TCM
TiVo ALERT
For
July
8–July 14
DAVID’S
BEST BETS:
BALL
OF FIRE (July 12, 4:00 pm): Think of this film as Snow
White and the Seven Dwarfs if Snow White was a hot nightclub
performer, played by Barbara Stanwyck, hiding from the police and her
mob boyfriend, and the dwarfs were brilliant but eccentric professors
putting together an encyclopedia about everything. Director Howard
Hawks – with the assistance of Billy Wilder, who co-wrote the
screenplay from a short story he wrote – does a great job blending
the two worlds together to make an outstanding romantic comedy. The
main professor, Bertram Potts (played by Gary Cooper), is focusing
his work on American slang. The slang of 1941 is dated, but the
scenes that have Potts learning the slang words of the day from
Stanwyck's character, Sugarpuss, are hysterical with Cooper doing an
excellent job as the straight man. Also of note are the wonderful
acting performances of the other professors, all who are considerably
older than Potts. It's a funny, entertaining film that leaves the
viewer with a smile on his/her face for most of the movie.
PLANET
OF THE APES (July
14, 9:15 am): Along with 2001:
A Space Odyssey, 1968's
original Planet of
the Apes is the
greatest science-fiction film I've ever seen. Whenever it airs, I
stop everything and watch it even though I've seen it at least 50
times and I own the entire DVD collection of the original five Apes
films. Charlton Heston is among a group of astronauts who land on a
strange planet and come across a
group of mute and simple-minded humans. They think
they're going to run the place in a few weeks. It turns out the
planet is actually controlled by talking apes. The interaction
between Taylor (Heston) and three key apes – Cornelius (Roddy
McDowall), Zira (Kim Hunter) and particularly Dr. Zaius (Maurice
Evans) – are the keys to this movie. The ending is among the
best you'll ever see. It turns out Taylor time traveled and landed on
a post-apocalyptic Earth. So many of the lines are iconic, the makeup
and costumes are incredible and years ahead of its time, and
the cinematography is amazing.
ED’S
BEST BETS:
THE
DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL (July 9, 11:00 pm): The
1951 original, of course, which is one of the greatest sci-fi films
ever made and a courageous retort to the hysteria of the day. Michael
Rennie is pitch perfect as Klaatu, an alien who comes here on a good
will mission and is shot for his troubles. He wants to convene a
confab of scientists and world leaders. The government, on the other
hand, want to keep him prisoner in order to pump information from
him. There are two things they hadn’t considered, however. One is
that he is a vastly superior being, able to see through our
heavy-handed trickery, and his robot, Gort, capable of burning the
planet to a cinder. Klaatu easily escapes the government’s attempts
at imprisonment, and grabbing a briefcase with the initials “J.C.”
(How’s that for symbolism?), ventures out into the world to contact
the people he needs to see by himself. It’s when he stops at a
rooming house run by Frances Bavier (Aunt Bee!) that he meets young
war widow Patricia Neal and her son, Billy Gray. They provide the
humanity and drama as the government launches a manhunt for Klaatu.
Director Robert Wise captures the hysteria of the times perfectly,
and the film is the first to feature a rational being from outer
space who is not out to kill or enslave us, though he does give the
nations of Earth a stern warning at the end. If you haven’t seen
this one, catch it by all means – and ignore the lame 2008 remake.
KING
KONG (July 14, 1:00 pm): Is there anyone out there
who hasn’t seen this film? Along with The Lost World,
it’s the granddaddy of the “monster-on-the-loose” films and
still holds its grip on us to this day. The search for and capture of
a gigantic ape on a previously unknown island is stuff of our
childhoods and I know of few people who aren’t in love with this
adventure. Animator Willis O’Brien created one of the classic
creatures of filmdom which, combined with an intelligent script,
continues to dazzle with each viewing. The addition of Fay Wray only
ratchets up the mythic heat with a modern take on Beauty and the
Beast: She and co-stars Robert Armstrong and Bruce Cabot do an
admirable job of acting, but it’s Kong we’ve come to see. And
when he finally dies in a hail of bullets atop the Empire State
Building, there’s not a dry eye left in the house, for he proves to
have more humanity than his captors.
