TCM
TiVo ALERT
For
June
1–June 7
DAVID’S
BEST BETS:
KEY
LARGO (June 2,
4:00 pm): This is, hands down, one of the 10 greatest films, the best
film noir in cinematic history, and the most incredible ensemble cast
you'll find a movie. It stars three of my favorite actors: Humphrey
Bogart, Edward G. Robinson and Lionel Barrymore. Bogart is a former
military man who checks into the Hotel Largo in Key Largo, Florida,
in the middle of hurricane season. The real storm hits when we see
gangster Johnny Rocco (Eddie G) walk down the hotel steps. Bogart had
top billing, but it's Robinson who you can't stop watching. The
action in this film is intense, and the
acting is incredibly strong (also including Claire
Trevor as Rocco's
neglected gangster moll, a role that won her a Best Supporting
Actress Oscar, and
Lauren Bacall as Barrymore's daughter and, of course, Bogart's love
interest). Legendary director John Huston could not have done a
better job, and the use of the storm to parallel what's happening to
the film's characters is ideal. Needless to say, this is one of those
films you can watch over and over again, and enjoy it more with each
viewing.
GILDA (June
3, 9:30 pm): Rita
Hayworth is cinema's greatest femme fatale in the title role of this
1946 film noir classic. She incredibly gorgeous, and her form-fitting
dresses and how she is filmed only adds to her sex appeal. Glenn Ford
had a number of memorable roles in his career, but his portrayal of
Johnny Farrell, a down-on-his-luck hustler in this film, is among his
best. George Macready is strong as Ballin Mundson, a casino owner who
also happens to be working with the Nazis. Little does anyone know
that Gilda, married to Mundson, had a torrid affair with Farrell
years earlier, and the two haven't resolved their feelings. In this
role, Hayworth could have chemistry with a rock. Fortunately, Ford
has considerably more talent than said rock and the two sizzle on the
screen. The cinematography, Hayworth's performance and the dynamics
between the three main characters makes this a classic even though
the plot could use some assistance.
ED’S
BEST BETS:
A
FACE IN THE CROWD (June 4, 7:15 am): Budd Schulberg
wrote and Elia Kazan directed this prescient look at celebrity and
Media-made pundits in the story of Larry “Lonesome” Rhodes (Andy
Griffith), a drifter discovered in jail by the hostess (Patricia
Neal) of a morning radio show in Pickett, Arkansas, and who, through
the sheer force of his “down home” personality eventually makes
his way to New York, where he becomes not only an entertainment
superstar, but a respected wielder of opinion; powerful enough to
make a nondescript senator into a formidable presidential candidate.
Rhodes, however, is rotten to the core, and as his fame and power
increase, the monster within him begins to break out. It’s up to
Neal, as a letter-day Frankenstein, to destroy the monster she
created before he destroys us, and she does it in a quite unique way.
Neal, of course, is superb, and Griffith gave the best performance of
his career, playing against type. He should have gotten the Oscar,
but wasn’t even nominated, in due to the less than stellar box
office of the movie and the Liberal backlash against director Kazan
for supposedly “naming names” before Congress. (In reality he
didn’t name anyone that wasn’t already named again and again.)
What eventually brought critics around to giving this film another
look was Francois Truffaut, who championed the film as a modern-day
classic and a warning.
LA
BETE HUMAINE (June 5, 8:00 am): Jean Renoir wrote and
directed this masterful adaptation of Zola’s novel of the same
name, setting it in modern times. The focus of the film is train
engineer Lantier (Jean Gabin), who, while waiting for his train to be
repaired at the Le Havre station, witnesses a murder committed by the
station master, Roubard (Fernand Ledoux). Roubard, realizing Lantier
saw everything, encourages his wife, Severine (Simone Simon) to
become Lantier’s lover in order to buy his silence. Needless to
say, this results in tragedy. Gabin is mesmerizing in the role of
Lantier, who turns violent whenever he has an epileptic attack. And
it’s good to see Simone Simon, who most American film fans know as
the doomed Irina from RKO and producer Val Lewton’s Cat
People. This film is a must for those who would like to see the
earlier Simon and for anyone who loves the films of Renoir, as I do.
WE
DISAGREE ON ... CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND (June
7, 8:00 pm)
ED:
A. Steven Spielberg was taking a chance by making an “A”
budget science fiction film back in the mid-70s. The last “A”
budget sci-fi film that did real business was Kubrick’s 2001:
A Space Odyssey back in 1968. But George Lucas released Star
Wars earlier in the year and proved that science fiction
films can be successful once again. But Columbia was a bit anxious
about Spielberg’s film, as it wasn’t on the cartoony level
of Star Wars. They need not have worried, as Spielberg’s
film appealed to a broader spectrum of the adult film going audience.
This is an extremely well made film about what happens when ordinary
people encounter something totally extraordinary. In this respect it
harkens back to the days of It Came From Outer Space in
1953 in that it’s a film made with intelligence. Spielberg hits all
the right notes in this film, crafting a film whose human storyline
strikes at our emotions and makes it compelling viewing. Also the
pre-CGI special effects not only enhance, but also contribute to the
movie’s atmosphere of sheer wonderment. And the wonderment is what
we take away from this film, a pleasant memory that never fades as
the years go on.
DAVID:
B. Close Encounters of the Third Kind is
a very good film, but I reserve A grades for excellent ones. In terms
of Steven Spielberg's directing career, this was his next film
after Jaws. In comparison, Close Encounters falls
short. While significantly better than his next film, 1941, Close
Encounters also doesn't measure up to the next two: Raiders
of the Lost Ark and E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial.
Perhaps it's not fair to judge Close Encounters to
the other films Spielberg made around the same time, but not
everything is fair. I agree with Ed that this movie's special effects
enhance the movie and I'll add that they are spectacular for 1977.
The issues I have with this film are it's too long, clocking in at 2
hours and 17 minutes and it drags, the storyline is sometimes
difficult to follow, and the editing of the movie could have been
better (the latter is a criticism Spielberg has acknowledged).
However, overall, the film is enjoyable, touching and for perhaps the
first time a big-budget science fiction film portrayed aliens as
friendly. Of course, Spielberg would take the friendly-alien concept
much further in E.T. For the most part, the acting
is exceptional, particularly Richard Dreyfuss, an electrical lineman
who becomes obsessed with aliens after seeing a UFO. And any film
with legendary French director Francois Truffaut in an acting role
has to be good.
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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