  • Goin’ South (Oct. 6, 1978, Jack Nicholson)
  • Phantasm (Jan. 1979, Don Coscarelli)
  • Love on the Run (Jan. 24, 1979, François Truffaut)
  • Hardcore (Feb. 9, 1979, Paul Schrader)
  • Woyzeck (May 25, 1979, Werner Herzog)
  • Thirst (Sept. 28, 1979, Rod Hardy)
  • Tess (Oct. 25, 1979, Roman Polanski)
  • Lupin III: The Castle of Cagliostro (Dec. 15, 1979)
  • Cute Girl (1980, Hsiao-Hsien Hou)
  • American Gigolo (Feb. 1, 1980, Paul Schrader)
  • The Changeling (Mar. 26, 1980, Peter Medak)
  • The Stunt Man (June 27, 1980, Richard Rush)
  • The Falls (Nov. 19, 1980, Peter Greenaway)
  • Cutter’s Way (Mar. 20, 1981, Ivan Passer)
  • Mur murs (May 17, 1981, Agnès Varda)
  • Deadly Blessing (Aug. 14, 1981, Wes Craven)
  • Prince of the City (Aug. 19, 1981, Sidney Lumet)
  • Lola (Aug. 20, 1981, Rainer Werner Fassbinder)
  • Documenteur (Sept. 13, 1981, Agnès Varda)
  • Veronkia Voss (Feb. 18, 1982, Rainer Werner Fassbinder)
  • The Verdict (Dec. 7, 1982, Sidney Lumet)
  • And the Ship Sails On (Sept. 10, 1983, Federico Fellini)
  • Sudden Impact (Dec. 8, 1983, Clint Eastwood)
  • Christine (Dec. 9, 1983, John Carpenter)
  • Boy Meets Girl (May 1984, Leos Carax)
  • Where the Green Ants Dream (May 1984, Werner Herzog)
  • Threads (Sept. 23, 1984, Mick Jackson)- TV movie
  • Silent Night, Deadly Night (Nov. 9, 1984, Charles E. Seillier Jr.)
  • Heroes Shed No Tears (Nov. 30, 1984, John Woo)
  • Starman (December 14, 1984, John Carpenter)
  • Birdy (Dec. 21, 1984, Alan Parker)
  • Lifeforce (June 21, 1985, Tobe Hooper)
  • A Zed & Two Noughts (Oct. 4, 1985, Peter Greenaway)
  • Bumpkin Soup (Nov. 3, 1985, Kiyoshi Kurosawa)
  • Gardens of Stone (Apr. 24, 1987, Francis Ford Coppola)
  • Intervista (May 18, 1987, Federico Fellini)
  • Prince of Darkness (Oct. 21, 1987, John Carpenter)
  • Cobra Verde (Dec. 3, 1987, Werner Herzog)
  • Kung-Fu Master! (Feb. 1988, Agnès Varda)
  • Jane B. par Agnès V. (Mar. 2, 1988, Agnès Varda)
  • Salaam Bombay! (May 1988, Mira Nair)
  • Killer Klowns from Outer Space (May 27, 1988, Stephen Chiodo)
  • Midnight Run (July 11, 1988, Martin Brest)
  • Police Story 2 (Aug. 13, 1988, Jackie Chan)
  • Things Change (Aug. 31, 1988, David Mamet)
  • Rain Man (Dec. 12, 1988, Barry Levinson)
  • Talk Radio (Dec. 23, 1988, Oliver Stone)
  • Resurrected (Feb. 1989, Paul Greengrass)
  • Winter’s Child (Feb. 15, 1989, Olivier Assayas)
  • Dekalog (May 16, 1989, Krzysztof Kieślowski)
  • The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover (Sept. 4, 1989, Peter Greenaway)
  • I Want to Go Home (Sept. 7, 1989, Alain Resnais)
  • Vincent & Theo (Apr. 27, 1990, Robert Altman)
  • Presumed Innocent (July 25, 1990, Alan J. Pakula)
  • Dances with Wolves: Extended Edition (Oct. 19, 1990, Kevin Costner)
  • Echoes From a Somber Empire (Nov. 28, 1990, Werner Herzog)
  • Days of Being Wild (December 15, 1990, Kar-Wai Wong)
  • Proof (May 1991, Jocelyn Moorhouse)
  • Jacquot de Nantes (May 15, 1991, Agnès Varda)
  • Orlando (Sept. 1, 1991, Sally Potter)
  • JFK (Dec. 19, 1991, Oliver Stone)
  • Light Sleeper (Jan. 24, 1992, Paul Schrader)
  • Color Adjustment (Jan. 29, 1992, Marlon Riggs)
  • My Cousin Vinny (Mar. 13, 1992, Jonathan Lynn)
  • The Sentinel (May 20, 1992, Arnaud Desplechin)
  • Bitter Moon (July 12, 1992, Roman Polanski)
  • Bram Stoker’s Dracula (Nov. 10, 1992, Francis Ford Coppola)
