By Ed Garea
As
the Oscar tribute fades into the limelight, we return to a normal
schedule. Overall, the Oscar month was better than most in the past
as TCM is mixing things up rather nicely. Let’s hope they do the
same with the August “Summer Under the Stars” festival and mix in
a few more names that have been absent in years past.
On
another cable front is the name change of The Military Channel. It
will become The American Heroes Channel (AHC) today. Executives at
the network say that while the renamed channel will continue
to present military-themed specials, it is hoped the new name
will reflect a new desire to focus on a broader range of American
heroes and helpers. It’s part of parent company Discovery’s
desire to reach out more to the 25-54 male demographic. The Military
Channel is already seen in 63 million homes.
The
renamed channel will debut 17 new series and specials, including a
six-part miniseries, Against the Odds. Narrated by Rob
Lowe, the series takes a look at the harsh realities of war, using
archival footage and first-hand interviews to feature U.S. troops who
banded together during the heat of battle.
I
suppose we’ll have to wait and see how it pans out, but the current
Military Channel shows some excellent multi-series documentaries
like Secrets
of World War II, The
Secret War, Nazi
Collaborators,
and The World
at War, a
BBC production from 1976 narrated by Laurence Olivier about World War
II that has never been duplicated, let alone surpassed. These, along
with the plethora of war movies shown on the channel, are two things
I would hate to see changed for the sake of demographics.
STAR
OF THE MONTH
Now
that we’re back to normal, we once again have a Star of the Month.
This month it’s Mary Astor, a most deserving choice. Astor is an
“actor’s actor,” a person that can play a rage of parts and be
effective in each one, whether as a charwoman or an heiress; a
temperamental musician or a woman with a past on the run.
March
5: Astor begins with a bang with five of her films being
shown. Leading off at 8:00 pm is the marvelous Dodsworth with
Astor as Edith Cortright, a beautiful woman expatriate Sam Dodsworth
(Walter Huston) meets in Europe as his longtime marriage to Fran
(Ruth Chatterton) hits the skids. Astor brings just the right amount
of sensitivity and understanding to a role that could easily have
gone off the rails, even with William Wyler directing. (Note Ruth
Chatterton’s somewhat heavy-handed interpretation of her role.)
At
10:00 pm, it’s the film for which Astor received the Oscar for
Supporting Actress, The Great Lie.
Set as a typical “woman’s picture” of the period, with plenty
of romantic travail, it had two things working against it: the lousy
script, with unbelievable relationships, and star Bette Davis, who
absolutely hated the script. She called Mary Astor and asked her to
play the role of pianist Sandra Kovak, Bette’s rival for lover
George Brent’s aviator, Pete Van Allen. Astor recalled in her
memoirs that after two days of shooting, Bette stopped and hauled
Astor off to the dressing room. Closing the door, Davis announced
that this picture is “going to stink!” It’s too incredible for
words. She told Astor that she had spoken with director Edmund
Goulding and others on the staff, and they all thought it was a fine
film. “So,” she said to Astor, “it’s up to us to rewrite this
piece of junk to make it more interesting.” And so they did,
building up Astor’s elegantly bitchy character of Sandra at the
expense of Davis’ character. The rumor around town was that Astor
was stealing the picture right out from under Davis, but Astor
demurred, “She handed it to me on a silver platter.” All Goulding
had to do each morning was to ask the ladies what they were going to
go that day. It was an easy assignment for the director and Astor was
rewarded with the Supporting Actress statue for her part. The film
has lost none of its charm over the years and remains as fresh today
as it did in 1941.
For
those who love their silents – and even for those who do not –
Mary shines forth in the 1926 Warner Bros. production of Don
Juan. Mary is Adriana Della Varnese, the woman who
becomes the love of Don Juan’s life in the villainous court of the
Borgias. Watch for Myrna Loy in a small part as Lucretia Borgia’s
(Estelle Taylor) maid.
