A
Guide to the Interesting and Unusual on TCM
By
Ed Garea
TCM
is taking a different approach with its “Star of the Month” by
making it into a John Wayne marathon of sorts. It begins on April 21
and ends on April 26. I don't know why they're taking this approach
for they did not do this before and they are not repeating it in May
(June Allyson) or June (Rock Hudson). But maybe we should just sit
back and enjoy this All-Wayne-All-Of-The-Time film fest.
STAR
OF THE MONTH – JOHN WAYNE
April
21: Tune in for Duke at 8 pm in his first starring role. He
plays a young mountaineer leading hundreds of settlers on a journey
from Missouri to California in Raoul Walsh’s epic Western, The
Big Trail (Fox, 1930). Although the Duke was
fine, the movie bombed at the box office. As this was the Depression,
this was tantamount to a death sentence for the actors involved,
especially Wayne. It didn’t matter if one could act or not, but a
star has to bring in the green, otherwise he or she is washed up
quickly. And this is exactly what happened with Wayne. He went on to
years of starring roles in cheap B-Westerns and serials and minor
supporting roles in other films. It wasn’t until John
Ford’s Stagecoach in 1939 that Wayne was
able to see career daylight. Fair treatment? No, but that was the
economics of the business. Film fans, especially Western fans,
should tune in to this underrated gem.
At
10:30 pm comes New Frontier,
a 1939 production from Republic made after Wayne wrapped
on Stagecoach. This film is interesting because it
was the final time Wayne appeared as Stony Brooke in the Three
Mesquiteers series. The series originally started in 1935 with The
Three Mesquiteers, about a trio of World War I buddies who go
west to farmstead but find nothing but trouble. The original cast was
Ray Corrigan as Tuscon Smith, Robert Livingston as Stony Brooke, and
Sid Saylor as Lullaby Joslin. Terhune replaced Saylor in the
sequel, Ghost-Town Gold, in 1936. Livingston left
the series for a while in 1938 because of personality conflicts with
Corrigan, and Wayne took the role of Brooke beginning with Pals
of the Saddle (1938). He played Brooke in seven more
films in 1938-39, three more after Stagecoach in
fulfillment of his contract. Like his predecessor, Livingston, Wayne
also had a personality crash with Corrigan, who made sure Wayne’s
time as Brooke was a miserable one. Added to the fact that he had
three more to make after his critical and popular plash as The Ringo
Kid only made matters worse.
Haunted
Gold, one of the quickies Wayne churned out for Warner
Brothers, comes on at midnight. An otherwise uneventful film, but
look for the statue of the original Maltese Falcon sitting on the
piano of heroine Sheila Terry. Also look for Wayne’s horse, named
Duke.
The
only other catch for the night is seeing Wayne as an office worker
seduced by Barbara Stanwyck in the notorious 1933 drama, Baby
Face. Look carefully, however, for Wayne is not given
much screen time.
April
22: An entire day of Wayne films kicks off with The
Life of Jimmy Dolan (WB, 1933). Wayne has a bit part
as a boxer. This is followed by a load of B-Westerns Wayne made for
Warners and Monogram. The best of the bunch are Randy
Rides Alone (Great title!) at 1:30 pm, followed
by The Star Packer at
2:45 pm. At 8:00 pm, the Grade-A films come out, beginning
with Stagecoach. Then
it’s the sublime The Man Who Shot
Liberty Valance (10:00), Fort
Apache (12:15 am), and The
Searchers (2:30 am). The evening wraps with an
underrated film from John Ford that features an excellent performance
from Wayne, The Long Voyage
Home (4:45 am).
April
23: The Wayne marathon continues with 3
Godfathers (6:45 am), She
Wore a Yellow Ribbon (8:45), and Rio
Grande (10:45). At 12:30 pm, it’s the
heralded The Quiet Man from
1952. Beginning at 8 pm, it’s “John Wayne Goes to War.” We
begin with the excellent They Were
Expendable (1945), followed by Operation
Pacific (10:45), The
Fighting Seabees at 1:00 am (See if you can count
how many Japanese Wayne kills single-handedly), Back
to Bataan at 3:00, and The
Green Berets at 4:45 am, with George Takei.
April
24: The day begins with more war films starring Wayne. The
best of the bunch are Flying
Tigers at 9:15 am, and Cast
a Giant Shadow, a 1966 film about the founding of
Israel with an all-star cast, at 3:15 pm. In the evening, it’s a
mixed genre bag with Howard Hawks’ 1948 masterpiece, Red
River, leading off. The best of the rest are Reap
the Wild Wind (12:45 am) from 1942 with Wayne as
a sailor chasing both pirates and Paulette Goddard; and The
Spoilers (3:15 am) with Wayne and Randolph Scott
fighting for the affections of saloon singer Marlene Dietrich.
