Perhaps conscious of the power of his reviews, Crowther adopted a tone that
New York Times obituarist
Robert D. McFadden considered to be "scholarly rather than breezy". In the 1950s, Crowther was an opponent of Senator
Joseph R. McCarthy, whose
anti-communist crusade targeted the State Department, the administration of
Harry S. Truman, the
U.S. Army, and individual government employees. However, he also criticised the left-wing film
Knock on Any Door for blaming law-abiding society for a juvenile delinquent's descent into murder: "Rubbish! The only shortcoming of society which this film proves is that it casually tolerates the pouring of such fraudulence onto the public mind." Crowther opposed
censorship of movies, and advocated greater social responsibility in the making of them. He approved of movies with social content, such as
Gone with the Wind (1939),
The Grapes of Wrath (1940),
Citizen Kane (1941),
The Lost Weekend (1945), ''
All the King's Men (1949), and High Noon'' (1952). Crowther barely concealed his disdain for
Joan Crawford when reviewing her films, saying that her acting style in
Female on the Beach (1955) was characterized by "artificiality" and "pretentiousness," and also chided Crawford for her physical bearing. In his review of the
Nicholas Ray film
Johnny Guitar (1954), Crowther complained that "no more femininity comes from (Crawford) than from rugged Mr.
Heflin in
Shane (1953). For the lady, as usual, is as sexless as the lions on the public library steps and as sharp and romantically forbidding as a package of unwrapped razor blades". Though his preferences in popular movies were not always predictable, Crowther in general detested action and war films that depicted violence and gunplay. He defended epics such as
Ben-Hur (1959) and
Cleopatra (1963), but gave the
World War II film
The Great Escape (also 1963) a highly unfavorable review, and panned
David Lean's later works. He called
Lawrence of Arabia (1962) a "thundering camel-opera that tends to run down rather badly as it rolls on into its third hour and gets involved with sullen disillusion and political deceit." Crowther often admired foreign-language films, especially the works of
Roberto Rossellini,
Vittorio De Sica,
Ingmar Bergman, and
Federico Fellini. and called
Godzilla (1954) "an incredibly awful film". Crowther dismissed
Alfred Hitchcock's
Psycho (1960) as "a blot on an otherwise honorable career". After other reviewers praised the film, Crowther recanted his criticism and named it one of the top ten movies of the year, writing that
Psycho was a "bold psychological mystery picture.... [I]t represented expert and sophisticated command of emotional development with cinematic techniques." He commented that while
Satyajit Ray's
Pather Panchali (1955; U.S., 1958) took on "a slim poetic form," the structure and tempo of it "would barely pass as a 'rough cut' with editors in Hollywood". Writing about ''
L'Avventura'' (1960; U.S., 1961), Crowther said that watching the film was "like trying to follow a showing of a picture at which several reels have got lost." The career of Bosley Crowther is discussed at length in
For the Love of Movies: The Story of American Film Criticism, including his support for foreign-language cinema and his public repudiation of
McCarthyism and the
Blacklist. In this 2009 documentary film, contemporary critics who appreciate his work, such as
A. O. Scott, appear, but also those who found his work too moralistic, such as
Richard Schickel,
Molly Haskell, and
Andrew Sarris. ==
Bonnie and Clyde criticism==