By Ed Garea
STAR
OF THE MONTH
The
Star of the Month for June is Rock Hudson, with TCM running the usual
boatload of his films during the month. I’m somewhat ambivalent
about Hudson. He was a decent actor, but I didn’t care for a lot of
the vehicles the studios placed him in throughout his career,
especially those sickly sweet comedies with Doris Day. But I loved
him in Westerns and military-themed films. I’m probably going
against the tide here when I say that I don’t find his soapers
under Douglas Sirk all that wonderful. In fact, I think they’re
overrated. But it has nothing to do with Hudson - I think Sirk is
overrated. Oh, well. Anyway, here’s what I consider the best of his
first two weeks.
June
5: A solid first night for Rock with three great Westerns,
his first film, and a Douglas Sirk film I actually like. Begin at
8:00 pm with The Last Sunset from
1961, a terrific yarn directed by Robert Aldrich with a screenplay
from Dalton Trumbo. Rock is a sheriff tracking bad guy Kirk Douglas
to rancher Joseph Cotten’s homestead. They soon find themselves
taking part in a grueling cattle drive and have to work out their
differences along the way, especially as they’re starting to put
the moves on Cotten’s wife (Dorothy Malone) and daughter (Carol
Lynley).
At
10:00 pm comes Sirk’s 1957 adaptation of William Faulkner, The
Tarnished Angels. Rock is a newspaperman in the ‘30s
who has come to write a “whatever happened to” story about World
War I flying ace Roger Schurmann (Robert Stack), now reduced to
making a living on the stunt pilot circuit. Not only does he get his
story but he becomes actively enmeshed in the couple’s life, even
taking them in to live with him in his small apartment when things
get really bad. Of course, as seemingly always with Sirk, things get
a little too melodramatic and the ending is totally artificial. But
it’s a nice ride along the way. By the way, for a woman living in
the ‘30s, Malone’s hairdo and costumes are definitely ‘50s.
That’s Universal for you.
11:45
sees Bend of the River from
director Anthony Mann in 1952. Jimmy Stewart is a man with a most
questionable past who is leading a wagon train of settlers from
Missouri into Oregon Territory. Arthur Kennedy is his
partner-in-crime who also joins the wagon train. But the partners
have a falling out as things proceed and end up in a life-or-death
duel. This is a compelling film that begins somewhat slowly, but
quickly picks up steam until we are unable to look away. Rock has a
supporting role as a gambler who is shot by Kennedy in a poker game.
At
1:30 am it’s anther great Anthony Mann Western, this time from
1950: Winchester ’73.
Jimmy Stewart is Lin McAdam. He defeats outlaw Waco Johnny Dean (Dan
Duryea) in a shooting contest officiated by none other than Wyatt
Earp, winning the prize of a new Winchester rifle. Dean and his gang
jump McAdam and steal the coveted rifle. The rest of the film is
concerned with the quest by McAdam to get the rifle back. Simply put,
this is one of the best Westerns ever made and was credited with
fueling the revival of the Western genre during the ‘50s. Rock made
an impression on director Mann playing the role of Sioux chief Young
Bull.
Finally,
at the late hour of 3:15 in the morning, comes Hudson’s first
film, Fighter
Squadron.
From Warner Bros. in 1948, it’s director Raoul Walsh’s tribute to
the daredevil antics of the fighter pilots who took on the Luftwaffe
over England and France during 1943-44. Hudson, an ex-truck driver,
was under personal contract to Walsh at the time and also served as
the director’s chauffeur. At Walsh’s urging, Hudson took a bit
part in the movie. He had one line, “You’ve got to get a bigger
blackboard.” But he was so nervous that it took 38 takes to get in
that one line. And don’t even look for his name in the billing.
June
12: Steel yourself. It’s Epic and Soap night for Hudson.
First up at 8:00 pm is a double barrel of pure soap with Magnificent
Obsession (1954) and All
That Heaven Allows (1955). The first is a
faithful remake of John Stahl’s 1935 original with Robert Taylor
and Irene Dunne in the parts later played by Hudson and Jane Wyman.
And like the 1935 original, the remake was a big hit, so much so that
it established Hudson as a bonafide Movie Star. And because this was
such a big hit, Universal decided to bring the director and stars
together again the next year for All That Heaven Allows.
This is one of Sirk’s slickest soapers, with Wyman as a lonely
older widow who falls for young landscaper Hudson, to the
consternation of everyone around her. Needless to say, the film was
another megahit and was remade in 1974 as Ali: Fear Eats
the Soul by Werner Fassbinder, of all people. Look for
B-horror stalwart Gloria Talbott as Wyman’s daughter, and former
squeeze of CMH winner “Manila John” Basilone, Virginia Grey, as
Alida, a friend of Hudson.
