A
Guide to the Rare and Unusual on TCM
By
Ed Garea
STAR
OF THE MONTH
Now
that August is ending, we’re back to having a Star of the Month.
And in September the star is Susan Hayward, a solid actor whose
steady presence has brightened up many a film. Beginning in the late
‘30s, she remained a durable star until the ‘70s, appearing in
everything from drama to costume drama to comedy and even to epics.
Two of her films are considered among the worst ever made, and come
in the second half of the month as the emphasis is on the early part.
September
3: Two excellent films are on tap. Start with Beau
Geste (Paramount,
1939), a scene-by-scene remake of the 1926 silent with Ronald Colman.
Gary Cooper stars as one of three brothers (Ray Milland and Robert
Preston are the others) who join the French Foreign Legion. Brian
Donlevy as their sadistic commander Markov and J. Carroll Naish as
his toady Rasinoff threaten to steal the film, but Cooper has
presence. Hayward has a small role but makes the most of it.
Then
tune in at 3:30 am (or record it) for Tulsa (Eagle-Lion,
1949) with Hayward as a rancher’s daughter out for revenge over his
killing. She strikes it rich in the Oklahoma oil boom. Her obsession
over money and power alienated her from her closest friends, an oil
expert (Robert Preston) and a childhood friend (Pedro Armendariz).
Hayward is wonderful in her role, but keep your eye on Armendariz,
who turns in a stellar performance.
September
10: The best pick of the night is at 8:00 pm, with Hayward
turning in a nifty performance in a tale of a model turned
dress-designer, I Can Get It For You
Wholesale (Fox, 1951). It’s competently
directed with a great script from Abraham Polonsky. I love a
well-written film, and Polonsky does a great job in adapting Jerome
Weidman’s novel.
Following
at 9:45 is a real yawner, as Hayward and Gregory Peck star in the
biblical epic David and Bathsheba
(Fox, 1951). As with most films in the genre, a combination of the
restrictive production code, combined with the studio’s caution in
offending anyone, leads to a leaden film highlighted by the
uninspired performance of its leads. Both Hayward and Peck give us
the impression that they’d rather be anywhere else. Bad, but not
bad enough to be a “must see.”
Finally,
at the wee hour of 4:00 am comes an excellent film from Nicholas
Ray, The Lusty Men (RKO,
1952). Robert Mitchum is great as a faded rodeo star who mentors an
up-and-coming Arthur Kennedy, but messes things up by falling for
Kennedy’s no-nonsense wife, Hayward. It’s one to catch, or
record.
FRIDAY
NIGHT SPOTLIGHT: FIVE CAME BACK
This
month’s TCM spotlight focuses on the war years, as in World War II.
Using Mark Harris’s wonderful book, Five Came Back: A
Story of Hollywood and the Second World War as a guide
and front, the network is showing a treasure trove of government
shorts and documentaries, plus pertinent films made during the war
years. Harris’s book is a cultural history of how the war changed
Hollywood and how Hollywood changed the war as seen through the
viewpoint of five directors: John Ford, William Wyler, John Huston,
Frank Capra, and George Stevens.
September
1: We begin at 8:00 pm with a screening of Frank
Capra’s Meet John Doe (Columbia,
1941), the story of how a reporter (Barbara Stanwyck) turns a tramp
(Gary Cooper) into a national hero and a pawn of big businessman
Edward Arnold. How this has to do with the war is beyond me, but it’s
always worth a look.
Documentaries
worth tuning in for include Capra’s Prelude
to War (10:15 pm), Anatole Litvak’s The
Battle of Russia (11:15 pm), Stuart Heisler’s The
Negro Soldier (12:45 am), the Richard Brooks directed
short, With the Marines at
Tarawa (1:45 am), followed by Capra with Tunisian
Victory, the stirring Battle
of Britain (3:30 am), the Capra supervised
short, Know Your Ally: Britain (4:30
am), and Capra’s War Comes to
America, from 1945 (5:15 am).
September
8: The night is devoted to John Huston and begins with
Bogart and Astor in Across the
Pacific (WB, 1942) at 8:00 pm. At 9:45, it’s
Huston’s short about the Aleutians, Report
From the Aleutians, and at 10:45 pm, it’s Huston’s
documentary on the invasion of Italy, San
Pietro. At 11:30, his documentary about solders
receiving medical treatment and psychotherapy, Let
There Be Light (1946), will air. Huston's – and
the government’s – message in the documentary is that employers
should not hold a soldier’s psychotherapy against him when applying
for a job. And then night ends with Huston’s Civil War classic The
Red Badge of Courage (MGM, 1951).
September
15: It’s John Ford night, beginning at 8 pm with his 1940
effort for United Artists, The Long
Voyage Home, starring John Wayne and Thomas Mitchell.
