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Julie Frances Christie is a British actress Born on April 14, 1940. An icon of the “swinging London” era of the 1960s, she has received awards including an Oscar, a Golden Globe, a BAFTA Award, and a Screen Actors Guild Award.
10. Heaven Can Wait (1978).
A rare movie that shines in every department and deserves to be seen again and again. A throwback to the high-gloss screwball comedies of the 1940s, Heaven Can Wait beguiles with seamless production values and great comic relief from Charles Grodin and Dianne Cannon.
9. Billy Liar (1963).
A young Englishman dreams of escaping from his working-class family and a dead-end job as an undertaker’s assistant. A number of indiscretions cause him to lie in order to avoid the penalties. His life turns into a mess and he has an opportunity to run away and leave it all behind.
8. Fahrenheit 451 (1966).
Adaptation of the Ray Bradbury novel about a future society that has banned all reading material and the job of the firemen is to keep the fires at 451 degrees: the temperature that paper burns. A fireman begins to re-think his job when he meets a book-loving girl.
7. McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971).
This is one of the saddest films I have ever seen, filled with a yearning for love and home that will not ever come — not for McCabe, not with Mrs. Miller, not in the town of Presbyterian Church, which cowers under a gray sky always heavy with rain or snow.
6. Far from the Madding Crowd (1967).
Adaptation of a Thomas Hardy novel about a woman and her profound effect on three men. Bathsheba Everdene, a willful, flirtatious, young woman, unexpectedly inherits a large farm and is romantically pursued by three very different men.
5. Away from Her (2006).
A man coping with the institutionalization of his wife because of Alzheimer’s disease faces an epiphany when she transfers her affections to another man, Aubrey, a wheelchair-bound mute who also is a patient at the nursing home.
4. Don’t Look Now (1973).
Still grieving over the accidental death of their daughter, Christine (Sharon Williams), John (Donald Sutherland) and Laura Baxter (Julie Christie) head to Venice, Italy, where John’s been commissioned to restore a church.
3. Darling (1965).
Beautiful but easily bored Diana Scott (Julie Christie) becomes a popular model and actress in London in the 1960s while toying with the affections of two older men, married television newsman Robert Gold (Dirk Bogarde) and public relations mastermind Miles Brand (Laurence Harvey).
2. The Go-Between (1971).
In this period drama, British teenager Leo Colston (Dominic Guard) spends a summer in the countryside, where he develops a crush on the beautiful young aristocrat Marian (Julie Christie). Eager to impress her, Leo becomes the “go-between” for Marian, delivering secret romantic letters to Ted Burgess (Alan Bates), a handsome neighboring farmer.
1. Doctor Zhivago (1965).
The life of a Russian physician and poet who, although married to another, falls in love with a political activist’s wife and experiences hardship during World War I and then the October Revolution. Covers behind-the-scenes shots during the making of David Lean’s ‘Doctor Zhivago’ (1965), which is based on the novel, ‘Doctor Zhivago’ written by Boris Pasternak.