In
its day RKO was known for its ability to produce well-crafted,
sometimes artsy or offbeat features using a smaller budget than the
other so-called major studios. Nonetheless, it was almost always in
trouble, financially. RKO stopped making movies in 1953 and eventually
sold its lot and production facilities to television's Desilu
Productions.
In July and August of 1982 the Biograph Theatre's Program No. 60
played out in Theatre No. 1, the larger of the two auditoriums. It was
an unusual program in that all 24 of the feature films were from one company,
RKO, which still operated as a distributor.
The 12 double features in this festival were: Top Hat (1935) and Damsel in Distress (1936); The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939) and The Informer (1935); King Kong (1933) and Mighty Joe Young (1949); Suspicion (1941) and The Live By Night (1948); Sylvia Scarlett (1936) and Mister Blandings Builds His Dream House (1948); Murder My Sweet (1945) and Macao (1952); The Mexican Spitfire (1939) and Room Service (1938); Journey Into Fear (1942) and This Land Is Mine (1943); The Thing (1951) and Cat People (1942); The Boy With Green Hair (1948) and Woman on the Beach (1947); Citizen Kane (1941) and Fort Apache (1948); The Curse of the Cat People (1944) and The Body Snatcher (1945).
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