A
Guide to the Rare and Unusual on TCM
By
Ed Garea
STAR
OF THE FORTNIGHT
Despite
our comments last issue, we actually do have a star for this
category, and it’s none other than the great Mae
Clarke, whose day on “Summer Under the Stars” can be
seen on August 20.
Unjustly
overlooked today, Clarke was at her best in films of the Pre-Code
era, playing anything from sassy wisecracker to endangered heroine to
sympathetic prostitute. To many casual film fans, her fame rests on
the fact that she was the one on the receiving end of Cagney’s
grapefruit in The Public Enemy,
which will air at 2:45 am, right after another pairing with Cagney
where he uses her as a sort of punching bag, Lady
Killer (1:15 am). It’s a shame that her third,
and last pairing with Cagney is not being shown this day, that
being Great Guy, which they made for Grand
National in 1936.
The
day begins at 6:00 am with three of her 50s Westerns being screened.
They are all somewhat entertaining, but can hardly be called Mae
Clarke vehicles, as her part in each is very small. But at 11:00 am,
it’s Pre-Code time, as every movie from here on in was made no
later than 1934. Several, such as 1930’s The
Fall Guy (11:00) and Parole
Girl from 1933 (3:30 am), are very rarely
televised. (In fact, it will be my first time watching both.)
At
8:00 pm, it’s Clarke’s best performance as the star of
Universal’s 1931 version of Waterloo
Bridge. Although MGM remade this in 1940 with Robert
Taylor and Vivien Leigh, this is the version to see, for two reasons:
the great James Whale directed it, and Clarke outdoes Leigh in the
role Myra. (Although, to be fair to Leigh, her film was made at the
height of the strangling Code.)
Clarke
is another of our lost treasures of the Pre-Code era; one of the
actresses who made Hollywood great and then was thrown by the
wayside. She is an actress who definitely deserves her due this day.
OUT
OF THE ORDINARY
August
16 (Patricia Neal): An excellent doubleheader begins at
10:00 pm with Neal’s Oscar-winning performance in the
redoubtable Hud (1963).
As Alma, the housekeeper overseeing the disintegration of the Bannon
family, Neal puts up with much from Homer Bannon’s rotten son, Hud
(Paul Newman), until she can stand no more and leaves after the old
man dies. Melvyn Douglas also won an Oscar for his performance as
Homer.
At
midnight, it’s one of the truly underrated classics of all time:
Andy Griffith starring with Patricia Neal in Elia Kazan’s A
Face In The Crowd (1957). Griffith, a rising
young comedian known for his gentle, folksy humor, is absolutely
brilliant as the devious megalomaniac Lonesome Rhodes in his film
debut. The film stands as a prescient examination of the power of
media-created figures. Also making their debuts in this film as
Walter Matthau, Tony Franciosa, and Lee Remick. The film was totally
ignored come Oscar time, but like most other excellent films that
were ignored by the Academy, it will be better remembered and
influential than that year’s winners.
August
17 (Lee J. Cobb): At 8:00 pm, Cobb stars with Richard Conte
in Jules Dassin’s masterful Thieves’
Highway (1949). Conte is Nick Garcos, a returning
veteran who discovers that his father, who lost both legs in an
accident while working as a truck driver, was cheated at the hands of
produce dealer Mike Figlia (Cobb), who may also have been responsible
for the accident that disabled the senior Garcos. Cobb is excellent
as the callous chiseler who doesn’t mind destroying careers and
lives to make an extra buck. It takes a while for the story to get
going, but once it does we’re in for one hell of a ride. Even
though Dassin cops out at the end with the obligatory happy ending,
his hero, Conte, remains forever scarred by his experience. This is
one not to be missed.
August
18 (Vivien Leigh): At noon, tune in to see Leigh in an
enchanting early performance in St.
Martin’s Lane (1938). She plays Liberty, a
young pickpocket taken in by busker (street entertainer) Charles
Laughton and taught the art of busking, at which she excels. We
expect Laughton to dominate, but Leigh matches him stroke for stroke
as Liberty becomes adept at using people in her quest to become a
star on the stage. Rex Harrison is the songwriter and theater
impresario for whom Liberty leaves her fellow buskers to break into
the big time.
