Movies
Was 1971 cinema’s greatest ever year? | Films | Entertainment

Dirty Harry, 1971 (Image: Getty)
What is the greatest year in cinema? There will never be a definitive answer. It’s all subjective of course, because it’s always a question of personal taste and opinion. But, for me, 1971 is indisputably the best ever in movie history. What stands out is the sheer variety of films on offer: what other year gives you Monty Python and Woody Allen, Spaghetti Westerns and Hammer Horror, the Carry On team and Ingmar Bergman?
Historically the year was important, too. It was all change in Hollywood, the end of the studio system. The studios still wielded enormous power, but they were like dinosaurs, out of date and out of time.
Some faced bankruptcy, others were bought out or forced to sell off their backlots to property developers. Box office attendances were down, too, and the old guard couldn’t gauge anymore what audiences wanted to see.
This led to the studio heads giving unprecedented freedom to younger writers and directors to make the kind of films they really wanted to make. This was really the start of what came to be dubbed the “New Hollywood”.
Influenced by the revolutionary new waves of cinema coming out of Europe, this generation of filmmakers gave us movies that were both innovative and morally ambiguous. Take Peter Bogdanovich’s The Last Picture Show, widely regarded as one of the seminal American films of the 70s.
It garnered eight Oscar nominations and helped launch a new generation of stars, notably Jeff Bridges, Cybill Shepherd and Ellen Burstyn. Newsweek acclaimed the film as, “The most impressive work by a young American director since Citizen Kane”.
Conversations about the greatest year in movies often revolve around 1939 and 1999.
Yes, those two years produced iconic pictures; the first including Gone with the Wind, Stagecoach and The Wizard of Oz; while the second turned out such films as The Blair Witch Project, Fight Club and The Matrix.
1971 cult classic A Clockwork Orange (Image: Getty)
Yet 1971 also gave us Hal Ashby’s kooky Harold and Maude, Robert Altman’s revisionist western McCabe & Mrs Miller and Alan J Pakula’s superior thriller Klute. And what may be most striking about 1971 is just how many firsts there were.
George Lucas made his debut feature with THX 1138, a chilly dystopian vision of the future that is worlds away from Star Wars. Steven Spielberg made his feature debut, too, with Duel, about a monstrous truck terrorising a motorist. It aired as an ABC Movie of the Week in America and received a theatrical release in Europe.
Spielberg felt a strong emotional resonance to the material and the driver’s predicament – this feeling of being victimised – having been bullied as a kid at school for being Jewish. He has since said Duel was his life in the schoolyard. The truck was the bully and he was the car.
Other directors making their film debuts included Stephen Frears, with Gumshoe, and Mike Leigh with Bleak Moments. Monty Python made their first foray into cinema with their ‘greatest hits’ sketch film And Now For Something Completely Different.
Back on the other side of the Atlantic, actors Jack Nicholson and Clint Eastwood moved behind the camera for the first time. The latter’s directorial debut, Play Misty for Me, a thriller about a psychotic ex-girlfriend who stalks her former lover, hinted at his capabilities. Eastwood has subsequently directed more than 40 pictures. Nicholson’s time behind the camera, with Drive, He Said, was less successful.
It was a busy year for Eastwood in front of the camera, too, with The Beguiled and Dirty Harry both released in 1971. Playing San Francisco police detective Harry Callahan, the latter spawned a five-film franchise, and some of the most quotable movie lines in history: “Do you feel lucky, punk?” and “Go ahead, make my day.”
Harry’s on-screen arrival came just two months after the introduction of another infamous cop, Gene Hackman’s Jimmy ‘Popeye’ Doyle in The French Connection.
William Friedkin’s seminal police drama deservedly won the Oscar as the best film of 1971. Hackman also ended up with an Academy Award as best actor, although he had real problems with the darker aspects of the character, based on a real New York cop.
At one point he quit the production, only to be talked into returning by his agent.
The French Connection, 1971 (Image: Getty)
Hollywood legend Bruce Lee in 1971 (Image: Getty)
In Melvin van Peebles’s landmark independent movie, Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song, the police are painted as a force of oppressive white supremacist power.
This film’s extraordinary success, combined with Gordon Parks’ Shaft, starring Richard Roundtree as a black private eye, initiated the Blaxploitation genre. There was a boom in martial arts pictures, too, in 1971, after the financial success of Bruce Lee’s first starring role in The Big Boss.