At
3:00 am, Mary stars with Paul Muni and Aline MacMahon in Warner
Bros.’ 1933 The
World Changes,
based on the Edna Ferber novel about a man who becomes a meat-packing
baron and loses his family in the process. And at 4:45 am it Other
Men’s Women,
a 1931 drama from Warners with Mary in the middle of a love triangle
between Grant Withers and Regis Toomey. However, watch it for the
performances of supporting players James Cagney and Joan Blondell,
who give this otherwise dead-on-arrival film a bit of life.
March
12: Oh, what a night! At 8:00 pm, it’s John Huston’s
1941 classic, The Maltese Falcon,
one of the greatest noirs – if not the greatest – ever made. The
casting is brilliant, with Peter Lorre, Sydney Greenstreet, Humphrey
Bogart, Mary Astor, Elisha Cook, Jr., and Lee Patrick giving
performances for the ages as they chase “the stuff that dreams are
made of.” And no matter how many times I’ve seen it, I’ll be
watching again.
At
10:00 pm, it’s Across the
Pacific from 1942. Also directed by John Huston,
the film reunites Bogart, Greenstreet and Astor with Bogart as an
American agent trying to prevent Greenstreet and his Japanese buddies
from blowing up the Panama Canal. Astor plays a woman of intrigue and
plays it so well we don’t know whose side she’s on. When director
Huston accepted his commission as a lieutenant in the Army Signal
Corps he pulled an elaborate prank on Vincent Sherman, who was tasked
with the job of finishing the film. Huston left Bogart tied to a
chair surrounded by armed Japanese soldiers in a house surrounded by
even more Japanese soldiers. Before leaving he told Jack Warner that
he was on his way into the army, and that Bogart will be able to
figure out how to escape. But, in reality, no one could figure out
how to escape and the scene had to be reshot with Bogart being held
under much more lax security.
At
midnight, it’s the 1937 John Ford classic, The
Hurricane. Set on the French possession of Manakura in
the South Seas, Astor is Madame De Laage, the wife of the provincial
governor (Raymond Massey) and offers support to the native couple of
Terangi (Jon Hall) and Marama (Dorothy Lamour), especially when
Terangi is pursued by the police for killing a white man in
self-defense. The real star of the film is the special effects
hurricane, which comes over most convincingly in those pre-CGI days.
The
1937 classic The Prisoner of Zenda,
from UA, follows at 3:30 am. Anyone out there who has not yet seen
this timeless classic would be well advised to record it, for if
there ever was an “Essential,” this is it. The story of a
rightful king being drugged and kidnapped by his brother with a
lookalike cousin installed in his place has been done numerous times,
but never quite this well. Astor has a supporting role as Antoinette
de Mauban, mistress to the king. As usual, she gets the most out of
it.
At
5:30 a.m., The Murder of Dr.
Harrigan, another in the low-budget series about
nurse/sleuth Sarah Keate. (Check my earlier article on While the Patient Slept, October 8, 2013.) While one would almost
expect Astor to play Keate, she doesn’t. Instead Kay Linaker, a
Broadway actress making her Hollywood debut, played Sarah. Linaker
went on to make 55 more films, but stardom wasn’t in her future.
Her parts diminished in size and she left the screen in 1945 after
marrying Howard Phillps. She began a new career, writing for
television and the movies. One of her most famous scripts was the one
she wrote for 1958’s The Blob. It went on to gross
millions, but she only received $150 for writing it. She also
supplemented her income by teaching screenwriting in colleges in
Canada and New England until her retirement from Keene State College
in New Hampshire in 2005 at the age of 92. As for Astor, she simply
plays one of the supporting characters, a nurse.
March
13: Because Astor made so many films, there’s runoff into
this morning and afternoon, with the most interesting being The
Lash from 1931. It’s interesting because it’s
a Western and Astor didn’t make many in that genre. This is a Robin
Hood story set in 1850s California with Richard Barthelmess as a
totally unconvincing Spanish nobleman who returns to find his
homeland being run by tyrants. Astor is his long love, Rosita Garcia.
It’s very rarely shown, and I’d be lying if I said I saw it. So
I’ll be tuning in as well.