Later,
at 3:15 pm, it’s another Leigh-Harrison pairing, Storm
in a Teacup (1937). Set in a small Scottish
village, this is a very witty social comedy with Harrison as a
journalist who reports on the cruel treatment received by a poor
widow unable to afford a dog-license fee at the hands of a local
pompous politician (Cecil Parker). Meanwhile, the reporter finds
himself falling in love with the politician’s daughter (Leigh).
August
22 (Marlene Dietrich): The highlight of the day is at 10:15
pm with the airing of Josef Von Sternberg’s atmospheric Shanghai
Express (1932). Dietrich is “Shanghai Lily,”
a prostitute known as the “White Flower of the Chinese coast.”
During a period of national unrest she boards a train at Peking along
with a collection of other characters, including an English officer
and former lover (Clive Brook), a rebel leader traveling incognito
(Warner Oland), and Hui Fei (Anna May Wong), a companion of Lily’s
and a fellow prostitute seeking to make a new start. Dietrich
dominates in one of her best performances, highlighted by the line
“It took more than one man to change my name to Shanghai Lily.”
However, keep a close eye on Wong’s performance as well. She is
superb as Hui Fei and an equal of Dietrich in both the acting and
mystery departments, displaying a talent that was stifled by
Hollywood’s apartheid system. There is no doubt that if she were
acting today she would be one of the biggest stars in the Hollywood
firmament.
August
27 (Monty Woolley): We’re in for a triple-treat of Woolley
beginning at 8:00 pm with Holy
Matrimony, from Fox in 1943 and directed by John M.
Stahl. Woolley is Priam Farli, a famous artist living in seclusion in
the South Seas. He is called home to England by the King to receive a
knighthood. During the voyage, his valet, Leek, dies, and Farli
assumes his identity to avoid the crush of publicity. Once in
England, everything goes as planned until one day when Leek receives
a letter from Alice Chalice (Gracie Fields), a widow with whom Leek
had been corresponding through a marriage bureau. Now that Leek has
arrived in England, she is expecting to finally meet her beloved in
person. And that’s just the beginning of his problems. It’s a
funny and charming comedy with Woolley and Fields in fine form and
given ample support from Una O’Connor as Leek’s estranged wife,
George Zucco as a prosecuting barrister, Franklin Pangborn as Priam’s
cousin, Duncan Farli, and the tragic Laird Cregar as art dealer Clive
Oxford.
Woolley
and Fields were so good in Holy Matrimony that
Fox paired them again in 1945’s Molly
and Me (9:45 pm). Fields is unemployed actress
Molly Barry. Desperate for work, she decides the best way to get it
is by playing the part of an experienced housekeeper. She later
discovers that Peabody (Reginald Gardiner), the butler, obtained his
position the same way. Their employer is John Graham (Woolley), a
dour retired politician, divorced from his wife (Doris Lloyd), who
ran off with another man, and estranged from his son, Jimmy (Roddy
McDowell). He lives alone with a staff of servants. Molly
single-handedly cleans up the household and decides Mr. Graham’s
life needs a little shaking up. Seeing as she’s the one for the
job, she begins thawing Graham’s icy exterior, and later his heart,
teaching him the value of things as opposed to money, which he knows
only too well. It’s a charming film, with the talented Gardiner
almost walking away with it.
At
11:45 pm, it’s Woolley’s best known role, that of uber critic
Sheridan Whiteside in George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart’s farce, The
Man Who Came to Dinner (1942). Playing a
thinly-disguised Alexander Woollcott, Woolley is on a nationwide tour
when his long-suffering secretary, Maggie Cutler (Bette Davis)
arranges for him to have dinner during a stopover in Mesalia, Ohio,
at the home of a locally prominent family, the Stanleys (Billie Burke
and Grant Mitchell). A snob to the nth degree,
Whiteside is appalled, but shows up out of obligation. Unfortunately
for his hosts, Whiteside slips on their icy porch and injures his
hip, necessitating a lengthy stay with the Stanleys during which he
takes over the household, barking out orders to everyone he sees,
entertaining questionable visitors, running up the Stanley’s phone
bill, and insulting everyone he sees. Davis is fine in a rare comedic
role, with Mary Wickes as Whiteside’s put-upon nurse, Ann Sheridan
as a floozy actress, and Jimmy Durante as an even more thinly veiled
Harpo Marx. Woolley is masterful in role, and why shouldn’t he be?
He was reprising his lengthy Broadway performance. Screenwriters
Julius and Philip Epstein do an excellent job of adapting the play
for the movie version.
