By Ed Garea
The
latter half of the month promises some enticing tidbits as well as
one of the all-time bad movies starring none other than January’s
TCM Star-of-the-Month Joan Crawford. So let’s get right down to it.
STAR-OF-THE-MONTH JOAN
CRAWFORD
As
Joan’s box office appeal begins to fade in the late ‘30s due to
poor script choices and starring vehicles (by MGM), and being one of
the stars named as “box office poison” by the movie exhibitors in
the late ‘30s, Joan takes her lumps, but then the quality of films
offered her improves and her star rises again, peaking with an
unexpected Oscar win while at Warner Brothers.
January
16: Two gems are mixed in amongst the otherwise mediocre
offerings for the night. First up at 8:00 pm is the celebrated bitch
fest from 1939, The Women.
Based on the Clare Booth Luce play and boasting a razor sharp
screenplay by Anita Loos, it’s one for the ages. Norma Shearer may
be the star (her last great star turn), but it’s Joan who almost
walks away with the picture as the grabby low-class trollop Crystal
Allen. I say “almost” because the one who really steals this
movie is Rosalind Russell as Sylvia Fowler. It’s always worth
watching, especially for Crawford and Russell.
The
other gem this night is A Woman’s
Face, which is screening at 12:30 am. This 1941 remake
of the 1938 Swedish film starring Ingrid Bergman, stars Joan as Anna
Holm, a blackmailer who despises everyone she meets. Part of her
bitterness can be seen in her face, scarred since childhood, when her
drunken father set fire to the house. Melvin Douglas is the plastic
surgeon who removes the scar, leaving Joan with a dilemma: should she
embrace the new life she can have with Douglas or will she return to
her dark past? Besides Douglas, also in the cast is Conrad Veidt, in
yet another great turn as (what else?) the heel – Joan’s
partner-in-crime who’s not willing to see Joan choose a new life.
Though not as good as the original – face it, Bergman’s a much
better actress – director George Cukor makes this one of Joan’s
best efforts.
January
17: Because of the large number of Crawford films at the
network, there is a spillover to the next morning and afternoon.
Showing this day are two real gems and a near gem. The two gems run
back-to-back beginning at 9:15 am. First up is the great 1940
psychotronic classic, Strange Cargo.
How Louis B. Mayer ever let this one slip through the MGM net is one
of filmdom’s great mysteries, but we should be grateful he did. Get
this cast: Joan Crawford, Clark Gable, Ian Hunter, Peter Lorre, Paul
Lukas, and Albert Dekker. But it doesn’t stop there. Also in the
cast are J. Edward Bromberg, Eduardo Cianelli, Frederic Worlock, and
Bernard Nedell. Strange Cargo is an allegorical tale
of escapees from Devil’s Island accompanied by a Christ-like figure
(Hunter) who becomes the source of their redemption. It was
considered controversial on its release and I can honestly say that
it hasn’t lost any of its edge over the years. For those who
haven’t yet seen this classic, all I can say is “By all means,
watch it.”
The
other gem of the day follows at 11:15 pm, and it’s also from
1940. Susan and God stars
Crawford as a self-absorbed socialite who gets religion and alienates
friends and family when she aggressively proselytizes her newfound
faith by publicly exposing their sins. Again, George Cukor is in the
director’s chair. Anita Loos penned the screenplay. Joan receives
able support from Frederic March, Ruth Hussey, John Carroll, Rita
Hayworth, Nigel Bruce, Bruce Cabot, and Rose Hobart.
The
near gem this day airs at 3:30 pm. Above
Suspicion (1943), is an entertaining and
thrilling espionage caper with Fred MacMurray and Joan Crawford
spending their European honeymoon on the eve of World War 2 by taking
on a spy mission to gather information about a new Nazi weapon. Basil
Rathbone is wonderful as the Nazi heel who captures and tortures
Joan. Conrad Veidt – in his final movie – is, off all things an
Austrian resistance fighter. Crawford later dismissed this film as
“undiluted hokum.” Yes, but it is great hokum.
