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It’s now a cinematic truism, that 1939 was Hollywood’s greatest year. Sure it produced such work as The Wizard of Oz, Gone With Wind, Stagecoach, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, The Women and Ninotchka––admittedly all very good films. But what of the others? The UCLA Film Archive’s “1939 Redux: Digging Deeper Into “Hollywood’s Greatest Year” considers the whole year. The 14-film survey contains some well-known gems, such as Howard Hawks’s stunt-flying thriller Only Angels Have Wings and Busby Berkeley’s musical extravaganza Babes in Arms. But who remembers Remember?, Norman Z. McLeod’s screwball comedy about amnesia and romance. Or Garson Kanin’s The Great Man Votes, a social drama with John Barrymore as a drunken professor who finds himself the last vote in a mayoral election (a plot line picked up by the recent Swing Vote). And what about John Cromwell’s melodrama In Name Only which casts a couple of comedy champs (Cary Grant and Carole Lombard) in a very soapy drama. While these films are not as great as the classic 1939 movies, they make that year all the more loveable.