Jack Clayton
Jack Clayton
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2. Room at the Top (1958)
The protagonist of Jack Clayton's 1958 British film "Room at the Top" faces the same dilemma as many of Ernst Lubitsch's comedic protagonists: a choice between two women. One represents a comfortable, upper class lifestyle (something the protagonist has never had). The other represents a life fully lived (this being the woman he truly loves). Based on the 1957 novel by John Braine, "Room at the Top" and all its dramatic romances ponders the emotional and logistical dancing between economics and love.
1. The Innocents (1961)
Now considered a cult horror classic of British cinema, Jack Clayton's 1961 film "The Innocents" is the third in line in a series of adapted work. It was adapted from a 1950 William Archibald play of the same name, which in turn was adapted from Henry James's famous 1898 novella "The Turn of the Screw." Shrouded in gothic atmosphere, the film's plot revolves around a governess who begins to notice ghostly occurrences and the strange behavior of the orphaned children she caretakes.



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