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  1. 5 days ago · Paris is a 1929 American pre-Code musical comedy film, featuring Irène Bordoni. It was filmed with Technicolor sequences: four of the film's ten reels were originally photographed in Technicolor. Paris was the fourth color film released by Warner Bros. ; the first three were The Desert Song (although it was only a part-color film), On with the Show , and Gold Diggers of Broadway , all ...

    • The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938) Directors: Michael Curtiz and William Keighley. Often taken for granted as rousing swashbuckling escapism, this celebration of Arcadian storybook pageantry is indisputably a work of cinematic art.
    • The Wizard of Oz (1939) Director: Victor Fleming. According to Hollywood folklore, it was future Citizen Kane screenwriter Herman J. Mankiewicz’s idea for The Wizard of Oz to pass from the sepia of the Kansas sequences to a deep-saturated Technicolor for Dorothy Gale and Toto’s odyssey in Oz.
    • Fantasia (1940) Directors: Ben Sharpsteen, James Algar, Samuel Armstrong, Bill Roberts, Paul Satterfield, Hamilton Luske, Jim Handley, Ford Beebe Jr, T. Hee, Norman Ferguson and Wilfred Jackson.
    • Heaven Can Wait (1943) Director: Ernst Lubitsch. From the opening needlepoint credits, it’s clear we’re in the same Americana territory that Vincente Minnelli would visit a year later in another Technicolor marvel, Meet Me in St Louis.
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    • Vertigo (1958) 1958 was the year of Jimmy Stewart and Kim Novak. They starred in two movies together that year, and one of them was Hitchcock's mystery/thriller Vertigo.
    • Charade (1963) A combination of a thriller and a rom-com, Stanley Donen's Charade might be the most Hitchcock-esque film that was not directed by the Master of Suspense.
    • Rear Window (1954) Another collaboration between Hitchcock and Jimmy Stewart, this time starring Grace Kelly, Rear Window takes place entirely in the living room of one man's apartment.
    • North by Northwest (1959) After being mistaken for a government agent by a group of foreign spies, New York City advertising executive Roger Thornhill (Cary Grant) is forced to go on the run after being framed for murder.
  2. The Last Time I Saw Paris I American Technicolor Film 1954 I

    • 116 min
    • 44
    • Golden Age Groove
  3. This is a list of early feature-length colour films (including primarily black-and-white films that have one or more color sequences) made up to about 1936, when the Technicolor three-strip process firmly established itself as the major-studio favorite.

  4. Paris is a 1929 American pre-Code musical comedy film, featuring Irène Bordoni. It was filmed with Technicolor sequences: four of the film's ten reels were originally photographed in Technicolor.

  5. *Reupload with higher video and audio quality*The 1929 film adaptation of the Broadway musical "Paris" (Cole Porter's first major hit) survives in its entire...

    • 1 min
    • 4.4K
    • The Library of Johngress
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