At 10:00 pm, it’s his stirring short, The
Battle of Midway, followed at 10:30 by How
to Operate Behind Enemy Lines. At 11:45 December
7th,
1945 airs, a disturbing look at the attack on
Pearl Harbor. Finally at 1:15 am comes two of his Hollywood
efforts: They Were Expendable (MGM,
1945), with John Wayne and Robert Montgomery, followed by Henry Fonda
and James Cagney in Mister
Roberts (WB, 1955)
SNAFU!
A
welcome highlight of this month’s Friday Night Spotlight is the
inclusion of the Private Snafu cartoons made by Warner Brothers. I
remember my father and uncle reminiscing about them, and how funny
they were and how the servicemen laughed raucously throughout at the
antics of Snafu as he got himself into trouble time and time again.
Look for our upcoming article on this unique soldier later this
month. For now, we’ll provide the times and titles of the various
cartoons.
September
1: 10:10 pm – Coming! Snafu (the
cartoon that introduced him to the servicemen); 11:10 pm – Booby
Traps; 1:40 am – Private
Snafu vs. Malaria Mike; 4:25 am – Snafuperman.
September
8: Beginning at 10:40 pm – In
the Aleutians; 11:25 pm – The
Infantry Blues; and at 12:40 am, The
Goldbrick.
September
15: The menu for tonight – Gripes (9:55
pm), A Lecture on Camouflage (10:25
pm), Spies (11:40
pm), and Private Snafu Meets Seaman
Tarfu in the Navy(1946).
NOTABLE
September
2: At 1:00 pm, it’s one of Joan Crawford’s best films, A
Woman’s Face, from MGM in 1941. Directed by George
Cukor, it’s a remake of a 1938 Swedish film En Kvinnas
Ansikte, starring Ingrid Bergman. Crawford is a facially
scarred woman whose life dramatically changes when she goes under the
knife of plastic surgeon Melvyn Douglas and regains her beauty.
Conrad Veidt is also on hand to provide some of his exquisite
villainy. It’s a film to watch, especially for those who haven’t
yet seen it.
September
4: Make a note to tune in or record at 4:45 pm for one of
the truly great underrated films about Hollywood. From RKO and George
Cukor in 1932 it’s What Price
Hollywood? Lowell Sherman is right on
point as a dipso director who helps waitress Constance Bennett
fulfill her ambition to become a star as he falls further and further
into the abyss of alcoholism. Under Cukor’s direction, it’s a
deft mix of comedy and drama and served as an inspiration for the
later A Star is Born.
September
6: An interesting double feature of Japanese films begins at
1:30 am with the 1926 production of Kurutta
Ippeiji. Surviving films from Japan’s silent era are
rare indeed. It concerns a former sailor who has driven his wife into
a mental asylum. Conscience stricken he takes a job as a custodian in
the very facility where his wife is being treated. It’s a rare look
at the problem of metal illness in Japan.
Following
immediately thereafter at 2:45 am is Kurosawa’s 1951 Hakuchi.
It, too, concerns mental illness and is the director’s adaptation
of Dostoevsky’s The Idiot, and is one of Kurosawa’s
most neglected works.
September 11: Looking
for a change of pace? Then tune in at 2:00 am for the brilliant and
unsettling Went The Day Well? from
Ealing in 1942. A British village welcomes a platoon of troops who
will be billeted with them. To their horror they discover the troops
are actually German paratroopers sent to prepare the way for an
invasion. How they deal with the invaders is what makes this film one
of a kind, being released when the threat of a Nazi invasion was
still a real possibility.
W.C.
FIELDS
September
4: TCM is running four films starring the great misanthrope
beginning at 8:00 pm with his 1940 masterpiece, The
Bank Dick. At 9:30 it’s his magnum opus, It’s
a Gift, from 1934. No one played the harried husband
better than Fields. At 11:00, it’s his underrated classic from
1938, You Can’t Cheat An Honest
Man, with Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy. And
finally, there’s his distinguished performance as Mr. Micawber in
MGM’s 1935 David Copperfield.
What a night.
‘50s
WESTERNS
Westerns
long regarded as the redheaded stepchild of Hollywood, emerged from
the jungle of B-dom thanks to a postwar popularity fueled in part by
their immense popularity in the new medium of television. This led to
Westerns that were more than just mere shoot-‘em-ups adhering to
the simple plot of good versus evil. Now they became more complex,
more structured, and with bigger stars in the leads. The ‘50s could
be said to have been the Golden Age of Hollywood Westerns.