WE
DISAGREE ON ... THE GHOST AND MRS. MUIR (July 12, 2:00 pm)
ED:
A. This is a lovely fantasy directed by the
great Joseph L. Mankiewicz, and with and Mankiewicz film, there’s
more than meets the eye. On the surface, it’s about a young, feisty
widow, Lucy Muir, who, along with her young daughter and maid, moves
into a broken-down cottage in a costal village. She soon learns that
she’s not alone in her new home – a raffish, grouchy ghost Daniel
Gregg, of a former sea captain also lives there, and he’s not happy
about having to share his digs. At first he makes his presence known
to scare her off, and when that doesn’t work, merely to aggravate
her. Before long, however, they begin fighting, flirting, and
eventually falling in love, even though such a relationship is doomed
from the start. When Lucy’s source of income dries up, Gregg
suggests she ghostwrite (no pun intended) his racy memoirs of the
life of the sea, so that she can have a new source of badly needed
income. Those who are looking for realism would be advised to look
elsewhere. This is a romantic fantasy, after all, a story about a
woman falling in love with a man who might well be just a figment of
her imagination. And that points to the deeper level of the film –
a story of a woman wishing to escape from the controlling climate of
her family in London coming to begin a new life who finds Captain
Gregg a reassuring presence, a strong able man who won’t die like
her husband. He represents Lucy’s desire for independence, urging
her to value herself, according to film historian Jeanine Basinger in
her excellent study, A Woman’s View: How Hollywood Spoke to
Woman, 1930-1960. As Lucy, Gene Tierney is ravishingly beautiful
and has excellent chemistry with Rex Harrison, who plays Captain
Gregg. This was back in the days when Harrison was a first-rate
talent, before he began merely playing himself in the ‘60s. He is
vibrant, strong, and elegant, the scenes where he and Lucy are
writing the book are touching and appealing. George Sanders is also
aboard playing his specialty, a scoundrel. He’s a married rogue who
almost marries Lucy until, almost by accident, she discovers that
he’s married. Natalie Wood, in only her third film, plays Lucy’s
young daughter. Watching Wood in this film it’s hard to believe she
wasn’t more of a seasoned actress. It’s a beautifully made film
and serves as a harbinger for Mankiewicz’s later classics, such
as A Letter to Three Wives, No Way Out, All About
Eve, Five Fingers, and The Barefoot Contessa.
Charles Lang’s cinematography was nominated for an Oscar, and
Bernard Herrmann is among his best scores.
DAVID:
C+. This is a cute movie, but nothing special. It's
an odd love story between the widowed Lucy Muir (played by the
beautiful Gene Tierney) and a gruff and grumpy sea captain, Daniel
Gregg (played by the often-annoying Rex Harrison) in the early 1900s.
The oddity of this 1947 film is Gregg is dead and is supposedly
haunting his old house as a ghost. The film starts off as a comedy of
sorts with Gregg pulling silly tricks to scare away Muir, turns
combative, becomes strange as they fall in love, back to drama and
ending more focused as a romantic fantasy film. It's as if director
Joseph L. Mankiewicz didn't know what to do so he threw out a bunch
of stuff and hoped style wins out over substance. After all, what
kind of relationship can you have with a ghost? The other possibility
is Gregg is a figment of Muir's imagination. In a book about this
film, written by critic Frieda Grafe, Mankiewicz described it as
"hack work." I think the director is a little hard on
himself, but even he acknowledged that this movie is not a classic.
Tierney is fine, though hardly spectacular, and Harrison is well,
Harrison. Ed mentions above that this film was "back in the days
when Harrison was a first-rate talent." To me, no such time
existed. He never impressed me as an actor and while his performance
here isn't as terrible as My Fair Lady or Doctor
Doolittle, it's yet another example of Harrison overacting to the
point of hurting the film. His limited range of emotions are anger,
impatience and love. George Sanders is enjoyable, as usual, playing
his role as a heel.
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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