  • Grey Knight (Mar. 7, 1993, George Hickenlooper)
  • King of the Hill (May 19, 1993, Steven Soderbergh)
  • Menace II Society (May 26, 1993, Albert and Allen Hughes)
  • Totally F***ed Up (Sept. 16, 1993, Gregg Araki)
  • The Young Girls Turn 25 (Oct. 1993, Agnès Varda)
  • Shadowlands (Dec. 25, 1993, Richard Attenborough)
  • Four Weddings and a Funeral (Jan. 20, 1994, Mike Newell)
  • To Live (May 17, 1994, Yimou Zhang)
  • Barcelona (June 1994, Whit Stillman)
  • Chungking Express (July 14, 1994, Kar-Wai Wong)
  • Eat Drink Man Woman (Aug. 3, 1994, Ang Lee)
  • Oleanna (Oct. 1994, David Mamet)
  • One Hundred and One Nights (Jan. 25, 1995, Agnès Varda)
  • The Doom Generation (Jan. 26, 1995, Gregg Araki)
  • The World of Jacques Demy (Mar. 14, 1995, Agnès Varda)
  • The Convent (May 1995, Manoel de Oliveira)
  • Desperado (May 1995, Robert Rodriguez)
  • Shanghai Triad (May 1995, Yimou Zhang)
  • Apollo 13 (June 12, 1995, Ron Howard)
  • Fallen Angels (Sept. 6, 1995, Kar-Wai Wong)
  • Beautiful Thing (Mar. 28, 1996, Hettie Macdonald)
  • Mission: Impossible (May 20, 1996, Brian De Palma)
  • In the Company of Men (Jan. 19, 1997, Neil LaBute)
  • Touch (Feb. 14, 1997, Paul Schrader)
  • Donnie Brasco (Feb. 24, 1997, Mike Newell)
  • Booty Call (Feb. 26, 1997, Jeff Pollack)
  • Nowhere (May 9, 1997, Gregg Araki)
  • The Eel (May 12, 1997, Shôhei Imamura)
  • Little Dieter Needs to Fly (Aug. 29, 1997, Werner Herzog)
  • Live Flesh (Oct. 10, 1997, Pedro Almodóvar)
  • High Art (Jan. 21, 1998, Lisa Cholodenko)
  • The Gingerbread Man (Jan. 23, 1998, Robert Altman)
  • Primary Colors (Mar. 20, 1998, Mike Nichols)
  • Blackjack (May 12, 1998, John Woo)- TV movie
  • Slums of Beverly Hills (May 21, 1998, Tamara Jenkins)
  • Out of Sight (June 26, 1998, Steven Soderbergh)
  • After Life (Sept. 11, 1998, Kore-eda Hirokazu)
  • Without Limits (Sept. 11, 1998, Robert Towne)
  • SLC Punk! (Sept. 24, 1998, James Merendino)
  • My Best Fiend (May 17, 1999, Werner Herzog)
  • A Visitor from the Living (July 26, 1999, Claude Lanzmann)
  • Forever Mine (Sept. 12, 1999, Paul Schrader)
  • Any Given Sunday (Dec. 16, 1999, Oliver Stone)
  • Erin Brockovich (Mar. 14, 2000, Steven Soderbergh)
  • Virgin Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors (Apr. 28, 2000, Sang-soo Hong)
  • Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (May 18, 2000, Ang Lee)
  • Mission: Impossible II (May 18, 2000, John Woo)
  • The House of Mirth (Aug. 5, 2000, Terence Davies)
  • The Cell (Aug. 17, 2000, Tarsem Singh)
  • Before Night Falls (Sept. 3, 2000, Julian Schnabel)
  • The Gift (Dec. 18, 2000, Sam Raimi)
  • My First Mister (Jan. 18, 2001, Christine Lahti)
  • L.I.E. (Jan. 20, 2001, Michael Cuesta)
  • Waking Life (Jan. 23, 2001, Richard Linklater)
  • ABC Africa (May 5, 2001, Abbas Kiarostami)
  • Sobibór, October 14, 1943, 4 p.m. (May 13, 2001, Claude Lanzmann)
  • In Praise of Love (May 15, 2001, Jean-Luc Godard)
  • Va Savoir (Who Knows?) (May 16, 2001, Jacques Rivette)
  • Invincible (Sept. 3, 2001, Werner Herzog)
  • The Lady and the Duke (Sept. 7, 2001, Éric Rohmer)
  • Dead or Alive: Final (Jan. 1, 2002, Takashi Miike)
  • Hysterical Blindness (Jan. 16, 2002, Mira Nair)- TV movie
  • Dark Water (Jan. 19, 2002, Hideo Nakata)
  • The Man Without a Past (Mar. 1, 2002, Aki Kaurismäki)