January
23: This is a great night for Crawford fans, for it
celebrates her move – and career resurrection – to Warner
Brothers. We begin at 8:00 pm with her unforgettable Oscar-winning
performance in 1945’s Mildred
Pierce. Next, at 10:00 comes Humoresque (1946)
with John Garfield as a musical prodigy from the slums whose career
as a classical violinist is sidetracked by his passion for wealthy
neurotic Joan. The roll continues with the most entertaining film of
the night, Flamingo Road (1949).
Joan is a stranded carnival dancer who settles in town and ends up
taking on the town’s corrupt political boss (Sydney Greenstreet).
At
2:00 am, it’s another great Crawford vehicle, The
Damned Don’t Cry (1950). Joan plays a housewife
who only stays in her marriage to Richard Egan because of their
7-year old son. When he’s killed riding the bike she impulsively
bought him and which hubby Egan ordered her to take back, Joan flies
the coop and rises from a cigar-store clerk to clothes model (and
part-time call girl) and eventually to mob moll. Vincent Sherman ably
directed this great mix of overwrought drama and high camp, which is
said to be based on the true story of famed mob moll Virginia Hill. A
nice little shift of character by Sherman prior to filming prevented
it from slipping into the arena of low camp. The film was to
originally begin with Crawford’s character as a teenager. Can we
honestly see Crawford at this time in her career playing a teenager?
(Too bad, that’s one role I would like to have
seen.) Sherman edited it so as to begin the movie with Joan already
established as a young mother.
And,
finally, at the wee hour of 3:45 am, it’s Possessed (the
1947 version, not the 1931 one). Joan is quite good in this one,
playing a mentally disturbed woman whose passion for onetime lover
Van Heflin leads to tragedy. Crawford’s subtle, fine-tuned
performance as the disturbed Louise would lead to an Oscar
nomination. Truth be told, she should have gotten the statue that
year. Unless one works the night shift or is a vampire, the best
thing to do is record this later viewing.
January
24: Ah, it’s Joan in the ‘50s, with plenty of suds and
overwrought acting. The best of the day is shown first, with Harriet
Craig screening at 7:15 am. This is a good one
with Joan as a perfectionist housewife whose need for total control
ultimately destroys her family. Wendell Corey is excellent as Joan’s
suffering husband Walter.
Goodbye,
My Fancy (1951) at 9:00 am gives us Joan as a
Congresswoman returning to her alma mater where she reignites her
affair with old flame Robert Young. Janice Rule, in her first
official film, plays Young’s daughter. The backstage story is that
Rule, fresh off Broadway and a magnet for the press on the set, made
the middle-aged Joan so jealous that Joan made Janice’s life hell
while filming, constantly berating the youngster for not hitting her
marks or flubbing a line by telling her that she hopes Janice makes
the best of this movie because she won’t be making many more at
this rate. I just wish some of that vindictiveness had bled over into
this movie.
At
11:00 am is one of Joan’s unintentionally funnier outings: This
Woman is Dangerous (1952). Yes, she is dangerous,
but only when she acts in this limp attempt at emotional drama with
Joan as a top gangster who is losing her vision and requires a tricky
eye operation from hunky Dennis Morgan. Then, at 12:45 pm, is Torch
Song (1953) where Joan is a tempestuous musical
star who falls and falls hard for a blind pianist. Joan is
wonderfully cheesy in this role, trying to turn back the clock with
flaming red hair and torpedo bra. Unfortunately she comes across more
like the Gorgon than as a ravishing redhead. Watch especially for the
scene where Joan plays in blackface. Embarrassing, especially by the
‘50s, when this sort of nonsense was supposed to have disappeared.
January
30: See the Psychotronia section.
OUT
OF THE ORDINARY
January
18: One of the great-underrated films, A
Face in the Crowd, is playing in the afternoon at 2:00
pm. I had championed this film back in the late ‘60s through the
‘80s for its theme of a megalomaniacal television star whose
creator must destroy him before he gets the chance to destroy us. TCM
has done a wonderful job in recent years of promoting this film as
the gem it truly is, but some out there have not yet taken the time
to view it. Directed by the great Elia Kazan, it’s Andy Griffith’s
first movie, and he deserved the Oscar for his performance.