Films like Dirty Harry and the violent cinematic image of Bruce Lee caused consternation to many. By the late 60s and early 70s, filmmakers were no longer constrained by the shackles of censorship and were pushing the limits of sex and violence.
1971 was truly the year of savage cinema. Sam Peckinpah’s Straw Dogs, with its notorious rape scene, was called “The first American film that is a fascist work of art” by noted American critic Pauline Kael.
Ken Russell unleashed his possessed nuns in The Devils, and burnt poor old Oliver Reed at the stake, to boot. Stanley Kubrick brought Anthony Burgess’ urban parasites the Droogs to life in A Clockwork Orange. And Michael Caine’s London gangster was seen tearing up the criminal fraternity of Newcastle in Get Carter. Is it any wonder that by the end of the year the British censor announced his retirement?
1971 turned out to be a sparkling year for British pictures, the last for quite some time as the industry sank into financial recession and did not pick itself up again until the 1980s. We have not one, but six Hammer horror films, two Carry On comedies and the big screen outing for that most beloved of all television sitcoms Dad’s Army.
The original Charlie and the Chocolate factory, 1971 (Image: Getty)
Fiddler on the Roof, 1971 (Image: Getty)
Nicolas Roeg made his first solo film as a director with the visually arresting Walkabout. John Schlesinger brought us the daring Sunday Bloody Sunday, while Joseph Losey’s period drama The Go-Between won the top prize at that year’s Cannes Film Festival.
Roman Polanski was up to his ankles in blood making his version of Shakespeare’s Macbeth on location in Wales, and falling behind schedule.
When the backers pulled out, Polanski’s friend Hugh Hefner flew over in his bunny jet and Playboy picked up the tab. Fortunately, the Playboy club in London was doing tremendous business and sacks of money kept coming down every week to pay the salaries of the crew.
Other European auteurs saw their films released in 1971, including Luchino Visconti’s Death in Venice, François Truffaut’s Les Deux Anglaises et le Continent, Pier Paolo Pasolini’s The Decameron, Louis Malle’s Murmur of the Heart, and a couple in the murder-mystery Giallo genre from Dario Argento.
Sergio Leone also made his final western, A Fistful of Dynamite, while there was an early work from the enfant terrible of German cinema, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, as well as the first English-language film from the master Ingmar Bergman.
Other highlights of the year include the film version of the musical Fiddler on the Roof. Music was a high point of Disney’s big release that year, the evergreen Bedknobs and Broomsticks. Sean Connery made his final appearance as James Bond in the official series with Diamonds Are Forever. And Jacques Tati bid farewell to his comic creation Mr Hulot.
And, bizarrely, there was a film financed by the Quaker company simply because they wanted to promote a new chocolate bar. Ironically the chocolate bar did not prove a success but the film, Willy Wonka and The Chocolate Factory, became a classic.
Rather like 1971 itself. In the 52 years since then, just like a fine wine, the year and the films it gave birth to, have improved with age.
- 1971: 100 Films from Cinema’s Greatest Year by Robert Sellers (History Press, £20) is published on August 31. To, pre-order, visit expressbookshop.com or call 020 3176 3832. Free UK P&P on orders over £25
Movies
‘Out of this world’ action movie is on 2 streaming platforms – not Netflix | Films | Entertainment

Heat: Robert De Niro and Al Pacino star in 1995 trailer
Val Kilmer sadly died earlier this month, leaving behind an incredible movie back catalogue.
According to film fans on IMDb, his greatest movie was Michael Mann’s iconic crime thriller Heat.
The 1995 movie stars Al Pacino and Robert De Niro as an LAPD detective chasing a career thief.
Kilmer plays the villainous Chris Shiherlis, a crew member in that incredible heist sequence.
Read more… Val Kilmer fans learning something epic about his iconic Heat heist scene [LATEST]
‘Out of this world’ action movie is on 2 streaming platforms – not Netflix (Image: WB)
Heat is streaming now on Amazon Prime Video and Disney+.
Movies
‘Best movie of all time’ is now streaming on Netflix | Films | Entertainment

Widely considered one of the greatest films ever made, one 1981 fast-paced, adventurous, and visually striking action film set the standard for the modern blockbuster.
In the early 1970s, George Lucas was inspired by the adventure serials of the 1930s and ’40s, and envisioned a modern tribute to those episodic cliffhangers – now featuring an adventurous archaeologist in the lead role.
