TCM
TiVo ALERT
For
April
23–April 30
DAVID’S
BEST BETS:
THE
APARTMENT (April 24, 3:15 pm):
Director Billy Wilder's follow-up to the overrated Some
Like It Hot, this
wonderful comedy-drama stars Jack Lemmon as an opportunistic office
worker who sort of sleeps his way to the top. Well, he lets his
office managers use his apartment as a place to have sex with their
various mistresses. Because of that, he gets promoted to the
personnel department, where his supervisor, Fred MacMurray, excellent
at playing sleazy characters, convinces his new assistant to let him
have the apartment on an exclusive basis. MacMurray's latest mistress
is the company's elevator operator (Shirley MacLaine), who
Lemmon likes a lot, but doesn't say anything to her. A fabulous
cast with one of Hollywood's best directors and an intelligent, funny
script, and you have 1960's Oscar winner for Best Picture. It was
nominated for nine others, winning four of
those. Incredibly, MacMurray wasn't even nominated for Best
Supporting Actor.
SINGIN'
IN THE RAIN (April
26, 10:00 pm): I'm not a fan of musicals so when I recommend one,
watch it. Singin' in
the Rain is the
greatest musical ever made. It's funny, it's charming, the singing is
great and the dancing is unbelievable. While Gene Kelly's numbers are
spectacular, Donald O'Connor's performance of "Make 'Em Laugh"
is the best in the film. O'Connor had a unique physical style of
dance that included him taking a number of pratfalls and other things
that later took a toll on his body. The plot isn't
exceptionally strong, but it's quite clever – spoofing
Hollywood's transition from silent films to talkies.
ED’S
BEST BETS:
MYSTERY
OF THE WAX MUSEUM (April 23, 2:00 pm): A great
vintage Pre-Code horror film from Warner Brothers in two-strip
Technicolor process with Glenda Farrell as a reporter investigating
the sudden disappearance of young women. Could it have something to
do with wax sculptor Lionel Atwill? He has his eyes of Glenda’s
friend, Fay Wray. Tune in and find out. This film was later remade in
3-D as House of Wax, starring Vincent Price, but I much
prefer the original. It has that ‘30s sass, especially from Farrell
in the lead that the later version completely lacks.
THE
BIG HOUSE (April 25, 10:45 pm): Technically, it
wasn’t the first prison drama to come from Hollywood, but it was
the first one that talked, and it was certainly one of the most
powerful, setting the template for years to come. They’re all here,
the prison characters that have become cliché over the years: the
innocent (Robert Montgomery), jailed for vehicular manslaughter and
thrown into a cell with two of the hardest convicts ever to break a
rock: forger and thief Chester Morris, and the totally uncouth and
murderous Wallace Beery, aptly nicknamed “Machine Gun” for his
antics outside the walls. Lewis Stone is the warden, trying hard to
keep a lid on this simmering pot that could explode at any minute.
Directed with innovation by George William Hill and written by his
wife, Frances Marion, who toured San Quentin with notebook in hand to
record observations of prison life and conversations with convicts
and officials alike. The best thing about this film is, except for an
unnecessary romantic subplot, it still packs quite a punch when seen
today, which is quite a compliment.
WE
DISAGREE ON ... HOW THE WEST WAS WON (April 24, 4:30 am)
ED:
A. This epic Western, boasting four directors
and an all-star cast, follows four generations of one family, told in
five segments beginning in 1839 as they travel through the Erie Canal
on their way West. Other segments chronicle their experience in
homesteading, surviving the Civil War, witnessing the expansion of
the railroad, and facing notorious outlaws. It all spells E-p-i-c,
and even more foreboding is that it was made especially for Cinerama.
It’s also 165 minutes in length. So the recipe for disaster is in
place: four directors, all-star cast, Cinerama process, and a lengthy
running time. However, for all that baggage, the film acquits itself
nicely. The directors happen to be John Ford, Henry Hathaway, George
Marshall, and Richard Thorpe, who directed the connecting segments – directors experienced not only with action movies, but also some damn
good Westerns. Despite its length, the film never fails to keep our
attention, the atmosphere is grand, the photography downright
awesome, the characters clearly defined, and the picture never lets
up with the action. One factor that definitely worked in its favor
was in splitting the film into segments and using a different
director for each segment, as directing a film this long can become a
Herculean task that can wear down the best director. The film also
touches all the bases: runaway wagon trains, daunting river rapids,
buffalo stampedes, The Rockies and Monument Valley, the coming of the
telegraph and the Pony Express, Indian attacks, railroad barons, and
dangerous outlaws. Ford’s direction of the Civil War episode was
John Ford at his best. The audience is always taking a chance when
watching an epic; many of them turn out to be long, tedious affairs.
But How The West Was Won could also be subtitled
“How To Make an Epic.” And that’s why it’s a favorite of
mine.
DAVID:
B-. This film comes with an impressive pedigree. It's
a Western with John Ford as one of its directors and an all-star cast
including Henry Fonda, John Wayne, Gregory Peck, James Stewart, Karl
Malden and Lee J. Cobb. The movie poster touted "24 Great Stars
in the Mightiest Adventure Ever Filmed!" Spencer Tracy provides
the narration, and it's beautifully filmed in Cinerama, a very
advanced, very expensive process for 1963, when it was released. It's
a good film, thus my grade of B-, so I'm not going to trash it for
argument's sake. However, for nearly every step forward, it take
a step back. While the cast is great, we don't get to spend much time
with them. It seemed like the movie was trying to fit in as many film
legends as possible just to say they're in it. There's little to no
character development and most of the actors either have cameos or
small roles. Because of that, the viewer can't get attached to the
characters as they leave the screen almost as fast as they entered a
few minutes prior. There's some nice work such as Ford's Civil War
segment, which, surprisingly, lasts about 15 minutes in a film that
is ridiculously long – almost three hours. The overall length would
be fine if portions of it weren't also boring and pointless. Epics
tell the story of a character or two or three, and allow the audience
to see the development of that person or people. That doesn't happen
here as it's a story of four generations of one family. That wouldn't
be an issue if there was a solid storyline. There's a lot of
potential in this movie, and some of it is realized. Of all the great
actors in the film, a decent amount is dedicated to a character
played by George Peppard, who is quite good. The movie has great
scenery and a beautiful look, but it should have been tighter
(shorter!) with more focus.
For the complete list of films on the TCM TiVo Alert, click here.
For the complete list of films on the TCM TiVo Alert, click here.
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