Incredibly, he wasn’t even nominated. Patricia Neal co-stars as the
woman who created the media monster in Griffith’s character,
Lonesome Rhodes, and who must ultimately pull the plug on him, even
though she’s still in love with the heel. Also in the cast is
Walter Matthau, Tony Franciosa, Lee Remick, and director Marshall
Neilan as the lackluster senator Rhodes is pushing for the
presidency.
January
20: Looking for a different baseball picture? Then try
1950’s The Jackie Robinson Story,
airing at 7:30 am, and starring Jackie himself playing, naturally,
Jackie Robinson. It’s a great time capsule-like look back at the
man who broke the color barrier in baseball filmed shortly after his
feat. As such it gives us a unique perspective into the event and all
the controversy that surrounded it. Co-starring is the beautiful Ruby
Dee as Jackie’s wife, Rachel.
January
22: For those who like baloney with their World War 2 morale
films TCM offers The North Star at
12:30 am. Directed by Lewis Milestone (All Quiet on the Western
Front), this 1943 outing is downright laughable in its portrayal
of Ukrainian peasants attacked in the Nazi invasion of Russia in
1941, depicted as a happy, jolly lot, whose singing aboard their
wagon is so rudely interrupted by the invading Nazis. Although it’s
has some decent battle scenes, it’s rather slow and dull until
things begins to pick up when naughty Nazi Erich Von Stroheim arrives
at the village and matches wits with village leader Walter Huston.
Besides these two, the movie also boasts a young Anne Baxter, Dana
Andrews, Walter Brennan, Ann Harding, Farley Granger, Dean Jagger
(wonder how the Red baiting Jagger explained this one later on), and,
incredibly, Jane Withers as a happy villager.
January
24: Among the offerings in the Friday “Science in the
Movies” night (at 1:45 am, no less) is one of the brightest satires
ever put to film: The Man in the
White Suit. From Ealing in 1951, it stars Alec
Guniness as obsessed inventor Sidney Stratton, who creates a fabric
that will never get dirty or wear out. Hailed as a miracle fabric at
first by the textile mills, it becomes obvious that this new fabric
could well put them out of business, and so they have to suppress it.
Guinness is totally charming as the eccentric scientist and is ably
assisted by Cecil Parker as textile magnate Alan Birnley, Joan
Greenwood as Alan’s daughter Daphney, Michael Gough as Alan’s
competitor and Daphney’s neglectful boyfriend, Vida Hope as the
shop steward representing Sidney, and Ernest Thesiger as Sir John
Kierlaw, the Mr. Big of the textile industry.
January
26: Speaking of deft satires, a “must see” is being
aired at the late hour of 2:00 am. Closely
Watched Trains, from Czechoslovak director Jiri
Menzel, is a wonderful blend of the influence of the French New Wave
with a sardonic coming-of-age story set during the German invasion of
Czechoslovakia. The film is centered on the story of Milo, a young
man who lands a job with the railroad at the moment when the Germans
occupy his hometown. His only goal at first is to find a way to end
his virginity, but as time passes and events unfold he is drawn into
the Czech resistance. Exquisitely photographed and directed, it
manages to be funny, sad, and most of all, touching.
PSYCHOTRONICA:
January
16: The Beginning or the
End from 1947, starring Brian Donlevy, Robert
Walker, Tom Drake, Audrey Totter, Hume Cronyn, and Hurd Hatfield, is
a thoughtful and engrossing account of the Manhattan Project, which
gave us the atom bomb. Made two years after Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
the film originally raised questions about the use of atomic weapons,
but after the Pentagon and the White House finished with it, the film
spun around 180 degrees to tell us how beneficial atomic weapons are.
Harry Truman even got the original actor portraying him in the movie
fired. It’s showing at 2:15 am.
Following
along at 4:15 am is one of the greatly underrated sci-fi
movies, These Are the Damned.
From Hammer Studios in 1962, the film is sort of Brighton
Rock meets the Apocalypse. It all takes place on the British
seashore, at Weymouth. Visiting American tourist Simon Wells
(Macdonald Carey) is lured by young hottie Joan (Shirley Anne Field)
into an alley where Joan’s brother King (Oliver Reed) and his Teddy
Boys mug and rob him. But Joan is tiring of her brother and flees
with Simon aboard his boat, with King and the Teddys in hot pursuit.
