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History of Film. From 1830 to Today. 1960. The first televised U.S. presidential debates, between Nixon and JFK. Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho is released. Dalton Trumbo receives screen credit for writing the script to Otto Preminger’s Exodus , signaling the end of the HUAC blacklist.
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History of Film From 1830 to Today
1960 • The first televised U.S. presidential debates, between Nixon and JFK. • Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho is released. • Dalton Trumbo receives screen credit for writing the script to Otto Preminger’s Exodus, signaling the end of the HUAC blacklist. • Federico Fellini directs his epic film about modern decadence in Rome, La Dolce vita. • Roger Corman directs the original Little Shop of Horrors, features a young Jack Nicholson.
1961* • First U.S. troops are sent to Vietnam. • The Soviets launch the first man into space. • The Berlin Wall goes up.
1962 • Marilynn Monroe Dies • Andy Warhol exhibits his first Campbell’s soup can paintings. • Telstar, the first communications satellite in orbit, is launched, relaying television pictures from the U.S. to France and England. • Dr. No is the first James Bond movie. • More than 700 foreign films are released in U.S. theatres.
1963 • Federal legislation mandates equal pay for women. • President JFK is assassinated; VP Lyndon Johnson is sworn in. • Betty Friedan publishes The Feminine Mystique. • Martin Luther King Jr. delivers his “I Have a Dream” speech in Washington, D.C. • Shirley Clarke directs her drama of African American life, The Cool World, in Harlem.
1964 • Nelson Mandela is sentenced to life in prison in South Africa. • The Beatles come to the U.S. • Martin Luther King Jr. receives the Nobel Prize. • Sidney Poitier becomes the first African American to win the Academy Award for Best Actor. • Stanley Kubrick’s nightmare comedy, Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.
1965* • The first space walk, on the Gemini 4 mission. • The New York City blackout. • The U.S. sends 3,500 troops to Vietnam. • Malcom X is assassinated in NY.
1966 • “Star Trek” television series premieres. • The Motion Picture Production Code considerably relaxes as the result of such films as Mike Nichols’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? • OusmaneSemene directs Black Girl, the first indigenous African feature film.
1967 • The U.S. and U.S.S.R sign a space demilitarization treaty. • The Six Day War in the Middle East. • Sony introduces a low-cost black-and-white home video recorder, The PortaPak. • Jean-Luc Godard releases his apocalyptic vision of modern society in collapse, Weekend.
1968 • The death of the pioneering woman film director, Alice Guy, goes unnoticed by the general press. • MLK Jr. and RFK are assassinated roughly a month apart. • The Motion Picture Association of America develops a new rating system.
1969 • Charles Manson is arrested for the murder of actress Sharon Tate, the wife of director Roman Polanski, and four others in LA. • The concert at Woodstock draws 400,000 people for three days of music. • Neil Armstrong becomes the first man on the moon. • Sony introduces the videocassette recorder for home use. • Sam Peckinpah’s The Wild Bunch brings a new level of violence to the screen.
1970 • Computer floppy discs are introduced. • Singer Janis Joplin and rock guitarist Jimi Hendrix die. • Earth Day is observed for the first time. • The Beatles break up. • Four students protesting the Vietnam War are killed by National Guard troops at Kent State.
1971 • “All in the Family” debuts on television. • Video cassette recorders are introduced. • Computer Space is the first video arcade game.
1972 • Ms. magazine debuts. • Magnavox introduces Odyssey, the first home video game system; Atari is founded.
1973 • Skylab is launched. • Sears Towers, the tallest building in the world, is built in Chicago. • George Lucas directs American Graffiti.
1974* • Dancer Mikhail Baryshnikov defects from the U.S.S.R. • President Nixon resigns due to the Watergate scandal. • Patty Hearst is kidnapped. • Roman Polanski’s Chinatown is released.
1975 • Jaws premieres and becomes the model for the modern movie blockbuster. • Robert Altman directs the quirky, multi-character film Nashville. • Sony introduces Betamax video recorders for home use.
1976 • VHS home video recording is introduced; it will soon eclipse the Betamax format. • Director BendardoBertolucci’s1900, a tale of political turmoil, is released.
1977* • The mini-series “Roots” airs on tv. • George Lucas’s Star Wars is released. • John Badham’s Saturday Night Fever is a huge hit, signaling the dominance of disco music. • Steven Spielberg releases Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
1978 • “Mork and Mindy” debuts on tv, making an instant star of Robin Williams. • Jim Jones and more than 900 followers commit mass suicide at “Jonestown” in Guyana. • John Carpenter’s Halloween starts a horror movie franchise.
1979 • Sony introduced the Walkman. • Ayatollah Khomeini becomes leader of Iran; revolutionaries take American hostages in Tehran. • Mother Teresa is awarded the Nobel Prize. • The China Syndrome, about the dangers of nuclear reactors, opens just before the Three Mile Island accident in Pennsylvania. • The Australian cinema comes roaring back to prominence with Mad Max, starring Mel Gibson.