  • Morvern Callar (May 19, 2002, Lynne Ramsey)
  • The Pianist (May 24, 2002, Roman Polanski)
  • Together (Sept. 10, 2002, Kaige Chen)
  • The Gleaners & I: Two Years Later (Dec. 18, 2002, Agnès Varda)
  • Hulk (June 17, 2003, Ang Lee)
  • Wheel of Time (Aug. 29, 2003, Werner Herzog)
  • The Dreamers (Sept. 1, 2003, Bernardo Bertolucci)
  • Casa de los babys (Sept. 5, 2003, John Sayles)
  • Baadasssss! (Sept. 7, 2003, Mario Van Peebles)
  • Love Actually (Sept. 7, 2003, Richard Curtis)
  • The Company (Sept. 8, 2003, Robert Altman)
  • Tarnation (Oct. 19, 2003, Jonathan Caouette)
  • Café Lumière (Dec. 10, 2003, Hsiao-Hsien Hou)
  • Clean (Mar. 27, 2004, Olivier Assayas)
  • Nobody Knows (May 13, 2004, Hirokazu Koreeda)
  • Woman Is the Future of Man (May 14, 2004, Sang-soo Hong)
  • 2046 (May 20, 2004, Kar-Wai Wong)
  • The Manchurian Candidate (July 19, 2004, Jonathan Demme)
  • Born to Fight (Aug. 5, 2004, Panna Rittikrai)
  • Silver City (Aug. 27, 2004, John Sayles)
  • A Hole in My Heart (Sept. 10, 2004, Lukas Moodysson)
  • …A Father… A Son… Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2005, Lee Grant)- TV documentary
  • The Beat That My Heart Skipped (Feb. 17, 2005, Jacques Audiard)
  • Tale of Cinema (May 19, 2005, Sang-soo Hong)
  • Into Great Silence (Sept. 4, 2005, Philip Gröning)
  • The Wild Blue Yonder (Sept. 5, 2005, Werner Herzog)
  • Evil (Sept. 24, 2005, Giorgos Nousias)
  • Lights in the Dusk (Feb. 3, 2006, Aki Kaurismäki)
  • Container (Feb. 10, 2006, Lukas Moodysson)
  • Mission: Impossible III (April 24, 2006, J.J. Abrams)
  • The Beales of Grey Gardens (July 21, 2006, Albert and David Maysles)
  • Private Fears in Public Places (Sept. 2, 2006, Alain Resnais)
  • The History Boys (Oct. 2, 2006, Nicholas Hytner)
  • Curse of the Golden Flower (Dec. 14, 2006, Yimou Zhang)
  • The Walker (Feb. 13, 2007, Paul Schrader)
  • Youth Without Youth (Oct. 20, 2007, Francis Ford Coppola)
  • Prince of Broadway (June 22, 2008, Sean Baker)
  • The Beaches of Agnès (Sept. 3, 2008, Agnès Varda)
  • Mammoth (Jan. 19, 2009, Lukas Moodysson)
  • St. Nick (Mar. 15, 2009, David Lowery)
  • My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done (Sept. 6, 2009, Werner Herzog)
  • Livid (Sept. 11, 2011, Alexandre Bustillo, Julien Maury)
  • Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol (Dec. 4, 2011, Brad Bird)
  • Agnès Varda: From Here to There (Dec. 19, 2011, Agnès Varda)
  • Charlie Victor Romeo (Jan. 21, 2013, Robert Berger, Patrick Daniels, Karlyn Michelson)
  • Nymphomaniac: Vol. I and II: Director’s Cut (Feb. 9, 2014, Lars von Trier)
  • Coming Home (May 16, 2014, Yimou Zhang)
  • Upsidedown Cross (Sept. 25, 2014, William Hellfire)
  • Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation (2015, Christopher McQuarrie)
  • Snowden (July 21, 2016, Oliver Stone)
  • Scarred Hearts (Aug. 7, 2016, Radu Jude)
  • I Do Not Care If We Go Down in History as Barbarians (July 2, 2018, Radu Jude)
  • Mission: Impossible – Fallout (July 12, 2018, Christopher McQuarrie)
  • Varda by Agnès (Feb. 13, 2019, Agnès Varda)
  • First Love (May 17, 2019, Takashi Miike)
  • Domino (May 30, 2019, Brian De Palma)
  • Uppercase Print (Feb. 21, 2020, Radu Jude)
  • Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One (2023, Christopher McQuarrie)

