By Ed Garea
STAR
OF THE MONTH
We
continue with Janet Leigh, the Star of the Month for October. While
most of the programming scheduled for the two remaining days of her
reign is mediocre, there are three classics definitely worth
watching.
October
22: The pick of the night airs at 2:15 in the morning. It’s
John Carpenter’s The Fog (1980),
one of the better horror films on the ‘80s, and one certainly worth
a view.
October
23: The fun spills over into the next morning at 6:00 am
with Leigh in one film she would have liked to have forgotten, the
abysmal Night of the Lepus (1972).
She and Stuart Whitman are married scientists seeking a serum to
control rabbit breeding. Instead they have created a formula that
causes the rabbits to grow to gigantic proportions. Imagine - hordes
of pet bunnies on the loose, accompanied by the occasional stuntman
in a bunny suit to inflict damage of unsuspecting humans. Yes, it’s
an all-time laff riot and demands to be seen in all its “glory.”
October
29: Two great classics with Leigh are airing tonight. At
8:00 pm, it’s Hitchcock’s Psycho (1960),
and at 10:00 pm, it’s Orson Welles’s overlooked classic, Touch
of Evil (1958).
FRIDAY
NIGHT SPOTLIGHT: AFRICA
Each
Friday night this month, except Halloween, TCM will run films about
Africa or shot in Africa.
October
17: There are three excellent films scheduled, beginning at
8:00 pm with MGM’s remake of King
Solomon’s Mines (1950), starring Deborah Kerr
and Stewart Granger. The incredible Trader
Horn (1931) follows at 10:00 pm, where Great
White hunters Harry Carey and Duncan Renaldo travel deep into the
jungle to trade wares with the locals and find themselves captured by
a bloodthirsty tribe ruled by White Goddess Edwina Booth. You have to
see it to believe it, but it’s great fun if not taken seriously.
Airing
at 12:15 am is Mountains of the
Moon (1990), an intelligent look at the
competition between British explorers Richard Francis Burton and John
Hanning Speke to find the source of the Nile River.
October
24: A night of heralded films begins at 8:00 pm, with Robert
Redford and Meryl Streep in Danish writer Isak Dinesen’s
autobiographical tale, Out of
Africa (1985). Following at 10:45 is Sigourney
Weaver in Gorillas in the
Mist (1988), another film based on a true-life
story. This time it’s the story of naturalist Dian Fossey and her
ultimately fatal struggle to save the gorillas of Rwanda from
poachers.
At
1:00 am, it’s The English
Patient (1996), a strange tale of a badly burned
man who remembers a tragic wartime romance. It won Juliette Binoche
an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress in one of Oscar’s biggest
upsets. The overwhelming favorite going in was Lauren Bacall for her
role in The Mirror Has Two Faces.
And,
wrapping up at the wee hour of 4:00 am is the classic sequel, Tarzan
and His Mate (1934).
OUT
OF THE ORDINARY
October
18: One can always make room for a classic, even if one has
seen it umpteen times, and if the classic is John Ford’s The
Searchers (1956). John Wayne is amazing in his
portrayal of an Indian-hating Civil War veteran searching for his
niece, kidnapped by Comanches many years ago. Anyone who thinks the
big glom couldn’t act should check this one out at 10:00 pm and eat
crow.
October
19: An excellent double feature from Spain comes our way with El
Sur (1983) at 2:45 am, followed by The
Spirit of the Beehive (1973) at 4:30. The former
is a moving story of a young girl living in an isolated northern
Spanish town. She is in awe of her father, and gradually comes to
realize that he has a great secret and the realization that this
secret is the center of his life while she is only a facet of that
life. What this great secret is becomes her mission to find out.
The
Spirit of the Beehive is an acclaimed film about
two innocent young girls who see Frankenstein at
a special showing in their village. The power of the film causes them
to embark upon a mission to find the monster. It is a wonderful
evocation of village life and the imagination of childhood that will
keep viewers mesmerized throughout. It’s one to catch.
October
25: A very strange and interesting film is on the agenda at
the late hour of 2:30 am. It is called Ciao!
