Word: gored
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Bullfight (Janus Films) is a feature-length European-made documentary which brings to U.S. moviegoers all the blood and gore that Hollywood's code of ethics has denied them. Where Hollywood cameras have averted their gaze because of the bans on scenes of cruelty to animals, Bullfight stares fixedly and spares the viewer no detail of "the moment of truth...
...last the lieutenant managed to wrest the gun from the Red agent and fire a shot into the air. Capitulating immediately, and terrified of official vengeance if he ever got back to Hungary, the agent begged Polyak to shoot him then and there. Polyak refused. Instead, dripping with gore and minus three front teeth, he went forward to the copilot's seat and, holding the agent's gun at the pilot's temple, took charge of the plane. Somewhere in the skirmish he had lost his map, but spotting an airfield and some jeeps in what...
Despite the skimpiness of plot, Adapter Gore Vidal has kept Chayefsky's sharply observed vignettes of Bronx life. Oscar-winning Actor Borgnine, probably the most resourceful character man in films, has no difficulty appearing older than Bette Davis (actually he is 39; she is 48), and his anguish as the hard-earned dollars are squandered is so real it hurts. The Bronx locutions are sometimes too much for Actress Davis, but, as always, she has power to spare in her performance. Barry Fitzgerald, as a crotchety uncle, hams it up and seems to be looking expectantly in each scene...
...Gore group's big argument is the need for haste. Russia plans to build more than 2,000,000 kw. of capacity by 1960. The British expect by 1965 to be operating 12 to 17 atomic power plants with up to 2,000,000 kw. capacity. The U.S., on the other hand, plans to produce only about half that amount...
...reply, Atomic Energy Commission Chairman Lewis L. Strauss last week raised his powerful voice in opposition to the Gore "crash program." Strauss's big point is that the U.S., which has available cheap sources of conventional power, does not need A-power as badly as do some foreign nations ; therefore building reactors just for the prestige would be "shortsighted." What the U.S. needs, says the AEC chief, is to utilize its scarce technical skills in an experimental program to find "reactors which will provide economically competitive power," rather than reactors that probably would be obsolescent before they got into...