On this date- June 2

Today Charles Haid is 75, Jerry Mathers is 70, Navid Negahban and Beetlejuice are 50, and Dominic Cooper and Justin Long are 40. Today is also the birthday of Dana Carvey, Zachary Quinto, Stacy Keach, Charlie Watts, Dennis Haysbert, Wentworth Miller, Morena Baccarin, Liam Cunningham, Wayne Brady, Sally Kellerman, James Ransone, Dr. Cornel West, Joanna Gleason, A.J. Styles, Lasse Hallström, Kevin Feige, Lisandro Alonso, and the late Johnny Weissmuller, Marvin Hamlisch, Thomas Hardy, Marquis de Sade, Milo O’Shea, Max Showalter, Chief John Big Tree, Bruno S., and Lotte Reiniger. Jean Hersholt died 62 years ago in 1956 at age 69. George S. Kaufman died 57 years ago in 1961 at age 71. Leo Gorcey died 49 years ago in 1969 at age 51. Stephen Boyd died 41 years ago in 1977 at age 45. Jim Hutton died 39 years ago in 1979 at age 45. Rex Harrison and Jack Gilford died 28 years ago in 1990. Harrison was 82. Gilford was 81. Imogene Coca died 17 years ago in 2001 at age 92. Mel Ferrer and Bo Diddley died ten years ago in 2008. Ferrer was 90. Diddley was 79. Richard Dawson and Kathryn Joosten died six years ago in 2012. Dawson was 79. Joosten was 72. Peter Sallis died one year ago in 2017 at age 96.

On this date- June 1

Today is the birthday of Morgan Freeman, Amy Schumer, Brian Cox, Alanis Morissette, Ronnie Wood, Tom Holland, Jonathan Pryce, Rene Auberjonois, Pat Boone, Richard Erdman, Paula Malcomson, Teri Polo, Sarah Wayne Callies, Rick Gomez, Heidi Klum, Gareth Edwards, and the late Marilyn Monroe, Andy Griffith, Powers Boothe, Edward Woodward, Cleavon Little, Frank Morgan, and Aubrey Morris. Leslie Howard died 75 years ago in 1943 at age 50. Adolf Eichmann was hanged 56 years ago in 1962 at age 56. Helen Keller died fifty years ago in 1968 at age 87.

On this date- May 31

Today Sharon Gless and Joe Namath are 75. Today is also the birthday of Clint Eastwood, Colin Farrell, Brooke Shields, Tom Berenger, Chris Elliott, Lea Thompson, Susie Essman, Paolo Sorrentino, Eric Christian Olsen, Jonathan Tucker, Sebastian Koch, and the late Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Don Ameche, Walt Whitman, Denholm Elliott, Jim Hutton, Alida Valli, Fred Allen, John Bonham, Jack Holt, Barbara Pepper, Madge Blake, and Menahem Golan. William Castle died 41 years ago in 1977 at age 63. Jean Stapleton died five years ago in 2013 at age 90.

On this date- May 30

Today Jimmy Lydon is 95, Agnès Varda is 90, and Ted McGinley is 60. Today is also the birthday of Keir Dullea, Idina Menzel, Ruta Lee, Stephen Tobolowsky, Colm Meaney, Michael J. Pollard, Wynonna Judd, CeeLo Green, Duncan Jones, Antoine Fuqua, Ryûhei Kitamura, and the late Mel Blanc, Howard Hawks, Hugh Griffith, Clint Walker, Benny Goodman, Douglas Fowley, Franklin J. Schaffner, Meredith MacRae, Stepin Fetchit (Lincoln Theodore Monroe Andrew Perry), Irving Thalberg, Christine Jorgensen, and Jamie Uys. Dooley Wilson died 65 years ago in 1953 at age 67. Claude Rains died 51 years ago in 1967 at age 77. Michel Simon died 43 years ago in 1975 at age 80.