A
Guide the Rare and Unusual on TCM
By
Ed Garea
STAR
OF THE MONTH
The Sterling
Hayden festival continues with the films, except for a few
gems, progressively getting worse.
May
20: It’s a night of Hayden Westerns, with the great cult
classic, Johnny Guitar,
first up at 8:00 pm. The rest are all celluloid mediocrities, unless
you’re really into Westerns.
May
27: A mixed bag, with the best of the bunch leading off the
night and closing it. At 8:00 pm, Hayden stars with Bette Davis in
1952’s The Star.
Davis is captivating as a star whose best days, along with her money,
are now behind her and she must find some way to salvage her life.
Watch it for Davis, as this has become something of a camp classic
over the years.
At
3:30 am, it’s the role Hayden is probably best remembered for –
the paranoid general Jack D. Ripper, who threatens the world with
nuclear Armageddon when he launches a squadron of bombers against
Russia in Dr. Stangelove Or: How I
Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the Bomb,
director Stanley Kubrick’s wonderful 1964 satire on Cold War
brinksmanship. The film is also notable for its star, Peter Sellers,
playing three roles, including the President and Dr. Strangelove,
whom director Kubrick was said to have based on then Harvard
professor Henry Kissinger.
FRIDAY
NIGHT SPOTLIGHT - ORSON WELLES
May
22: A wonderful night begins at 8:00 pm with 1946’s The
Stranger. Welles is a Nazi war criminal hiding in a
small New England town pursued by federal agent Edward G. Robinson.
Loretta Young plays the young innocent schoolteacher whom Welles
married. Welles is his usual excellent, but it’s Robinson’s film,
as his masterfully understated agent, grabs the spotlight, not easy
to do when working with Welles. If you can’t out act him, under act
him, I guess.
At
10:00 pm, it Welles in the director’s chair as he helms the classic
adaptation of Franz Kafka’s The
Trial (1962). Anthony Perkins stars as Joseph K,
a clerk accused of an unspecified crime. As he pleads his innocence
he is further caught up in an impenetrable web of bureaucracy from
which there is no escape. Also starring the incredible Jeanne Moreau
and the underrated Suzanne Flon.
At
12:15 am comes a movie made for French TV that Welles directed and
stars in, The Immortal Story,
from 1968. Set in the Portuguese colony of Macao in the 1860s, Welles
plays Mr. Clay, an aging, wealthy merchant who, unable to sleep at
night, has his clerk, Elishama, read to him. One night the clerk
picks the prophecies of Isaiah, but Mr. Clay wants to hear real
stories of events that happened to real people. He recounts a story
he heard as a child about a sailor who was paid by a wealthy man to
sleep with his wife. When Elishama remarks that the story is in
fact a commonplace legend, Mr. Clay arbitrarily resolves to make the
story come true whatever the cost and asks Elishama to hire a sailor
and a prostitute to act out the roles. Co-starring Jeanne Moreau,
Roger Coggio, and Fernando Rey, it was adapted from a novel by Karen
Blixen (aka Isak Dinesen) by Welles and Louise de Vilmorin.
Wrapping
up the night at 1:30 am is F
For Fake (1973),
a free-form documentary by Welles about fakery that focuses on the
famed art forger Elmry de Hory and de Hory’s biographer, Clifford
Irving, who wrote the fraudulent Howard Hughes autobiography. It then
touches on Hughes and Welles’ own career, which began with a faked
resume and a phony Martian invasion. Welles’ talents as a
storyteller are on full display here and the film is a pure delight.
May
29: The last night of the Welles festival starts with a bang
and ends with a bang. At 8:00 pm it’s the classic The
Third Man (1949), with Welles unforgettable as
Harry Lime, who invites old friend, pulp novelist Holly Martins
(Joseph Cotten) to postwar Vienna with the promise of a job. When
Martins arrives he learns that Harry had died, and his subsequent
investigation of his friend’s death opens a can of worms about the
corruption engendered by the city’s black market and the man
controlling it.
At
10:00 pm, it Welles starring with Claudette Colbert in the excellent,
but weepy, Tomorrow is
Forever (1946). Welles plays a WWI soldier,
missing and presumed dead, who returns home years later to discover
his wife has remarried.
