TCM
TiVo ALERT
For
January
8–January 14
DAVID’S
BEST BETS:
LIVE
A LITTLE, LOVE A LITTLE (January 8, 7:45 am): An
unusual but entertaining Elvis Presley film, and among his last
non-concert movies. Elvis is Greg Nolan, a newspaper photographer who
loses his job after being drugged and kept captive by Bernice, a
quirky, sexy girl who lives at the beach. In need of employment, he
finds two in the same building. He shoots photos for both a
conservative firm and a girlie magazine, and tries to balance that
with Bernice, who goes by different names depending on the guy. It's
not a terribly deep film, but it was a step in an interesting
direction for Elvis. He shows some nice range in this 1968 film. It's
part of TCM's mini-Elvis film festival on January 8, his birthday.
This film's best scene has Elvis singing "A Little Less
Conversation," one of his best songs.
CLEO
FROM 5 TO 7 (January 12, 2:00 am): This is a really
good film. Cleo is a French pop singer waiting for the results of
medical tests done to determine if she has cancer. As the title
states, this 1962 French film starts at 5:00 pm with Cleo having to
spend time until the results come back supposedly at 7:00 though the
film is only 90 minutes long. During that time, she walks the streets
of Paris talking with strangers and friends with the film skillfully
tackling some pretty heavy subjects including mortality, inner beauty
versus outer beauty, despair, maturity and acceptance - all coming
from a feminine perspective. It's fascinating with beautiful
cinematography and an outstanding storyline. As I mentioned these are
some pretty heavy topics, but the film addresses them in a way that
makes them approachable without compromise.
ED’S
BEST BETS:
ANASTASIA (January
12, 8:00 pm): Ingrid Bergman stars in a film that not only won her an
Oscar for Best Actress, but also ended her exile from America for her
perceived moral transgressions. She has a field day as an amnesiac
refugee picked by opportunistic Russian businessman Yul Brynner to
impersonate the surviving daughter of Russia’s last tsar. She is so
good in the role that even skeptics become convinced that she’s the
real thing. Helen Hayes also sparkles as the Dowager Empress, the
elderly matriarch who has lost her entire family to the Revolution.
Can Bergman fool her as well? The film is an absolute tour de force
for Bergman, who goes from coquettishness to bewilderment as fast as
a driver can change gears in a car. The direction by Anatole Litvak
is superb, and there’s honestly not a bad performance in the cast.
It’s rarely shown, so it’s a Must See.
MAD
LOVE (January 14, 5:00 pm): After he creeped us out
so thoroughly in Fritz Lang’s M (1931),
American audiences were waiting for Peter Lorre’s next big film. It
took him until 1935 to reach the shores of America, and MGM had just
the role for him: a reworking of the classic horror novel Les Mains
d’Orlac by Maurice Renard. It had previously been filmed in 1924
with Conrad Veidt as the pianist whose hands, crushed in a train
wreck were replaced by the hands of an executed murderer, with tragic
results. In this version, the emphasis shifts from Orlac (Colin
Clive) to the surgeon, Doctor Gogol (Lorre), who is obsessed with
Orlac’s wife, Yvonne (Frances Drake). No one knows that Gogol has
grafted the hands of a murderer onto Orlac; and Gogol knows that
those hands will kill again, Orlac will be apprehended, and Yvonne
can finally be his alone. Lorre was positively brilliant in the role,
and Charles Chaplin exclaimed that Lorre was the screen’s finest
actor after seeing the film. Lorre would be so identified with this
role that years later he was cast in another horror film about a hand
with a mind of its own: The Beast With Five Fingers.
WE
DISAGREE ON . . . BABY DOLL (January 13, 5:30 am)
ED:
B+. When
I was a teenager I remember taking out a book on movies from the
library and running across a photo of Carroll Baker from this film,
curled up in a crib and sucking her thumb. Reading the description of
the movie described as racy, lewd, suggestive, and morally repellent
by The Legion of Decency, I knew right then and there that someday I
would have to find this film and watch it. Hot stuff! And directed by
Elia Kazan with a screenplay by Tennessee Williams – Wow! After
years of forgetting, I finally rented it in the ‘80s. I was
disappointed by how tame it was, but thinking back to when it was
made, I realized just why it had outraged so many. It boasts a good
cast, with Karl Malden as Baker’s witless husband, who has to wait
until his child reaches the age of 20 before he can deflower her.
Into the mix comes swarthy Eli Wallach at his slimiest best as
Malden’s business rival, and guess who he’s after? The fireworks
between Malden and Wallach still retain their punch; Tennessee
Williams had few peers when it came to the underbelly of Southern
life.
DAVID:
C-. I admit that the subject matter of Baby
Doll makes me somewhat uncomfortable. But if the film was
better, I'd deal with it. Carroll Baker's Baby Doll character is 19
and about to turn 20, but she acts like a little girl, sleeping in a
crib sucking her thumb. She's the virgin bride of Karl Malden, an
older redneck who. after two years of marriage, is about to have sex
for the first time with his wife. Along comes Eli Wallach, Malden's
cotton gin rival. He tries to seduce Baby Doll to have sex with her
and to exact revenge against Malden, who burned down Wallach's new
gin. The film is dull, poorly written (just because the screenplay is
by Tennessee Williams doesn't mean it's automatically good), highly
overrated and way too long at nearly two hours in length. While
Baker's performance is good, the role is ridiculous. Malden is fine,
but Wallach is bad. The plot was racy for its time, 1956,
with a script designed to shock. Yes, it's shocking, but that seems
to be the film's only goal. It's not that entertaining or
interesting. I watch movies to either be entertained or interested.
That's why I rate this film as only a C-.
For the complete list of films on the TCM TiVo Alert, click here.
For the complete list of films on the TCM TiVo Alert, click here.
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