April
25: Yet more Wayne, beginning with Tall
in the Saddle (RKO, 1944) at 6:15 am. Also of
interest in the afternoon are Trouble
Along the Way (1:45) with Wayne as a hard-driving
football coach, Big Jim McLain,
a 1952 opus that finds Wayne and Jim Arness fighting Commies in
Hawaii, and the 1958 Howard Hawks Western, Rio
Bravo (5:15) with Dean Marin and Angie Dickinson.
The evening starts at 8:00 with North
to Alaska, with Wayne and Stewart Granger as
prospectors having to deal with con man Ernie Kovacs. At 10:15
it’s McClintock!,
starring Wayne and Maureen O’Hara as a battling married couple in
the West. At 12:45 am, it’s Wayne’s swan song, The
Shootist, from 1976. He plays a dying gunman trying to
get his affairs in order. The evening then rounds out with 1965’s
The Sons of Katie Elder (2:30
am), and at 4:45 am, the epic The
Greatest Story Ever Told, also from 1965.
April
26: The Wayne-a-Thon finally comes to an end with 1971’s Big
Jake showing at 8:15 am.
OTHER
NEWS
TCM
salutes MGM’s 90th anniversary on
April 17 and 18 with such fare as the Garbo-Gilbert silent
steamer, Flesh and the
Devil from
1926 (April 17, 8:00 pm),Grand
Hotel (April
17, 10:00 pm), the original Mutiny
on the Bounty (April
17, midnight), Ninotchka (April
17, 2:15 am), The Band
Wagon (April
18, 9:00 am), North by
Northwest (April
18, 11:00 am), The
Postman Always Rings Twice with
John Garfield and Lana Turner (April 18, 10:00 pm), and Singin’
In The Rain (midnight).
OUT
OF THE ORDINARY
April
20: Tune in at midnight for a double header of Fritz Lang’s
silent spy thriller, Spione (1928),
followed by Max Ophuls’ 1955 drama, Lola
Montes.
Spione,
or Spies was inspired by a real life story
about Scotland Yard’s uncovering of a Soviet spy ring working in
London under the cover of being a trade delegation. But when Lang and
his wife, Thea von Harbou, get through with it, Spione becomes
something more akin to a pulp thriller: financial mastermind Haghi
(Rudolph Klein-Rogge) runs a international espionage network under
the cover of a bank. In fact, his headquarters is under the bank’s
foundation. A master of disguise, he controls a vast surveillance
network used to steal state secrets. His top operative is the
beautiful Sonia (Gerda Maurus). Opposing them are rival agent Doctor
Masimoto (Lupu Pick) and the heroic Agent 326 (Willy Fritsch), who
falls in love with Sonia while trying to stop Haghi. It contains all
the familiar Lang tricks and turns and will thrill all Lang’s fans.
Even for those who usually bypass silents, this is still fun to
watch.
In Lola
Montes, director Ophuls picks up the story of
the celebrated courtesan after her days of adventure have passed and
she is reduced to being a featured attraction in a circus. It was the
only color movie that Ophuls directed and was the last of his career.
Panned by critics upon its release, it came to the attention of the
French New Wave directors and critics who celebrated Ophuls’ themes
about how male-dominated society destroys women and the paths they
try to pursue to independence and happiness. Ophuls said in
interviews that his inspiration for the film came from seeing how
celebrities Judy Garland and Zsa Zsa Gabor were treated by society
after being caught in affairs. It’s a lushly filmed saga with the
colors popping out right at us, but more than that, it’s a
thoughtful piece that will make the viewer reflect after it ends. As
Francois Truffaut observed, “there are films that demand undivided
attention. Lola Montes is one of them.”
April
27: It’s a double feature from Finnish director Ari
Kaurismaki, beginning with The Match
Factory Girl at 2:00 am. It’s the third film in
Kaurismaki’s “Proletariat Trilogy,” after Shadows in
Paradise (1986), about a garbageman, and Ariel (1988)
about an unemployed miner. This time the subject is Iris, a young
woman who toils on a factory assembly line. After work she returns to
a tiny apartment, where she lives with her uncaring mother and
stepfather. It’s a roof over her head, but nothing more, as she
turns over her wages, does the cooking and cleaning, and sleeps on
the sofa. Looking for any kind of affection, she frequents a dance
hall, where she meets and sleeps with a man, with whom she falls in
love. But she means nothing to him, which proves to have rather
disastrous consequences. Rejected, depressed, her life a mess, Iris
wakes up and decides to gain revenge on those who wronged her. But
the style of the director keeps this from lapsing into a wallowing in
depression. His method of following each helping of misery with
another gives the film a veneer of black comedy, and we find
ourselves rooting for Iris to exact her revenge.