At
midnight, it’s Welles in a supporting role as a film mogul in the
Liz Taylor-Dick Burton drama, The
V.I.P.’s (1963). Terrence Rattigan wrote the
screenplay about a group of fog-bound passengers at London’s
Heathrow Airport, each with a personal drama.
The
night ends with Welles as Cardinal Wolsey to Paul Schofield’s
Thomas More in the classic A
Man For All Seasons (1966).
Better than this it doesn’t get.
MEMORIAL
DAY MARATHON
It
wouldn’t be Memorial Day on TCM without the annual marathon of war
films.
May
23: Begin with the sturdy submarine drama, Destination
Tokyo, at 8:30 am. The 1943 film, starring Cary Grant
as a submarine captain on a mission inside Tokyo Bay, still holds
interest today, even as time has made some of it perhaps a bit campy.
John Garfield and Dane Clark shine as crewmen, and Alan Hale plays
the role he’s best known for, that being Alan Hale.
Immediately
following at 10:00 am is Howard Hawks’ excellent Air
Force, also from 1943. The story of the B-17 bomber
Mary Ann and its crew still makes us sit up and notice, no matter how
many times we’ve seen it. The movie is a sheer hoot on many levels,
beginning with the typical cross-section of America crew. John
Garfield shines as the cynical tail gunner Winocki, and Harry Carey,
Sr. is notable as the grizzled veteran White. John Ridgley plays the
pilot, “Irish” Quincannon, and George Tobias is the Jewish
mechanic Weinberg. Look for Quincannon’s death scene, one of the
corniest in movie history, and lines such as “Fried Jap coming
down.” Hawks takes what could have become two hours of sheer
boredom and makes it into diverting entertainment.
Dial
ahead to 10:00 pm and it’s the estimable 1989 Civil War
story, Glory,
about the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Army, the
first African-American fighting unit in the war. It’s a chapter of
history we were never taught in school, and grabs our attention from
start to finish. Matthew Broderick is top-billed as the company’s
commander, General Robert Gould Shaw, but it’s the performances of
Morgan Freeman and Denzel Washington that truly stand out. Washington
won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his performance, but, frankly,
Freeman outdid everyone with a truly understated piece of acting.
Finally,
at 3:00 am it’s Westbound,
a 1959 Western from director Budd Boetticher. Randolph Scott stars as
Union Captain John Hayes, who has orders to establish a stagecoach
line to transport gold from California to the East. But he runs into
trouble in the small Colorado town of Julesberg, particularly from
Clay Putnam, a pro-
Confederate hotel owner played by Andrew Duggan and his gang, led by the vicious Mace (Michael Pate). Any Boetticher-Scott collaboration is guaranteed entertainment, and this film is no different.
Confederate hotel owner played by Andrew Duggan and his gang, led by the vicious Mace (Michael Pate). Any Boetticher-Scott collaboration is guaranteed entertainment, and this film is no different.
May
24: Awake at 6:00 am to Humphrey Bogart in Columbia’s 1943
war drama, Sahara,
with Bogart as a tank commander in North Africa who finds himself
surrounded by the enemy. Bogart is wonderful to watch as he carefully
plots his moves, knowing one slip could be his last.
Following
at 8:00 am is more Bogart, this time in John Huston’s 1942
thriller, Across the Pacific.
This time, Bogie must save the Panama Canal from Japanese saboteurs
led by the villainous Sydney Greenstreet. It also stars Mary Astor as
a woman of mystery, a sort she played in the previous year’s The
Maltese Falcon.
At
noon, it’s William Wellman’s, The
Story of G.I. Joe (1945), the story of famed war
correspondent Ernie Pyle (Burgess Meredith), as he follows the
fortunes of Company C of the 18th Infantry during
their campaigns in North Africa and Italy. Robert Mitchum was
nominated for a Best Supporting Oscar for his work as Lieutenant
Walker. It’s a war story as only Wild Bill Wellman can tell it.
Speaking
of Italy, at 4:00 pm is the tense 1945 drama A
Walk in the Sun, from director Lewis Milestone,
starring Dana Andrews, Richard Conte and John Ireland as members of a
platoon that must capture a key farmhouse during the landing at
Salerno. Of particular note is the excellent performance of Huntz
Hall as Private Carraway.