Then,
at 11:45, comes one of the biggest epics, outside of biblical epics,
of the ‘50s: Giant.
This 1956 drama from director George Stevens, is based on Edna
Ferber’s sprawling story of two generations of a Texas family as
they move from cattle to oil. Although Elizabeth Taylor and Hudson
play the leads, the film is perhaps best remembered as the last of
James Dean’s short career.
FRIDAY
NIGHT SPOTLIGHT
The
Friday Night Spotlight for June is devoted to - aaargh, me buckos -
pirate films.
June
6: Start at 8:00 pm with a rare showing of the original 1924
silent version of The Sea Hawk,
starring the legendary Milton Sills as “The Sea Hawk,” and the
unforgettable Enid Bennett as Rosamund. In fact, the only cast member
we’re familiar with is Wallace Beery, who plays freebooter Jasper
Leigh. Sills died of a heart attack in 1930 at the young age of 48
while playing tennis. Bennett, married to director Sidney Franklin
(she was previously married to director Fred Niblo), appeared only
sporadically in sound films, her last being The Big Store in
1941.
At
10:00 pm, it’s Tyrone Power in Henry King’s 1942 adaptation
of The Black Swan.
Power is wonderful playing against type as a rotten brigand. He’s
ably supported by the likes of Maureen O’Hara, Laird Cregar, Thomas
Mitchell, George Sanders, Anthony Quinn, and George Zucco.
Then,
at midnight, treat yourself to The
Spanish Main, a 1945 production from RKO and director
Frank Borzage, starring Maureen O’Hara, Paul Henreid, and the
villainous Walter Slezak.
June
13: The night begins at 8:00 pm with Burt Lancaster’s
off-the-charts performance in 1952’s The
Crimson Pirate. Nick Cravat plays Burt’s right-hand
man, Ojo, in large part because he was Burt’s trapeze partner when
the two worked the circus. The reason he’s a mute in the film was
because of his heavy New York accent. Look for the young Christopher
Lee as Joseph, the military attaché.
Following
at 10:00 pm is Vincente Minnelli’s troubled The
Pirate, from 1948. Minnelli’s wife, Judy Garland,
who was the film’s star, was suffering from maladies both physical
and emotional, which caused her to miss 99 of the movie’s 135-day
shooting schedule. Both Garland and co-star Gene Kelly fought for the
inclusion of the talented Nicholas Brothers, Fayard and Harold, in
the film, but the scene they were in with Garland and Kelly, “Be A
Clown,” was cut by exhibitors in the South.
At
midnight begins a double feature of pirate comedies. First is The
Princess and the Pirate,
an above average Bob Hope feature from RKO in 1944, co-starring
Virginia Mayo, Walter Slezak, and Walter Brennan, who steals the film
as the pirate Featherhead. This is followed at 1:45 am by Abbott
and Costello Meet Captain Kidd;
a 1952 film from Woodley Productions and Warner Brothers. It’s the
usual Abbott and Costello antics, but Charles Laughton, reprising his
role as Captain Kidd, has a field day and makes this mess worth
watching.
CAGNEY
Cagney
may have looked totally ridiculous and out of place in the 1939
Warner Brothers’ attempt to make Western stars out of both him and
Humphrey Bogart, The
Oklahoma Kid,
but give him about 15 years, a few pounds, and the experience of
having been a gentleman farmer in his time away from movies, and it’s
a different story. On June 5 at 4:30 pm we get to see what that time
has done when we watch Jimmy in 1956’s Tribute
to a Bad Man,
from MGM. This time out, Cagney is a ruthless land baron who will do
almost anything to hold on to his possessions. He’s unstoppable
until he runs into former saloon hostess Irene Papas, and it’s then
the sands begin to shift from under the stubborn rancher. Originally
meant for Spencer Tracy and Grace Kelly, director Robert Wise does an
excellent job with Cagney and Papas as the leads. It’s Cagney's
last Western, and he definitely goes out on a high note.
OUT
OF THE ORDINARY
June
8: Beginning at 2:00 am it’s a double feature of the
Orpheus legend. We begin with 1959’s Black
Orpheus, which sets the legend in Rio during Carnival.
