A
Guide to the Rare and Unusual on TCM
By
Ed Garea
STAR
OF THE MONTH: ANTHONY QUINN
Well,
it seems TCM has shot their load of good Anthony Quinn flicks in the
first two weeks. Now we’re left with the also-rans, and a few good
pics where he has a small part.
April
22: It’s a night devoted to Quinn's Westerns, with his
dark Western, Man From Del
Rio (1955),
at 8:00. Quinn plays an uneducated Mexican gunfighter who wins the
town over with his courage. At 9:30 pm, it gets a little better
with Guns for San Sebastian (1968),
with Quinn as a Mexican bandit masquerading as a priest who is roped
into helping defend a town against an Indian attack. At 11:30,
it’s Deaf Smith and Johnny
Ears (1973) with
Quinn as a deaf gunfighter who fights for Texas independence. At 1:45
am, Quinn is again a Mexican bandit in the Robert Taylor-Ava Gardner
vehicle, Ride, Vanquero! (1953).
Finally, at 3:30 am, Quinn is Crazy Horse in They
Died With Their Boots On (1942), starring Errol
Flynn as George Custer, late of the Battle of Little Bighorn.
April
29: At 8:00, it’s The
Wild Party (1956). This is one of the few Quinn
films I’ve missed over the years and I’m looking forward to
watching it, as everything I’ve heard about it is bad. But then
again, it co-stars Carol Ohmart, and she’s always worth looking at
in a movie. The plot has Quinn as a former pro football player who
has fallen on hard times. Look for Nehemiah Persoff as a hipster, of
all things, and Jay Robinson (Caligula in The Robe) as a
psycho who swings a mean switchblade.
At
9:45, it’s another mediocrity, The
Naked Street (1955). Quinn is Mob boss Phil
Regan, who goes to elaborate lengths to help little sister Anne
Bancroft, who is preggers by lover Farley Granger, but Granger is
currently sitting on Death Row. So with a little finagling, Quinn
manages to get Farley sprung, but later lives to regret it. It’s
another bad film for Quinn, and one so bad I recommend it to all bad
film fanatics.
Quinn
then stars in a movie that was a pleasant shock to me when I first
saw it. Flap (1970),
which airs at 11:30 pm, stars Quinn as Flapping Eagle, a dim-witted
tribal revolutionary and con man who takes on the U.S. government
over the mistreatment of his tribe. It’s funny and touching, thanks
in large part to a excellent script from Clair Huffaker (from his
novel Nobody Loves a Drunken Indian) and its director –
Sir Carol Reed. It’s one to watch, even at this late hour.
Following
at 1:30 am is The Secret of Santa
Vittoria (1969) with Quinn back in form in a slob
role playing the mayor of a small Italian town that has hidden a
million bottles of wine from the Germans during the waning days of
World War II. It’s produced and directed by Stanley Kramer, so we
know it’s of dubious quality, a mechanical film with not one moment
of spontaneity.
To
wrap up the evening, it’s Quinn in a supporting role as an engineer
in the John Wayne-Laraine Day quite watchable
action-adventure, Tycoon (1947).
This was Quinn’s last film in Hollywood as he was taking a hiatus
to start a Broadway stage career. He would not appear in another film
until The Brave Bulls in 1951.
FRIDAY
NIGHT SPOTLIGHT
The
Friday Night Spotlight in April is devoted to special effects man and
art director A. Arnold Gillespie. As we mentioned previously,
Gillespie worked with special effects at a time when CGI was just a
dream. His skill, though, was such that he was nominated 13 times
from 1939 to 1963, winning four of those times, for special effects
work. Today, with the advent of computer graphics and green screens
replacing mattes, it’s a different, and some would say less
interesting, world.
April
17: Beginning at 8:00 pm, it’s Green
Dolphin Street (1947, Special Effects). 10:00
pm – Royal Wedding (1951,
Special Effects). 12:15 am – Scaramouche (1952,
Special Effects). 2:30 am – The
Wreck of the Mary Deare (1959, Special Effects).
April
24: The evening begins at 8:00 pm with Forbidden
Planet (1956, Special Effects). 10:00 pm –
North By Northwest (1959,
Special Effects). 12:30 am – Ben-Hur (1959,
Special Photographic Effects). And at 4:30 am – How
the West Was Won (1962, Special Visual Effects).
OUT
OF THE ORDINARY
April
19: At 3:30 am, it’s the stunningly gorgeous The
Makioka Sisters from Toho Studios and director
Kon Ichikawa, from Jun’ichiro Tanizaki’s 1943 novel, Sasameyuki
(Fine Snow). Made in 1963, it had been filmed twice before in
1950 (by Shintoho Film Distributors) and in 1959 (by Daiei)
as Sasameyuki. The film is set in prewar Japan and
chronicles the activities of the four Makioka sisters, Tsuruko,
Sachiko, Yukiko, and Taeko, who hail from a wealthy industrial family
in Ozaka and gather each year in Kyoto for the annual Cherry Blossom
Festival. The family, once powerful, is in a period of decline, and
with Japan’s defeat, all the sisters really have left to hold onto
are the traditional rituals and customs, which the eldest sisters
believe will preserve the family’s greatness. Director Ichikawa
shows most of the exalted customs to be outdated, archaic, and
inflexible to the point of absurdity, especially seen in the light of
a changing Japan in the postwar era. As one who read the original
novel and seen this version, I can say that it is an excellent
illustration of what happens when filmmakers try to adapt a classic
of literature. Characters and their motives as described in the novel
are not fully translated to the screen, with the result that they
seem to come out of empty space with no real relevance to the plot. I
have also read that the studio forced changes in the script from the
director to sanitize the plot and give it happy ending. My only
comment is that I take all film adaptations of classic literary works
with a grain of salt. (Literature is art, film is craft.) I do
recommend this film highly, though, for its photography and the
performances, especially Keiko Kishi, who was magnificent as the
office flirt, “Goldfish,” in Ozu’s Early
Spring (1956), as the eldest and most rigid sister,
Tsuruko.