OUT
OF THE ORDINARY
March
4 – John Garfield’s Birthday: Jacob Jules Garfinkle was born
on this day on the Lower East Side of New York City to David and
Hannah Garfinkle, and TCM is devoting the morning and afternoon to
nine of his films. Beginning at 6:00 am with the ever-sturdy
soap, Dust Be My Destiny (1939)
to his remake of To Have and Have Not, The
Breaking Point (1950) with Patricia Neal at 6:15
pm, it’s a day of happy happy joy joy for all Garfield fans. Others
worth your time and effort are East of
the River (1940) at 11:00 am, Out
of the Fog (1941), at 1:45 pm, and The
Sea Wolf, with Edward G. Robinson, at 3:15 pm.
March
7: TCM’s “Friday Night Spotlight” this month has “Food
in the Movies” as its theme. Ang Lee’s marvelous 1994
comedy, Eat, Drink, Man, Woman,
leads off the festivities at 8:00 pm, followed by the charming Mostly
Martha (2001) at 10:15. This wonderful and
touching German production was remade in 2007 as No
Reservations, with Catherine Zeta-Jones. At 12:15 am is one of
the all-time cinema classics, Tom
Jones (1963). All in all, it’s a great night.
Bring plenty of food or eat beforehand.
March
9: TCM rolls out a tribute to the late Shirley Temple,
beginning at 4:30 pm with 1937’s Heidi.
The highlight of the mini-marathon in Bright
Eyes (1934), where she sings “On the Good Ship
Lollipop.” Another film of note is The
Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer (1947), with Cary
Grant and Muyra Loy, and the final film, shown at 4:15 a.m., That
Hagen Girl, from 1949, with Ronald Reagan in a
surprisingly taut performance.
March
14: Another
edition of “Food in the Movies” finds us starting with the lovely
comedy Christmas in
Connecticut at
8. Then it’s on to the hallowed Christmas classic, A
Christmas Story (1983),
and I don’t care how many times we’ve seen it during its 24-hour
runs on sister station TBS, it’s always worth
a look. At midnight, it’s one of my favorite movies, My
Dinner With Andre (1981),
and then at 2:00 a.m. it’s one of David Skolnick’s faves, Diner.
PSYCHOTRONICA
& THE B-HIVE
March
5: Even if musicals aren’t your cup of tea, Campus
Rhythm is a must for all those interested in film
history. It’s a musical from Monogram Studios starring Gale Storm
as a popular radio singer who takes it on the lam to attend college
incognito, where she falls for student newspaper editor Johnny Downs.
Storm began her career at RKO, and then drifted over to Monogram
where she toiled until Universal signed her in 1949. It was only with
the coming of television that she became a star with My
Little Margie and The Gale Storm Show. Co-Star
Downs began his career in the silents as part of Our Gang. In the
30s, he worked in supporting roles at Fox, Paramount, Warner Bros.,
Columbia, and Universal before landing on Poverty Row in the 40s,
working at Monogram and PRC (Remember him in The Mad
Monster from 1942?). Another cast member of interest is
Candy Candido, an actor/singer known for a voice that could go from
soprano to alto to tenor within seconds, finishing with a bass a few
notes lower than on the piano. Candido was also known for his brief
partnership with Bud Abbott after the death of Lou Costello.
March
7: A Tarzan double-header, both from Johnny Weismuller’s
RKO years, starts off the day. At 6:30 a.m. it’s Tarzan
and the Amazons (1945), with greedy gold thieves
after the stash held by a fierce Amazon tribe led by Maria
Ouspenskaya (?!). Then at 8:00, the king of the jungle tangles with
greedy hunters Patricia Morison and Barton MacLane in Tarzan
and the Huntress (1947). Further information on
these classics of the cinema can be found on this site in my essay,
Johnny Weismuller’s Tarzan at RKO, Part 2 (September
3, 1012). Part 1 was published on August 25, 2012).
March
8: A good psychotronic double feature begins at 5:00 p.m.
First up is the excellent 1961 sci-fi thriller, Village
of the Damned. Based on the 1951 novel, The Midwich
Cuckoos, by John Wyndham, it concerns an English village where a
blackout takes place, rendering the villagers unconscious. Weeks
later, every woman capable of giving birth in the village discovers
that she is pregnant. Moreover they cannot remember how it happened.