He developed the idea further with screenwriter Philip Kaufman, who suggested the Ark of the Covenant – a legendary biblical artifact – as the central object of the story.
Lucas paused work on the project to focus on his groundbreaking 1977 classic Star Wars. After Star Wars became a worldwide success, he revisited the previous concept and pitched it to Steven Spielberg, who was interested in making a film in the style of a James Bond adventure.
Then, in 1981, Raiders of the Lost Ark introduced the world to Indiana Jones – the fedora-wearing archaeologist who became one of cinema’s most remarkable characters – with the help of screenwriter Lawrence Kasdan and actor Harrison Ford, who had previously played Han Solo in Star Wars.
Set in 1936, Raiders of the Lost Ark follows Dr. Indiana Jones, who is recruited by the U.S. government to find the Ark of the Covenant before it falls into the hands of the Nazis.
The film opens in the jungles of South America, where Jones retrieves a golden idol from a heavily booby-trapped temple, only to be betrayed by a guide and outwitted by his rival, French archaeologist René Belloq.
Back in the U.S., he is briefed by Army intelligence officials who inform him that the Nazis are searching for the lost city of Tanis in Egypt, believed to contain the Ark – a sacred chest said to house the stone tablets of the Ten Commandments.
To find the Ark, Jones must track down an artifact known as the headpiece to the Staff of Ra, which is in the possession of Marion Ravenwood, the daughter of his former mentor – and his former lover.
The middle of the film is packed with action scenes, including fights, chases, shootouts, and a memorable sequence involving a pit of snakes in the Well of Souls, the burial place of the Ark.
Raiders of the Lost Ark was an immediate commercial and critical success upon its release in June 1981, and became the highest-grossing film of the year, earning more than $300 million worldwide.
It was nominated for nine Academy Awards and won five, including Best Art Direction, Best Film Editing, Best Sound, Best Visual Effects, and a Special Achievement Award for sound effects editing.
It was also audiences’ introduction to the franchise that would follow, which includes The Temple of Doom (1984), The Last Crusade (1989), The Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008), and The Dial of Destiny (2023), as well as books, video games, and merchandise.
The first Indiana Jones movie has been consistently ranked among the greatest films of all time by critics, filmmakers, and audiences alike. In 1999, the film was selected for preservation in the U.S. National Film Registry by the Library of Congress, being deemed “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant”, and its influence can be seen in action-adventure films for decades afterward, and it helped shape the format for many Hollywood blockbusters that followed.
Raiders of the Lost Ark is now available to stream on Netflix.
Movies
Filming the new Harry Potter TV remake in England will boost our economy | Films | Entertainment

Studio chiefs at Warner Brothers believe costs for the lavish production – which will be shot entirely in Britain – are likely to soar as high as a record-breaking £75million per episode. With plans for seven seasons – one for each of JK Rowling’s beloved books – of six episodes each, that would send the overall total to a mind-boggling £3.15billion, making it the most expensive show in television history.
Producers have revealed stars John Lithgow as Albus Dumbledore, Paapa Essiedu as Severus Snape, Janet McTeer as Minerva McGonagall, and Nick Frost as Rubeus Hagrid. Luke Thallon will portray Quirinus Quirrell, and Paul Whitehouse will be Argus Filch. They have also watched 32,000 audition tapes after an open casting call for the roles of Harry, Ron and Hermione, played by Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint and Emma Watson in the film series.
They are expected to announce their choices next month. A senior Hollywood production source confirmed: “There’s no question Harry Potter will become the biggest TV show the world has ever seen – as well as providing an enormous windfall for the UK.” Shooting is due to start this summer at the 200-acre Warner Bros studio complex at Leavesden, Hertfordshire.
The TV adaptation is expected to launch next year across HBO cable and streaming platforms. The source added: “It’s going to generate well-paid jobs for several years as well as ensuring Britain remains one of the world’s most important filming hubs.”
As the Sunday Express revealed in February, so many filmmakers and TV productions are heading to the UK – due to tax incentives and spiralling costs in the US – that it is now dubbed “Hollywood East” in industry circles. Harry Potter on TV, however, will easily be the biggest ever financial juggernaut, with executives believing profits may eclipse the £7.4billion made by the eight films and the Fantastic Beasts spin-offs.
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