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Sudden Impact and The Enforcer
Gunman's Walk, from 1958, with Van Heflin and Tab Hunter. Yes, I know, Tab Hunter, but listen: He plays a near-sociopath, the older son of Van Heflin's former Indian fighter turned rancher in the late 1800s of the Dakotas. Hunter's Ed is good-looking, charming when he wants to be, and yet utterly self-absorbed and ruthless. He kills one man, whom he calls a "half-breed," when they are racing to catch a mustang by forcing him (and his horse!) off a cliff. He shoots another, who has testified for him at his hearing, out of not much more than pique (and then grins to the crowd, "Drinks on me!"). He kills an unarmed deputy sheriff as he, Ed, escapes from jail. And at the climax, he squares off against his own father. At no point does he suffer a crisis of conscience or hint that he might learn something and change.
An okay film, but with a very strong performance from Mr. Hunter, who is usually thought of as merely "pretty boy" material.
What Cairo said.
I strongly second that recommendation!! The wife and I really enjoyed this film. What appeared to be a typical "white couple in trouble in the 'burbs" routine matured into something much, much more. If you're a fan of the excellent Joel Edgerton like we are you have to check out Felony and Wish You Were Here. These are both excellent dramas with Edgerton."The Gift" - Great film! Trailered and teased as your typical "mad stalker bedeviling White suburban family" film, it's anything but. The twists and revelations are believable. No one is killed, maimed or tortured (well not physically at least) and the pay off is substantial and real. I can't recommend it more highly!
Worf
While talking about Phillip Barry, let's not forget Holiday, a piece I actually prefer to The Philadelphia Story. Young Johnny Case (Cary Grant in the film) wants to take time off to LIVE first before a lifetime of hard work. This is a shocking, deal-breaking idea to the upper crust in that play/film... but it's essentially the modern "gap year" concept.
Shaun of the Dead (though the spelling of Sean rankles me...).