The
Match Factory Girl is followed at 3:15 am by
Kaurismaki’s second film in the “Proletariat Trilogy,” Ariel.
It’s the story of Taisto Kasurinen, a Finnish coal miner
thrown out of work when the mine is closed and shuttered. He meets
his father afterwards in a coffee house. Dad tells him how much life
stinks, then retreats to the restroom and blows his brains out.
Taisto cleans out his bank account of 8,000 marks, but loses the
money to a pair of muggers. Needing money, he then becomes a
dockworker, working intermittently. He meets Irmeli, a divorced woman
with a son and falls in love. As he finds work is not forthcoming, he
sells his car, and as he walks out with his money he spots one of the
men who robbed him. The man pulls a knife and Taisto kills him in
self-defense, but instead he is framed as the criminal and sentenced
to prison. He quickly befriends his cellmate, Mikkonen, and when
Irmeli visits him one day he proposes marriage, to which she accepts.
He and Mikkonen break out of prison, he marries Irmeli, and after a
series of escapades during which Mikkonen is shot and killed, Taisto
and Irmeli finally make it to the ship that will take them to Mexico
– the Ariel. Again, it’s the director’s method of staging each
scene and setback that turns the film from a mere
depression-filled melodrama into a black comedy. It’s definitely
worth a peek.
April
28: Looking for a nice little change of pace? Then say no
more and tune in at 3:30 pm to Night
Flight, an MGM drama from 1933 starring John Barrymore
as A. Riviere, a man who runs his air freight company with an iron
hand, driving his pilots harder and harder and clashing with his
easygoing inspector, Robineau (Lionel Barrymore). The movie’s plot
is concerned with a desperately ill child in Rio de Janeiro who needs
medicine from Santiago, Chile, ASAP. Robert Montgomery is the pilot
that takes the serum from Chile to Buenos Aires, Argentina, flying
through rough weather, only to be fined by Riviere for arriving late.
From there, pilot William Gargan flies the serum to Rio over the
protests of wife Myrna Loy, who fears that he won’t get to Rio
alive. In the meantime, there’s a subplot with pilot Clark Gable
flying from the southern tip of Chile to Rio in stormy night weather
as wife Helen Hayes worries. It’s an interesting little picture
that was suddenly vaulted by the studio in 1942, remaining there
until TCM and Warners Home Video came to the rescue.
PSYCHOTRONICA
& THE B-HIVE
To
paraphrase Spencer Tracy from Pat and Mike, “there’s not
much there, but what’s there is cherce.”
April
19: We begin with one of the few good films to come from
hack director Otto Preminger, Laura,
which airs at 8:00 pm. Dana Andrews is in excellent form as a
detective investigating the murder of Gene Tierney, who casts a spell
over everyone she meets, including Andrews. It’s a delightful
Whodunit filled with plot twists, including the ultimate twist just
when Andrews thinks he’s solved the mystery. Clifton Webb is
memorable as the acerbic critic Waldo Lydecker and won the Oscar for
his performance. Judith Anderson is fine as Laura’s wealthy,
scheming aunt, Ann Treadwell, as is Vincent Price, who plays Laura’s
oily parasite of a fiancée, Shelby Carpenter. For those who want to
see just how good Price could be, especially in a non-horror role,
tune in and find out. Laura was originally slated as a
B-film, but the favorable reaction was so great that it began playing
as the featured attraction and made Preminger, who won the Oscar as
Best Director for the film, one of the hottest directors in
Hollywood.
At
2:00 am comes one of the great-demented horrors from Italian director
Mario Bava, Hatchet for the
Honeymoon (1970). Stephen Forsyth stars as a
bridal shop owner stuck in a loveless marriage to wife Laura Betti,
who is obsessed with the occult. However, he’s also bothered no end
by a childhood trauma that he can only recall in tiny, disjointed
fragments. He discovers that each time he kills one of his female
clients (with a hatchet) after she ties the knot, more of his puzzle
becomes clear to him. He finally gets around to killing his wife,
burying her in the hothouse garden, but she proves to be a hard
person to get rid of in a most supernatural manner. The performance
of Betti, one of Italy’s most distinguished actresses, makes this
one to catch. Also keep your ears peeled for the soundtrack by Sante
Maria Romitelli.