PSYCHOTRONICA
August
16: Patricia Neal shines in the 1951 sci-fi classic, The
Day the Earth Stood Still, from 20th Century
Fox and co-starring Michael Rennie as the unforgettable Klaatu. Made
at the height of the Cold War hysteria, it offers a sober, rational
alternative vision telling us that not all space aliens are
cold-blooded killers.
At
4:00 am, it’s a film that’s mostly neglected when discussing the
Neal oeuvre, The Road Builder,
aka The Night Digger (1971). Neal is a single
woman living with her invalid mother (Pamela Brown) when their peace
is interrupted one day by the arrival of a young drifter named Billy
(Nicholas Clay) who tells them he was referred as a handyman by their
neighbor. At first, Maura is suspicious and resentful of the
stranger, but soon she finds herself falling in love with the
emotionally volatile young man. Meanwhile, a serial killer is
terrorizing the countryside, raping and murdering women and burying
their bodies in the path of a soon to be paved public highway. The
film, full of sexual tension and Gothic flavor, was adapted by Neal’s
then-husband, Roald Dahl, from a novel by Joy Cowley. It was Neal’s
second film since her return to work after suffering a series of
near-fatal strokes in 1965.
August
20: On Mae Clarke’s day, tune in at 9:30 pm to see her
small, but pivotal, role of Elizabeth in James Whale’s eerie and
atmospheric horror classic Frankenstein
(1931). Bette Davis was originally set for the role, but
when Whale took over the project from Robert Florey, he believed that
Davis was too aggressive to play a threatened horror heroine, and
brought in Clarke to play the role.
August
21: Tune in – or record – at 6:00 am for a truly rare
airing of director Larry Cohen’s attempt at horror-comedy, Full
Moon High (1981). Adam Arkin (son of Alan) is an
Eisenhower-era teenager who goes behind the Iron Curtain to
Transylvania with his government agent father (Ed McMahon). He
becomes a teenage werewolf who likes to bite girls on the ass.
Real-life father, Alan Arkin, plays an abusive psychiatrist. This
seldom-seen comedy was released right after the box office hit An
American Werewolf in London.
August
24: Warren Oates has a supporting role in director Budd
Boetticher’s gangster opus, The
Rise and Fall of Legs Diamond (1960), which is
showing at 7:45 am. Ray Danton plays the former dancer turned thief
and killer. Karen Steele, as his moll, supplies the necessary eye
candy, and look for a young Dyan Cannon as Dixie. As realized by
Boetticher, it’s short on historical fact, but long on energy and
slam bang melodramatics.
August
25: Two good psychotronic entries from star-of-the-day
Virginia Bruce. First up at 6:30 pm is Kongo, MGM’s
1932 remake of Lon Chaney’s 1928 silent West of
Zanzibar. Walter Huston takes over the role of the bitter and
sadistic crippled Flint, who seeks revenge on the daughter (Bruce) of
his wife’s over and the man responsible for his paralysis (C. Henry
Gordon). For those under the belief that only Warner Brothers made
films like this (see William Wellman’s Safe in Hell from
1931), Kongo will prove most unsettling.
Huston gives a bravura performance as a deranged man with more than a
trace of megalomania who takes his rage out on his perceived enemies.
He’s in for quite a surprise, though, at the end of this one. And
for you Pre-Code enthusiasts out there, this film has everything one
could want in a Pre-Code film: Torture, alcoholism, drug addiction,
rape, and sado-masochism.
At
9:30 pm, Bruce stars in the better-than-you-think sci-fi comedy, The
Invisible Woman,
from Universal in 1940. Bruce is unemployed model Kitty Carroll, who
answers an ad placed by scientist Professor Gibbs (John Barrymore)
looking for a guinea pig in his experiments, even though his
benefactor, playboy millionaire Richard Russell (John Howard), has
gone bankrupt. Gibbs invents a machine to make her invisible, and she
quickly slips away to partake in mischievous revenge on the cloddish
fashion store manager who fired her. Meanwhile, a gang of crooks led
by Blackie (Oscar Homolka) learns about the Professor’s machine and
try to steal it for their purposes. Everything comes together at
Blackie’s secret hideout in Mexico as the baddies are defeated and
Richard and Kitty fall in love and marry, with their daughter
inheriting Mom’s invisible proclivities.
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