They stray inside the perimeter of a secret military base run by
stuffy bureaucrat Bernard (Alexander Knox). A fissure in the rock
leads Simon and Joan to an underground bunker, where nine young
children reside. Their skin is cold to the touch, and in time we
learn that they have been engineered by Bernard to be radioactive. If
we grownups start a thermonuclear war, these children will inherit
the Earth. Directed by ex-pat Joseph Losey (forced from this country
by the HUAC hearings in the early ‘50s), it’s well made, with
Bernard’s mistress Freya (Viveca Lindfors) supplying the opposition
view in debates with Bernard about the ethics of his project. Also
watch the opening moments for the song “Black Leather Rock,” a
really great tune written for the movie by James Bernard and Evan
Jones. Guaranteed you’ll be humming this after the movie ends.
January
18: Tallulah Bankhead followed the path of older actresses
such as Joan Crawford, Bette Davis and Olivia de Havilland and in
1965 starred in a Gothic horror of her own: Die!
Die! My Darling! Airing at 11:30 pm, Bankhead is
a religious fanatic who imprisons her late son’s sinful fiancée
(Stephanie Powers). It’s run-of-the-mill at best, interesting for
those who want to see just whatever became of Bankhead in her later
years.
At
2:00 am TCM is showing Skidoo,
a film from director Otto Preminger. Critic Michael Weldon said it
best in The
Psychotronic Encyclopedia of Film,
so I’ll simply quote him here: “Most of the bad directors
featured in this book work for small independent companies with
impossibly low budgets and are unknown to the general public. Not so
Otto Preminger, a famous, respected hack who was turning out
incredibly bad films until very recently.”
Jackie
Gleason is a retired gangster recruited to pull one more hit, this
time on Mickey Rooney, who is ratting out the mob. To make the hit
Gleason has to get back into Alcatraz. He takes LSD and changes into
a person all for love and peace. We’ll leave it at that, save to
say than it’s a must for those who never experienced the silliness
of ‘60s popular culture or who have and just don’t remember.
January
19: Why are the best films always on at the worst hours? A
perfect example is I Married a
Witch, Rene Clair’s delightful 1942 comedy. Veronica
Lake is a witch condemned with her wizard father, Cecil Kellaway in
colonial Massachusetts and burned at the stake. Cut to the present
day as lightning hits a tree and releases their spirits. Now Lake
plots revenge on the ancestor of the man who presided over their
trial: gubernatorial candidate Frederic March, but instead she falls
in love with him. It’s a witty comedy from the director of such
classics as Le Million (1931), A Nous la
Liberte (1931), The Ghost Goes West (1935),
and It Happened Tomorrow (1944).
January
20: Sometimes I ask myself why a movie that seemingly has
everything going for it fails. This is the case with the
disappointing The Angel Levine,
which will be seen at 3:00 am. Angel wannabe Harry Belafonte comes to
Earth to help impoverished tailor Zero Mostel. Based on a book by
Bernard Malamud and directed by Jan Kadar (Lies My Father Told
Me), it doesn’t have the usual saccharine ending. On the
contrary, it’s an interesting, thoughtful film that should have
done respectable business at the box office. At any rate, it’s
worth a look for those who haven’t yet seen it.
January
25: It’s a psychotronic night as TCM rolls out some past
classics. We begin with Jaws (1975)
at 8:00 pm; Alien (1979)
at 10:15 pm; and Rollerball (1977)
at 12:15 am. Then at 2:30 am, it’s a doubleheader of weird family
movies, starting with The Baby,
a 1973 opus that finds both Anjanette Comer and Ruth Roman scraping
the bottom of the barrel for a paycheck. Comer is social worker Ann
Gentry, investigating the demented Mrs. Wadsworth (Roman) and her
equally demented daughters Germaine (Marianna Hill) and Alba (Suzanne
Zenor). But Mrs. Wadsworth also has a baby son, named simply Baby
(David Manzy). A further look finds that Baby is a 20-something year
old, who wears diapers, lives in a crib, and cannot walk or talk
apart from a few really badly dubbed baby gurgles. It’s the sort of
film where when you think it just can’t get any stranger, it does.