We
then go from the sublime to the boring as TCM airs Roger Corman’s
fangless horror film, The
Terror,
with Jack Nicholson as a French soldier in the Napoleonic Era who is
separated from his regiment and through a series of misfortunate
events, ends up at the castle of Boris Karloff. Jack is looking for
this mysterious woman named Helene (Sandra Knight) who has loved and
left him. He has trailed her to Karloff’s castle, but Karloff
claims there is no woman inside. Nicholson enters and looks for her
while Karloff continues acting mysterious. It has a great Gothic
atmosphere, but makes no sense whatsoever. For Corman completists
only.
April
21: Before
the John Wayne marathon begins that night, TCM devoted the morning
and afternoon to teen moves from the ‘60s, especially the “Beach
Party” series starring Frankie and Annette. Yeah, they’re stupid.
Yeah, they’re badly acted and have low production values. BUT –
they are fun to watch, nonetheless, because try as one might, it’s
impossible to take these films seriously. As to “best” of the
bunch, they are as follows: Dr.
Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine(AIP,
1965) at 6 am, with Vincent Price as a mad scientist out to ensnare
the fortunes of the world’s wealthiest men using bikini-clad
beautiful robots and Frankie Avalon as the secret agent who foils his
plan. At 12:45 pm, it’s Bikini
Beach,
as Frankie faces competition from British rock star The Potato Bug
(also played by Avalon). How bad is it? Let me quote critic Michael
Weldon: “He (Avalon) had trouble with one role, let alone two. His
Bug portrayal, complete with long wig and ‘yeah-yeahs,’ is really
embarrassing.” In other words: great entertainment for those hooked
on bad movies.
April
26: We go from the ridiculous to the sublime beginning at
2:00 am with The Candy
Snatchers (1973), a totally wretched, sleazy, and
lurid piece of celluloid utterly lacking any quality. It’s about
the abduction of 19-year old Candy (Susan Sennet) by a trio of
kidnapers (Tiffany Bolling, Brad David and Vince Martorano) who bind
and gag her, then bury her alive in a grave supplied only with an air
pipe as they demand ransom from her stepfather, the owner of a
jewelry store. But Pops has other plans and could care less. The key
to her freedom is in the hands of a small, mute, autistic boy who has
witnessed the kidnapping. Now, if he could only communicate with the
adults and refrain from dropping snacks down the air pipe, everything
might just work out.
Bolling,
a former Playboy model, has called this movie “the worst film in
the history of the world,” and said she only did it because she
needed work and was on cocaine at the time and unable to form good
judgments. Yeah . . . Okay.
The
sublime comes to us at 3:45 am in the form of Séance
on a Wet Afternoon (1964). It’s a fine tale,
directed by Brian Forbes, about a self-styled medium (Kim Stanley)
who kidnaps a child so she can help police solve the crime. Although
may of the scenes could be shortened or deleted to strengthen the
film, the main reason to watch is the performances of Kim Stanley and
Richard Attenborough as her weak-willed husband. The two are well
supported by Judith Donner as the kidnapped child and Nanette Newman
as the distraught mother. It’s definitely one to watch.
April
30: Let’s
wind up the month on a high note with one of director Fritz Lang’s
best thrillers, Man
Hunt (1941)
which airs at 10:00 pm. Walter Pidgeon is perfect as Captain Alan
Thorndyke, a big game hunter who infiltrates Hitler’s
Berchtesgarden retreat and gets the Fuehrer in his sights before
being stopped by the Gestapo. Brought before Gestapo Major
Quive-Smith (George Sanders), Thorndyke tells him that he never
intended to shoot, but his pleas hit deaf ears. Instead he is given a
confession to sign that says he was an agent of the British
government. He refuses to sign and is tortured, but when he continues
to refuse to sign, Quive-Smith arranges for him to be thrown off a
cliff, in order that it looks like an accident, but Thorndyke falls
into a river and survives. He eludes the Gestapo and makes it to
England, but they are in close pursuit. He manages to evade them with
the help of a young Cockney woman, Jenny Stokes (Joan Bennett). It’s
touch and go with the Nazis until the final scenes, as Lang keeps the
pressure up, helped by the sublime villainy of Sanders. For those who
haven’t yet seen this one, by all means watch. You will not be
disappointed.
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