A
Guide to the Rare and Unusual on TCM
By
Ed Garea
SUMMER
UNDER THE STARS
It’s
August, which means a month of “Summer Under the Stars,” in which
each day is devoted to the films of a particular actor or actress. In
the past, TCM has made this somewhat interesting by including people
we don’t normally see, i.e., those not from Hollywood, the
international stars. But this year is a definite downer – there are
no international stars featured. The closest we get is a day devoted
to Marlene Dietrich (August 22) and Ingrid Bergman (August 28), but
in the case of both, we do not get any of their early, foreign-made
output. We only get their Hollywood work (except in Bergman’s case,
a few films she made with then-husband Roberto Rossellini and Ingmar
Bergman later in Sweden).
Instead,
we get yet another day of Fred Astaire, Katharine Hepburn and Gary
Cooper, and the films being shown are those we’ve already seen 100
times. Given the opportunity to do something out of the ordinary, TCM
sticks to the tried and true, and in the end, lets its fans down. I,
for one, would like to see a day devoted to the films of Marcello
Mastroianni, Alec Guinness, Setsuko Hara, Monica Vitti. Paul Wegener,
George Arliss, Michel Simon, Chishu Ryu, Peter Lorre, Peter Cushing,
Christopher Lee, Simone Signoret, Charles Hawtrey, Anouk Aimee, Ugo
Tognazzi, Emil Jannings, Richard Attenborough, Brigitte Bardot,
Vittorio Gassman, Googie Withers, Jean-Paul Belmondo, Anna Karina,
Alberto Sordi, Diana Dors, Jean-Claude Brialy, Gerard Depardieu,
Giulietta Masina, Isabelle Huppert, Jean Marais, Anna Magnani, and
Albert Remy. And that’s just off the top of my head.
OUT
OF THE ORDINARY
August
1: On a day devoted to Gene Tierney, try Whirlpool (2:00
pm), a 1949 crime drama from Fox and directed by Otto Preminger.
August
2: It’s Olivia de Havilland’s day, and our pick is the
distinctly and delightfully weird In
This Our Life from Warner Bros. and director John
Huston in 1942, airing at 6:00 pm.
August
3: It’s Adolphe Menjou’s time, and the pick of the lot
are his seldom seen Pre-Code films, The
Easiest Way (1931), Men
Call It Love (1931), and The
Great Lover (1931), which are being shown from 9:00 am
to 1:00 pm.
August
4: The only movie of note on Teresa Wright’s day is the
marvelous The Little Foxes,
from 1941 and director William Wyler, airing at 8:00 pm.
August
9: Robert Walker has the stage, so to speak, and the film of
his to see is The
Beginning Or The End (1:45 am), from MGM in 1947.
It’s a whitewashed story of the development of the atomic bomb,
with a little fact and a whole lot of fiction thrown in.
August
10: Joan Crawford’s day is highlighted by two films: The
silent Our Dancing Daughters from
1928 (9:00 am), followed at 10:30 by 1933’s Dancing
Lady, more notable for the appearance of Fred Astaire
and The Three Stooges.
August
11: The day is devoted to the great and overlooked Rex
Ingram, with several gems being screened. Begin at 4:00 pm with The
Thief of Bagdad (1940), followed by his amazing
performance as Jim in MGM’s The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1939), at 6:00
pm. The evening offers three classics, beginning at 8:00 pm with The
Green Pastures (WB, 1936), followed at 10:00 by
MGM’s Cabin In The Sky from
1943. The evening closes with Columbia’s 1943 gripping war
film, Sahara,
starring Humphrey Bogart, at midnight.
August
14: On a day devoted to Grouch Marx, set your clocks for
4:30 pm. That is when the classic Marx Brothers movies will be shown,
starting with The Coconuts from
1929. Following in order are Animal
Crackers (1930), Monkey
Business (1931), Horse
Feathers (1932), Duck
Soup (1933), and A
Night at the Opera (1935).
August
15: It’s Douglas Fairbanks Jr on this day, and, once
again, his most interesting films are his rarely shown Pre-Codes.
Begin at 6:00 am with Chances (WB,
1931), then continue on through Union
Depot with Joan Blondell (WB, 1932) at 7:15, It’s
Tough To Be Famous (WB, 1932) at 8:30 am, The
Narrow Corner (WB, 1933) at 10:00 am,
and Captured with
Leslie Howard and Paul Lukas (WB, 1933) at 11:15 am.
PSYCHOTRONICA
August
2: At midnight, it’s Olivia de Havilland and Bette Davis
in the toothless Gothic horror Hush,
Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1964).
August
6: Two to choose from for Michael Caine fans. First up at
9:45 am retired spy Michael takes on the evil Karl Malden in Billion
Dollar Brain (1967). And for those who want to
stay up until 4:00 am or who simply love torture, there’s Caine in
one of the all-time crap classics The
Swarm (1978).
August
8: Raymond Massey, Edward Chapman, and Ralph Richardson try
to bring an end to war in this adaptation of H.G. Wells’s The
Shape Of Things To Come, simply titled Things
To Come (1936).
August
10: Joan Crawford’s always good for a psychotronic feature
or two, and tonight, we have two. First, at 1:45 am, it’s Joan
versus deranged sister Bette Davis in 1962’s What
Ever Happened to Baby Jane? Following at 4:15 am,
Joan plays surrogate mother to a mixed-up caveman in the wonderfully
atrocious Trog (1970),
Joan’s last movie. What a way to go out.
August
11: Rex Ingram demeans himself as a native opposite Gordon
Scott as Tarzan in Tarzan’s Hidden
Jungle (1955), from producer Sol Lesser and RKO.
August
12: Two back-to-back features starring Robert Mitchum. At
10:45 pm, it’s Robert and Gene Barry in the classic Thunder
Road (1958) followed by Mitchum taking on the
Japanese Mob in The Yakusa (1975)
at 12:30 am.
August
14: At
4:00 am, it’s an all-star cast in the Godawful Story
of Mankind (1957).
See great actors embarrass themselves in this putrid retelling of
history down through the ages. Not to be missed for fans of bad
movies.
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