April
21: It’s an evening devoted to the great Sophia Loren and
features three of her best films: Marriage,
Italian Style (1964), at 8:00 pm; Two
Women (1961) at 11:00 pm, for which Sophia
won the Best Actress Oscar; and The
Gold of Naples (1954) at 1:00 am, a film by
Vittorio DeSica composed of six stories of life in Naples. Going
against the grain is the 1972 H-Bomb Man
of La Mancha, at 3:00 am. Loren was the only one
in the damn thing who gave a good performance, not to mention she was
the only one that could sing. Kicking the evening off at 8:00
pm is a short, Human Voice,
directed by her son, Edoardo Ponti. It’s based on Jean Cocteau’s
one-woman play of the same name, with Sophia as Angela, a woman in
the twilight of her years on an emotional roller coaster in her last
conversation with the man she loves, who is leaving her for anther
woman. Son Edoardo, by the way, is married to Sasha Alexander
of Rizzoli and Isles fame on TNT.
April
26: From Czechoslovakia comes the 1966 Pearls
of the Deep, airing at 2:00 am. It’s an uneven
anthology of five stories, each based on a work by the noted Czech
writer Bohumil Hrabal. The problem with omnibus compilations,
especially with each segment being directed by a different filmmaker,
is that the quality can vary widely. (Think of the Edgar Allen
Poe-based film, the 1968 Spirits of
the Dead, with three segments directed by Vadim,
Malle, and Fellini.) Vera Chytilova, who directed the wonderful
Daisies in 1966, helms one of the episodes, but as I
haven’t as yet seen this one, I’m proceeding with caution.
A
much better Czech film follows at 4:00 am, A
Report on the Party and the Guests,
from 1968, directed by Jan Nemec. It’s a stunning, Kafkaesque
allegory about a group of picnickers psychologically forced into
submission by a group of strangers led by Rudolf. The picnickers are
led into a clearing where they are interrogated. When one of the men
objects to Rudolf, he is abused until another man shows up to
apologize for Rudolf’s behavior, explaining that it was only a
practical joke. He invites the “guests” to his birthday banquet
and they trek to a lake, where they are joined by others. When the
meal begins it’s discovered that not everyone is in their proper
assigned seats, and they are told to reseat themselves. When one of
the guests becomes upset because her husband has left the table due
to Rudolf’s rudeness, Rudolf declares that he has ruined the
banquet and organizes a search party armed with police dogs and guns
to look for him. When the film premiered in Prague, it was quickly
banned and taken out of circulation. The director himself was later
exiled for his documentary short, Oratorio
for Prague,
which shows the invasion by Soviet tanks. He would not return until
1990.
PSYCHOTRONICA
AND THE B HIVE
April
18: A psychotronic double feature is on tap for today,
beginning at 12:25 pm with Children
of the Damned from 1964, no relation to the
excellent 1960 Village of the Damned, but once
again starring those wonderful space children with their wonderful
special powers. It’s followed by the 1958 crap classic, Attack
of the 50-Foot Woman, at 2:00 pm.
Victor
Buono has given us some eccentric performances over his career, none
weirder, though, than his turn in the 1964 horror film, The
Strangler, which airs at 4:30 am. Buono is a rather
corpulent 30-year-old lab technician with a fetish for dolls and a
hatred for women. He’s already killed 7 of them, all nurses, before
the film opens with him dispatching number 8, another nurse, by
strangling her with her own stockings while she undresses to go to
sleep. He strangles number 9, who happens to be his invalid mother’s
dedicated sanitarium nurse, and the shock of this gives mom (Ellen
Corby), who treated our protagonist horribly as a youth, her final,
fatal heart attack, which was probably the whole point of his
rampage. The cops are now onto him, too late to save victim number
10, but in time to save number 10’s co-worker before she buys it.
April
20: The evening’s theme is “Hitching a Rise,” and
several good films are on the agenda, starting at 8:00 pm with Robert
Aldrich’s noir classic, Kiss Me
Deadly (1955), which served as an inspiration to the
French New Wave. Other films to catch this night are Roman
Polanski’s Knife in the
Water (1962), at 1:45 am; Edgar G. Ulmer’s
B-classic, Detour (1945),
at 3:30 am, and director Ida Lupino’s genuinely creepy The
Hitch-Hiker, from
1953 at 4:45 am.
April
22: It’s an entire morning and afternoon of Andy Hardy
films, beginning at 6:00 am with the last in the series, Andy
Hardy Comes Home (1958). They travel backward in
time, with the best of the bunch being The
Courtship of Andy Hardy (1942), featuring a young
Donna Reed, at 1:00 pm; Andy Hardy’s
Private Secretary (1941), at 4:30 pm; and Andy
Hardy Meets Debutante (1940), at 6:15 pm.
April
23: A double feature of horror begins at 2:00 pm with
1932’s The Mystery of the Wax
Museum, starring Glenda Farrell, Fay Wray, and Lionel
Atwill. It’s followed at 3:15 pm by its remake, House
of Wax, from 1953, starring Vincent Price, Frank
Lovejoy, Phyllis Kirk, and a young actor named Charles Buchinsky, who
later gained fame as Charles Bronson.
April
25: Another double feature, this one of monsters, begins at
7:30 am with 1933’s sequel, Son of
Kong, followed at 8:45 am by the 1958 Japanese
classic, Rodan.
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