Midnight
sees the airing of King Vidor’s groundbreaking 1925 war epic, The
Big Parade, starring John Gilbert as a young enlistee
who learns all too soon about the horrors of war. It’s followed at
3:00 am by the classic Grand
Illusion (1938) from director Jean Renoir about
French prisoners led by Pierre Fresnay, Jean Gabin and Marcel Dalio
versus their German jailer, Erich Von Stroheim. It’s a richly
layered and touching film that has lost none of its punch over the
years. If anything, it’s gained in stature over the decades and
today is seen as one of the seminal films about war.
May
25: Begin at 12:30 pm with From
Here to Eternity (1953), based on James Jones’
novel about the prewar military at Pearl Harbor. Stay tuned at 2:45
pm for The Dirty Dozen (1967),
followed at 5:30 pm by Clint Eastwood starring in Kelly’s
Heroes (1970).
The
evening begins at 8:00 pm with 1948’s Battleground,
perhaps the best film ever made about The Battle of the Bulge. At
10:15 pm, it’s George C. Scott in his Oscar winning role as Patton
(1970), followed by the silly Battle
of the Bulge (1965), with Henry Fonda in one of
the most absurd roles of his career and Robert Shaw as a German tank
commander obsessed with the war. Finally it’s the rarely shown
B-actioner, The Tanks Are
Coming (1953), starring Steve Cochran as a tank
commander who is at first disliked by the crew, but by the end is the
hero of his men. Look for George O’Hanlon, later the voice of
George Jetson, as one of the crew. Believe it or not, this is the one
to catch if you’ve never seen it.
OUT
OF THE ORDINARY
May
17: 10:00 pm sees the airing of the classic The
Blue Angel from 1930 with Marlene Dietrich in her
star-making role as nightclub chanteuse Lola Lola, who seduces and
destroys stuffy professor Emil Jannings.
Late
night sees two from Europe, beginning at 2:15 am with Here’s
Your Life, a 1968 coming-of-age tale of a
working-class boy in the rural Sweden during World War I. I can’t
comment on this one as I haven’t seen it, but it is based on a
semi-autobiographical novel by Nobel Prize-winning novelist Eyvind
Johnson. It’s followed at 4:15 am by Ingmar Bergman’s All
These Women from 1964. This one I have seen and I can
only comment that it is one of Bergman’s few misfires. It’s the
story of a pretentious critic, Cornelius (Jari Kulle) who attempts to
write a biography of a famed cellist. Though he never gets to
interview his subject, he learns much about him from his long string
of girlfriends and tries to use this knowledge to blackmail the
cellist into performing a composition the critic has written. Kulle,
who was so wonderful in Bergman’s Smiles on a Summer
Night (1955),
is merely annoying and irritating in this film. It seems Bergman is
trying to emulate Fellini, but he lacks Fellini’s insight and
playfulness, replacing it with physical humor for its own sake, which
fails miserably. It’s for the Bergman completist only.
May
31: Two early ‘50s drama from Japan make up the late night
bill. First, at 2:45 am is Ginza
Cosmetics (Ginza kesho), a 1951 production
from director Mikio Naruse and Shintoho Film Distribution. It’s a
slice-of-life drama about a few days in the life of geisha Yukiko,
the single mother of a young, smart boy who lives in the Ginza
quarter of Tokyo. Not only is she struggling to bring up her son
alone, but she also faces financial and sexual problems, as well as
the disapproval of society as she nears the end of her career as a
bar hostess. It’s moving without being maudlin, as events taking
place naturally, matter-of-factly, without being theatrical. The
performance of Kinuyo Tanaka as Yukiko is first-rate and richly
layered, as she brings depth to a character usually overlooked in
contemporary Japan. Highly recommended.
Following
at 4:15 am is Naruka’s Wife (Tsuma),
a 1953 black comedy from Toho Company about an unhappy couple married
for 10 years. The crux of the problems between the two is that
husband Tochi (Ken Uehara) simply doesn’t make enough money for
wife Mihoko (Mieko Takamine) to enjoy the lifestyle she would like.
As a consequence she has to work, and her expressed disinterest in
domestic duties has Tochi questioning her fitness as a spouse. Things
come to a head when Tochi falls for recently widowed co-worker Fusako
(Yatsuko Tanami), whose entry into the scene spurs Mihoko into action
to save her marriage. But is her husband really worth the effort?