This is a feast for the eyes with the vivid colors and sounds of
Carnival, and is beautifully acted and directed. Following is Jean
Cocteau’s 1949 rendering of Orpheus,
an excellent updating of the legend starring Jean Marais as a poet
following wife Eurydice into the underworld, only to fall in love
with the Princess of Death (Marie Casares). Although overdone is
spots, it still retains its hypnotic effect on the viewer and is one
that must be seen.
June
15: Again, another double feature, this time from director
Rene Clement. Leading off at 2:00 am is Purple
Noon (1961), the first adaptation of Patricia
Highsmith’s novel The Talented Mr. Ripley, with Alain
Delon as the young man who murders his rich friend and takes over his
identity. Anthony Minghella remade the film in 1999 as The
Talented Mr. Ripley with Matt Damon as Ripley, but
speaking as one who has seem both versions, I can recommend Clement’s
version hands down. For one thing, Minghella suffers from a need to
try to explain Ripley’s actions while Clement allows Ripley’s
amorality to run free, which pulls us right in to the movie and we
end up rooting for Ripley to get away with it. Also, while Damon is
an interesting actor, co-star Jude Law upstages him. Alain Delon, by
contrast, gives a compelling and magnetic performance, dominating the
film. Also bask in the glow of Henri Decae’s wonderful
cinematography, which makes the move come to life. Yes, this is the
one to see.
Following
at 4:00 am is Clement’s 1947 noir, Les
Maudits (The Damned), a story about
a true ship of fools. In the last days of World War II, a group of
Nazis and sympathizers (including a general, an Italian businessman
and his wife, and an SS leader and his assistant) leave Oslo via
submarine for the safe harbor of South America. Due to an injury to
the businessman’s wife suffered during a depth charge attack, they
stop at liberated Royan and kidnap a French doctor (Henri Vidal).
When they reach South America, they discover asylum is not what it’s
cracked up to be. Most of the film takes place within the confined
space of the submarine, where magnified sensibilities combine with
the lack of privacy and shared contempt to give us a peek at what
life in Hell might look like. It’s definitely worth the time and
effort.
PSYCHOTRONICA
AND THE B HIVE
There
is seemingly something for everyone in this month’s selection of
psychotronic movies.
June
1: The dark side of atomic energy is featured with two
films, one from the U.S. and one from the U.S.S.R. At 2:00 am, it’s
the 1962 Soviet sci-fi thriller, Nine
Days of One Year. This
remarkable film recounts the efforts of a team of Soviet nuclear
scientists to build a fusion reactor, one physicist doing so even at
the risk of his own life. The film also shows the carelessness of the
scientists’ work and radiation it inadvertently unleashes,
something usually not admitted in the U.S.S.R.
Following
at 4:00 am, also from 1962, is American International’s look at
what could happen if the bomb were ever dropped, Panic
in the Year Zero, as Ray Milland and Jean Hagen, along
with children Frankie Avalon and Mary Mitchel, try to survive in the
aftermath. Milland is fine, but the film, suffers from the insertion
of a gang of young beatnik thugs spouting anti-establishment slogans
who make life tough for Milland and family. However, keep in mind
that it is psychotronic - and that there is a reason for that. So sit
back, enjoy, and try not to take the proceedings seriously.
June
2: It’s a night of British Invasion films that goes from
the sublime to the ridiculous. First, the sublime: at 8:00 pm, TCM
leads off the Richard Lester’s delightful Swinging London romp
starring the Beatles, A Hard Day’s
Night (1964). The only plot revolves around a day
with the Beatles as their fans chase them all over Londontown. Will
they make their television date? What do you think? The film’s
subplot deals with Paul trying to keep his grandfather (Wilfrid
Brambell) out of mischief. It’s followed at 9:45 by Go
Go Mania, a concert film of British rock ‘n’ roll
acts hosted by London disc jockey Jimmy Savile. It’s a lovely
nostalgic feast for those of us who came of age during this time, and
those watching will find it has lost none of its power. In fact, it
may even win some fans from among the younger generation.
At
11:15, it’s a rock film of a different sort, as the Dave Clark Five
star in the John Boorman directed Having
a Wild Weekend from 1965. Instead of simply
cloning A Hard Day’s Night, Boorman (in his
feature debut) and writer Peter Nichols fashion a remarkable film
dealing with the reaction of the young as they are being swallowed up
by the commercialization of the youth culture. Another point of
departure from A Hard Day’s Night is the
fact that the Dave Clark Five do not play themselves - or even
musicians - in the movie. Instead they are stuntmen who, along with
the star they’re supporting in the shooting, become disillusioned
on the set of a slew of commercials being filmed for a meat packing
company. The star, Dinah (Barbara Ferris), strikes up a relationship
with Steve (Dave Clark), one of the stuntmen. Together they grab the
company’s Jaguar and head off for some time away from the set, but
no matter where they go, there are people wishing to cash in on the
duo. It’s different and worth a look.