September
9: An evening of six quality Westerns begins at 8:00 with
Glenn Ford and Van Heflin in 3:10 to
Yuma (Columbia, 1957). At 10:00 pm, it’s Jimmy
Stewart and Arthur Kennedy in The
Man From Laramie (Columbia, 1955). Following at
midnight is an all-time Western, The
Gunfighter (Fox, 1950), starring Gregory Peck as
“the fastest gun in the West” and thus as one with a price on his
head from wanna-bes. At 1:30 am, it’s Budd Boetticher’s Ride
Lonesome (Columbia, 1958) starring Randolph Scott
as a bounty hunter who must bring in his quarry through distinctly
unfriendly territory. Jimmy Stewart, Janet Leigh, and Robert Ryan
then take over in The Naked Spur (MGM, 19563), with Stewart trying to
capture shifty outlaw Ryan. Lastly, at 4:45 am, Burt Lancaster and
Robert Walker star in Vengence
Valley (MGM, 1951). All are worth the time
invested.
PSYCHOTRONICA
September
2: At 3:15 am, it’s the animated version of The
Lord of the Rings from 1978, featuring the voices
of Christopher Guard, John Hurt, and Norman Bird among others.
Directed by Ralph Bakshi, it covers 1½ books of the trilogy. It’s
no great shakes, but is recommended for film buffs as well as Tolkien
buffs.
September
5: Following another chapter in the continuing sage
of Batman and Robin at
10:00 am, TCM begins a weekly showing of Bulldog Drummond films,
beginning at 10:30 with Bulldog
Drummond Escapes (Paramount, 1937). Ray Milland
stars as Drummond in his only stab at the role, with cutie Heather
Angel as his girlfriend Phylis Clavering. Following Milland’s debut
as the Captain, Paramount plugged John Howard in as Drummond while it
moved Milland to bigger and better things. The Drummond series proved
a solid B-series for the studio, though it only lasted until 1939. In
the late ‘40s, Columbia revived the series.
At
1:45 pm, it’s producer Val Lewton’s unique take on Jane Eyre –
I Walked With a Zombie
from RKO in 1943, a definite “must see.”
Beginning
at 2:00 am, it’s a motorcycle-powered doubleheader from AIP with
Tom Laughlin’s The Born Losers,
followed by Dennis Hopper and Jody McCrea in The
Glory Stompers, both from 1967.
September
6: Tune in at midnight for one of the granddaddies of all
films psychotronic, The Cabinet of
Dr. Caligari, from 1919.
September
7: Fans of both science fiction and George Lucas should be
interested in the director’s big screen adaptation of his USC
student film, THX 1138,
which airs at midnight. It takes place in the 25th century,
where a totalitarian government has imposed a strict and bland rule.
Dress is plain, heads are shaved, and everyone is on a regimen of
sedatives. Those who don’t use them are prosecuted for “drug
evasion.” THX1138 (Robert Duvall) is a worker who helps assemble
the policing robots. He slowly becomes aware of his situation because
his female roommate (Maggie McOmie) has been diluting his dosage. He
discovers love – and sex, which has been outlawed and replaced with
artificial insemination. When the couple is found out, THX is sent to
a white void. There he meets fellow prisoner SEN (Donald Pleasance).
Together with a hologram (Don Pedro Colley) they begin planning an
escape.
September
12: It’s Bulldog Drummond
at Bay at 10:30 am. Later, at 2:45 am, it’s
Larry Cohen’s It’s Alive (WB,
1974) about a killer infant on the rampage, followed by Jack Hill’s
camp classic, Spider Baby,
at 4:30 am.
September
13: An encore performance of the sci-fi classic The
Day The Earth Stood Still airs at 6:15 pm. Later
at 10:00 pm, it’s Bette Davis and Olivia De Havilland in the gothic
horror Hush, Hush Sweet Charlotte.
At 2:00 am, it’s the premiere of director Hiroshi Teshigahara’s The
Face of Another (Toho, 1967). Tatsuya Nakadai is
a wealthy chemist whose face was horribly scarred in an explosion.
Until his doctor (Mikjiro Hira) can successfully complete the
prosthetic mask that will become his new face, Nakadai lives with his
head swathed in bandages with visible openings only for his eyes,
nose and mouth. When he gets his new face, the results are not what
everyone assumes. Following immediately after (4:15 am) is a repeat
performance of the unsettling 1959 shocker Eyes
Without a Face (1959). See it once and you’ll
remember it forever.
September
15: At the early hour of 7:30 am is a showing of director
Rene Clair’s adaptation of the classic Agatha Christie novel Ten
Little Indians, And Then There
Were None (Fox, 1945). Ten guests are invited to
a lonely island only to find themselves bring knocked off one by one.
Dudley Nichols’s brilliant script is combined with some superb
visuals from Clair to create one of the all-time great mysteries.
It’s rarely shown, so catch it while you can.
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