This Week In Film History, 12.05.10

This Week In Film HistoryDecember 7, 1919: Director/actor Erich von Stroheim, “The Man You Love to Hate,” makes his directorial debut with Blind Husbands.

December 11, 1930: A protest of All Quiet on the Western Front by members of the Nazi Party in Berlin will lead to the banning of the film from Germany.

December 9, 1937: In a poll conducted by gossip columnist Ed Sullivan, Clark Gable (article Dear Mr. Gable) and Myrna Loy are crowned “King and Queen of Hollywood.”

December 8, 1949: Scandal erupts around actress Ingrid Bergman when columnist Hedda Hopper reports she’s pregnant by director Roberto Rossellini.

December 7, 1955: United Artists withdraws from the MPAA over the refusal to grant approval to the drug addiction drama The Man With the Golden Arm.

December 10, 1962: A relatively-unknown Peter O’Toole stars in David Lean‘s highly-anticipated, 70mm epic Lawrence of Arabia, which makes its debut in London today.

December 11, 1963: The Cardinal, the first film released in Panavision 70, a process which enlarges 35mm film to 70mm and is then projected onto a wide screen, debuts.

December 7, 1964: Director Sam Peckinpah is fired by the producer of The Cincinnati Kid for shooting nude scenes that were not written in the script.

December 5, 1976: The first film to take advantage of Garret Brown’s Steadicam, a device which stabilizes handheld cameras, Bound for Glory, is released.

December 10, 1978: Ed Wood Jr. (article: Jail Bait), auteur of such classic turkeys as from Outer Space and Glen or Glenda, dies in Hollywood at the age of 54.

December 6, 1979: A decade after the TV show left the airwaves, Star Trek: The Motion Picture opens and gives new life to the Enterprise crew.

December 8, 1982: Eddie Murphy becomes the latest Saturday Night Live regular to jump to big-screen stardom with the action-comedy 48 Hrs.

December 11, 1991: Despite success with Dances with Wolves and The Silence of the Lambs, Orion Pictures files for bankruptcy protection in federal court.