And yet, you can’t look away. Finally TCM runs Spider
Baby at 4:30 am. It’s the ultimate in cheapie
deranged family movies, starring Lon Chaney, Jr. as the caretaker for
a family of murderous weirdos. When greedy relatives come looking for
the family riches, they get more than they can imagine – in a low
budget way, of course.
January
30: Beginning at 8:15 am and running until 4:15 pm it’s a
Philo Vance mini-marathon. The films run as follows: The
Bishop Murder Case (1930, 8:15 am), with Basil
Rathbone as the sleuth investigating a series of murders inspired by
Mother Goose rhymes. The Kennel
Murder Case (1933, 9:45 am) stars William Powell
as Vance and is the best movie in the group. The
Dragon Murder Case (1934, 11:00 am) finds Warren
William as the sleuth as he investigates a murder near a mysterious
“dragon pool.” The Casino Murder
Case (1935, 12:15 pm) has Paul Lukas in the Vance
role as he investigates a series of murders at the mansion of an
aging dowager (Alison Skipworth). The
Garden Murder Case (1936, 1:45 pm), starring
Edmund Lowe as Vance as he looks into the possible reason for a
series of mysterious suicides. Finally, there’s Calling
Philo Vance (1939, 3:00 pm), an attempt to reboot
the series. Going with the times, Vance tangles with foreign agents
when he investigates the murder of an aircraft manufacturer.
It’s
also the last night for the Joan Crawford Star-of-the-Month festival,
and her films from the ‘60s are trotted out. Psychotronic fans can
tune in at 8:00 pm to Whatever Happened
to Baby Jane? We all know the plot by now: Joan
and Bette Davis are former movie stars living in a decaying mansion
where Joan is at the mercy of nutty sister Bette. Still, it manages
to keep its charm.
At
2:00 am, it’s the infamous Trog from
1970. At various times in interviews Joan has referred
to Rain and This Woman is Dangerous as
her worst films, but Trog has them beaten by the
proverbial country mile. In her last film, Joan is an anthropologist
who leads an expedition to retrieve a living missing link,
affectionately called “Trog” after his discovery in a cave in a
remote village. As this is a low-budget affair, an actor with a
monkey head and hair around his waist and on his chest plays the
troglodyte. It’s great watching Joan trying to take all this
seriously, and stick around for the ending where a crowd gathers
around the cave to watch the proceedings while drinking Pepsi. Joan
doesn’t miss a trick.
At
3:45 am, it’s Joan in a supporting role in 1967’s The
Karate Killers. Starring Robert Vaughn and David
McCallum, it’s a movie edited from TV episodes of The Man
From U.N.C.L.E. Those who love old television shows should
find this one interesting.
January
31: The last day of the month begins on a low note and ends
on a high one for psychotronic fans. First up at 7:30 am is Joan
Crawford in Herman Cohen’s 1967 stinker, Berserk! Joan
is the owner of a circus that’s been going through a series of
murders. We learn at the end that Joan’s loopy daughter (Judy
Geeson) is the murderer. The great thing about the film is that as
old as Joan is, her vanity will not allow her
not to have a stud-muffin available, and so in this film Ty Hardin
essays the role.
In
the last installment of Friday night’s “Science in the Movies,”
we are treated to a delightful twin bill based on the works of H.G.
Wells. First up at 8:00 is First Men in
the Moon from 1964 starring Edward Judd as a
scientist who travels to the Moon, were he meets the ant-like
Selenites (animated by Ray Harryhausen), who live beneath the
surface. Following at 10:00 pm is George Pal’s adaptation of The
Time Machine (1960), starring Rod Taylor as the
scientist who builds a time machine and travels into the future to
see how mankind has split into two races, the Eloi and the Morlocks.
It’s a fondly remembered classic by those of us who saw it as
children and one that still has the power to enchant and entertain
the young.
No comments:
Post a Comment