Now
to the ridiculous: First up at 1:00 am is Hold
On! This 1966 effort from Herman’s Hermits and
director Arthur Lubin finds the band on a U.S. tour accompanied by a
NASA scientist who is deciding if the group is worthy enough to have
a space capsule named after them. The film features 10 songs from the
band, including the title track and “A Must to Avoid.” The group
appears again right after in the 1968 Mrs.
Brown, You’ve Got a Lovely Daughter. The group play
working lads in Manchester who all own a share “Mrs. Brown,” a
racing greyhound. To finance her career, they form a group and play
gigs from Manchester to London, where Herman falls hard for ingénue
Sarah Caldwell. This time, nine of the band’s songs are featured,
including the title track and “There’s a Kind of Hush (All Over
the World).” The film was made on the quick and looks every bit of
it. Those who were fans will love this while those who were not will
feel an itchy finger on the remote control fast forward finger. The
irony of it was that by 1968 the group was already Yesterday’s
News.
Finally,
at 4:30 am it’s Mary Ann Mobley in 1964’s Get
Yourself a College Girl,
with Mary Ann as a student at a conservative college who writes rock
songs in secret. While on vacation at Sun Valley, she and other
students put on a show to help re-elect a senator. Produced by the
notorious Sam Katzman, it’s every bit as interesting as it sounds.
My advice is to record it and use your fast-forward button to get to
the music, which is incredible. While the Dave Clark Five, the
Animals, and the Standells are on the bill, the film is stolen by the
Jimmy Smith Trio, and jazz great Stan Getz and the velvet voice of
singer Astrud Gilberto doing their standard of ‘60s cool, “The
Girl From Ipanema.”
June
3: It’s Outer Space Night at TCM, with the following
classics being shown beginning at 8:00 pm. 2001:
A Space Odyssey (1968), Ridley
Scott’s Alien(1979)
at 10:45, the 1950 pioneer, Destination
Moon, at 1:00 am, Marooned (1969)
at 2:30 am, and that all-time stink bomb, Queen
of Outer Space (1958) at 4:45 am. My
recommendation is to record both Destination Moon,
because it’s not aired that often, and Queen of Outer
Space for its hilarity.
June
4: It’s a psychotronic double feature starring Ursula
Andress beginning at 8:00 pm with Hammer’s remake of RKO’s 1935
jungle epic She.
Based on the 1897 novel by H. Rider Haggard, Andress is breathtaking
as the queen of the lost city, discovered by explorers John
Richardson and Peter Cushing, and Christopher Lee ably assists her as
the evil head priest, Billali. However, the RKO version is the one to
see, for it’s a whole lot funnier. It must be lost or in
litigation, for surely TCM, which owns most of the RKO library, would
have screened this.
At
10:00 pm it’s the disappointing Clash
of the Titans from 1981. The story of Perseus
(Harry Hamlin) and his quest to save the beautiful Princess Andromeda
(Judi Bowker), it features Laurence Olivier as Zeus, Claire Bloom as
Hera, and Andress as Aphrodite. With the special effects by Ray
Harryhausen, it features the usual amount of wonderful monsters, but
the film falls flat. The brass owl, Bubo, who aids Perseus, comes off
as a lame clone of R2D2.
June
10: It’s time for Robert Osborne’s picks and he starts
off with two psychotronic noirs from Fritz Lang, The
Woman in the Window (1944), and Scarlet
Street (1945). Both star Edward G. Robinson, Joan
Bennett, and Dan Duryea and display Lang at the height of his power.
June
13: The morning and afternoon is devoted to films featuring
the number “13.” Among them are Thirteen
Women (1932) at 10:00 am with Myrna Loy as a
mysterious Eurasian out to murder the boarding school roommate who
mistreated her; the Red Scare film, The
Woman From Pier 13 (1950) at noon; Francis Ford
Coppola’s early entry, Dementia 13
(1963), which he wrote and directed, at 3:15 pm; William Castle’s
gimmick-laden 13 Ghosts (1960)
at 4:45 pm, followed at 6:15 by his Thirteen
Frightened Girls (1963). Not a bad afternoon.
June
14: A late night double feature of gangster films begins at
2:00 am with the dark Italian production Shoot
First, Die Later (1974) and the Bernie Casey-Pam
Grier Blaxploitation actioner Hit
Man, from 1972.
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