Manhattan, an avant-garde film from
1972 directed by John Palmer and David Weisman and starring the late,
tragic, counterculture idol, Edie Sedgwick. It could be called a
semi-autobiographical tale, as it follows the life and career of
young Susan Superstar (Sedgwick) through her time as one of Andy
Warhol’s Superstars. Using actual audio
recordings of Sedgwick's account of her time in Warhol’s Factory in
New York City, and coupled with clips from the original unfinished
script started in 1967, the film captures the deterioration of Edie
Sedgwick, aka Susan
Superstar. It is not only a requiem to Edie Sedgwick, Warhol’s
first superstar, but also to the New York Underground scene, which
blossomed on the ‘60s and died from its own excesses.
THE
B-HIVE: A TRIBUTE TO EDGAR G. ULMER
On October
21, TCM is devoting an entire night to the films of director
Edgar G. Ulmer. Ulmer, known as the director who did the most with
the least, was the Auteur of Poverty Row. Not that he particularly
wanted to work there, he was blackballed by the Hollywood studios in
the mid-‘30s as a consequence of his affair with Shirley Alexander,
wife of producer Max Alexander of Universal, a nephew of Universal’s
president, Carl Laemmle. Shirley divorced Alexander to marry Ulmer
and remained his wife until his death in 1972. Ulmer worked
everywhere in the low-budget world, from films in Yiddish to
fly-by-night production companies. He hooked up with PRC in the ‘40s,
the largest studio he would work for, and created several minor
masterpieces while there. Anyway we put it, Ulmer was an interesting
character, and his films are always interesting to watch.
The
night begins at 8:00 pm with the PRC drama Her
Sister’s Secret (1946), a weeper about a woman
who becomes pregnant by her soldier lover, who takes a powder. She
gives the child to her sister only to have the lover return intent on
having a family.
At
9:30, it’s a wonderful documentary about Ulmer’s films and
influence, Edgar G. Ulmer -- The Man
Off-Screen (2005). At 10:45 pm, it’s Carnegie
Hall (1947), a story of a young piano prodigy and his
stage mother. Following at 1:15 am is Murder
Is My Beat (1955), a nice little quickie from
Allied Artists about detectives’ search for the killer of a
businessman.
Detour (1945),
widely regarded as Ulmer’s masterpiece, airs afterward at 2:45 am.
Then, it’s The
Amazing Transparent Man (1960),
which may just by Ulmer’s worst film: a story of a gangster who can
become invisible. The less said, the better.
PSYCHOTRONICA
October
16: As part of the Special Theme - Ghost Stories, TCM is
airing the superior horror-comedy, The
Ghost Breakers (1940), with Bob Hope and Paulette
Goddard, at 8:00 pm. The other interesting films of the night are two
spook comedies from The Bowery Boys, beginning at 2:15 am: Ghost
Chasers(1951), and Spook
Busters (1946).
October
18: Tune in at 2:30 am for director John Carpenter’s
updating of Howard Hawks’s Rio Bravo in an
urban setting - Assault on Precinct
13 (1976).
October
23: An excellent double-bill of ghost stories beginning at
8:00 pm with The Innocents (1961),
based on Henry James’s The Turn of the Screw, and at
10:00 pm, Ray Milland and Ruth Hussey in the superior ghost
story, The Uninvited (1944).
October
26: It’s Lon Chaney’s silent horror-comedy, The
Monster (1925), at 12:45 am, followed by
Henri-Georges Clouzot’s classic thriller, Diabolique(1955),
at 2:15 am.
October
28: It’s an entire day of horror films. The best of the
bunch begins with Bela Lugosi in Columbia’s The
Return of the Vampire (1944). At 8 pm, it’s
Ealing’s classic anthology Dead of
Night (1945), and at 12:15 am the
anthology Kwaidan (1965)
from Japan.
October
30: Films worth catching include the unintentional comedy I
Was a Communist For The F.B.I. (1951) at 3:45
pm, The House on Haunted Hill(1958)
at 8:00 pm, and The Haunting (1963)
at 1:00 am.
October
31: A good day for horror films. Try Carnival
of Souls (1962) at 4:45 pm, Repulsion (1965)
at 6:15 pm, the original Night of
the Living Dead(1968) at 8:00 pm, and Curse
of the Demon (1958) at 10:00 pm.
Finally,
at 5:00 am, it’s one of the most exotic and disturbing films from
France, Eyes
Without a Face (1959).
Directed by Georges Franju, it’s the story of a surgeon (Pierre
Brasseur) who kidnaps young women and grafts their faces onto that of
his disfigured daughter (Edith Scob). It’s a “can’t miss” if
you’ve never seen it and a “must see again” if you have.
No comments:
Post a Comment