Twelve babies are born within hours of each other, all blonde, all
with strange, arresting eyes. The children are discovered to be
super-intelligent and telepathic. By gazing at their victim they can
cause him to do their bidding. Needless to say, they must be stopped
and it’s up to physicist Gordon Zellaby (George Sanders) to stop
them before they take over the earth. Over the years, Village
of the Damned has come to be regarded as a minor masterpiece
of the genre, with Sanders and co-star Barbara Shelley giving notable
performances. I remember going to the movies to see this one and
being genuinely creeped out by the kids on the poster with those
eyes.
At
6:30 comes another minor gem, It,
the Terror From Beyond Space. Don’t let the title
fool you, this is a good, tight B-movie about a rescue mission to
Mars in the year 1973 (?!). Only one survivor from the previous
expedition is found (Marshall Thompson), but as the ship prepares to
leave for earth, it takes on another passenger, a deadly stowaway.
Not only has it acquired a definite taste for human blood, it also
spends much of the film playing hide-and-seek in the ventilation
tunnels connecting the ship. At first it’s presumed that Thompson
is the murderer – after all, he’s the only survivor, and no one
else has been seen. But soon, other members of the crew begin to
disappear, and it’s only a matter of time before they discover the
real murderer. With a script superbly crafted by Jerome Bixby (who
wrote a few Star Trek and Twilight
Zone episodes) and a good ensemble cast headed by Thompson
and veteran character actor Dabbs Greer, the movie actually convinces
us in its own little way of its plausibility. Even Z–movie veteran
director Edward L. Cahn manages to stay out of his own way and let
the action flow. And, as every film buff knows by now, screenwriter
Dan O’Bannon lifted the movie’s main premise for Ridley Scott’s
sci-fi blockbuster, Alien. By the way, the wonderful
costume worn by veteran stuntman Ray “Crash” Corrigan was
designed by B-movie veteran Paul Blaisdell, whose inspired creations
have been seen in quite a few Roger Corman films, including It
Conquered the World, The She Creature, and The
Day the World Ended. A side note: besides writing the script,
Bixby also served as an uncredited set designer on the film.
March
11: Those of us who spent out formative years in the 50s
glued to the idiot box will always remember watching The Lone
Ranger. In world where we were too young to appreciate the High
Art the medium was trying to impart to us via such shows as Playhouse
90 and The U.S. Steel Hour, not to mention the
scary-looking Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, our preferred viewing was much
more simple. Westerns were always a favorite, for, unlike the crime
shows our parents seemed to prefer, the Western told a basic story
without embellishment. The Good Guys were unmistakably Good and the
Bad Guys totally without redemption. Besides, the stories were set so
long ago that, unlike crime stories, there was no way whatsoever we’d
actually run into these sorts in real life. There were Westerns
geared for our parents, but we didn’t watch these. They had girls,
and the romance got in the way of the shoot-em-outs.
Of
all the Westerns I uncritically digested as a kid, one in particular
stands out: The Lone Ranger. Now there was a guy you could trust,
even though he wore a mask. After all, Tonto trusted him, didn’t
he? And Tonto wouldn’t just trust anyone. So when that very special
day came when The Lone Ranger brought his talents to the big screen
(for Warner Brothers), we banded together and were schlepped by one
of the mothers in her dodge station wagon to a theater in the next
town, bringing cash for the ticket and necessaries such as popcorn,
soda, and the ever popular spearmint leaves. I always get a thrill
when TCM shows, as they are doing on this day at 6:30 am, which means
that I’m going to record it. The plot of The
Lone Ranger is merely an extended television
show: a wealthy evil rancher/developer Reece Kilgore (Lyle Bettiger)
is starting trouble between the Natives and the Whites. His goal is
to gain control of nearby Spirit Mountain, sacred to the Natives, but
loaded with enough silver to enable Kilgore to become even wealthier
and spend half his time on the beach in Florida. For those of us that
fondly remember the television show, this movie always comes as a
welcome treat.
No comments:
Post a Comment