The
film marked another notch for Toho, which was on quite a roll during
the early ‘50s, having just made the critical and financial
hit Ikiru in
1952, with the blockbusters Gojira and Seven
Samurai still
to come in 1954. The film was also made during what could be called a
Golden Age of Japanese filmmaking, with such directors as Akira
Kurosawa, Yusuhiro Ozu, Kenji Mizoguchi and Masaki Kobayashi at the
peak of their creative powers. Mikio Naruse belongs in this esteemed
company, but perhaps because of all the creative artistry, is
unfortunately overlooked. He deserves much, much more.
PSYCHOTRONICA
AND THE B HIVE
May
16: At 10:30 am, it’s Bomba in Bomba
and The Hidden City,
a 1950 opus from Monogram. Bomba is wounded and helped by the simple
village girl Leah (Sue England). Over time he learns she is really
Zita of Kampari, the rightful heir to the throne whose father was
overthrown by the evil Hassan (Paul Guilfoyle). The rest you can
figure out.
Bad
Movie Alert! Airing at
2:30 am is one of the undiscovered gems of bad moviedom – An
American Hippie in Israel (1972), a laff riot
from would-be auteur Amos Sefer. As if the title alone weren’t
enough to warn us, the film features an inane plot, pretentious
direction, terrible acting, and high school-level special effects. In
other words: TOTAL ENTERTAINMENT! Don’t miss it!
May
18: Beginning at 8:00 pm, it’s a psychotronic double
feature. First up is the classic The
Hunchback of Norte Dame from 1939 with Charles
Laughton in one of his greatest performances as Quasimodo. Following
at 10:15 is Tower of London,
a 1939 production from director Rowland Lee and Universal with Basil
Rathbone as the ambitious Richard III and Boris Karloff as Richard’s
executioner henchman, Mord. The film is not seen that often on
television, which adds another reason to see it, apart from the
performances of Rathbone and especially Karloff. Vincent Price has a
small role as the unfortunate Duke of Clarence. In 1962, he would
play Richard himself in Roger Corman’s remake.
May
26: A great psychotronic drama is airing at a lousy hour.
Scheduled for 5:15 am is Boris Karloff in Devil’s
Island from Warner Bros. in 1940. Karloff is Dr.
Charles Gaudet, a surgeon accused of treason for treating an escaped
convict. He’s sent to the notorious prison, where the commandant,
Col. Lucien (James Stephenson) uses a miniature guillotine to clip
his cigars. Boris leads a prisoner revolt and is sentenced to death,
but Lucien offers to spare his life if he can operate on the
Colonel’s daughter. Karloff’s operation is successful, but Lucien
reneges on the deal, but Karloff escapes the island with the help of
Madame Lucien (Nedda Harrigan). It’s a good, tight B-movie ably
guided by director William Clemens.
May
28: TCM devotes this evening to the theme of time travel
films, starting at 8:00 pm with the Leslie Howard romance, Berkeley
Square, from 1933. Following at 9:45 is Time
After Time, a 1979 sci-fi flick directed by Nicholas
Mayer. The plot is quite intriguing: Jack the Ripper (David Warner)
steals H.G. Wells’ (Malcolm McDowell) time machine and heads for
modern-day San Francisco with Wells in hot pursuit. It’s a
delightful film highlighted by the performances of Warner, McDowell,
and Mary Steenburgen as a young woman who helps H.G. Wells in his
quest to send the Ripper back.
At
11:45, it’s Chris Marker’s acclaimed short, La
Jetee (1962), followed by 1965’s Dr.
Who and the Daleks, with Peter Cushing marvelous as
the time-traveling doctor. At 2:15 am, it’s Rod Taylor in the
original The Time Machine from
1960, and at 4:15 am, it’s Taylor once again as an astronaut thrown
forward in time into a post-apocalyptic Earth in the 1956 film, World
Without End.
May
30: And we end this issue’s psychotronic tour right where
we began – with another Bomba adventure. At 10:30 am, it’s The
Lion Hunters, a cheaper-than-usual production from
Monogram with Bomba out to save his feline friends from being
massacred by a pair of unscrupulous hunters. It’s notable only as
the movie debut of Woody Strode. He plays a native (naturally).
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