TCM
TiVo ALERT
For
September
1–September 7
DAVID'S
BEST BETS:
THE
LONELINESS OF THE LONG DISTANCE RUNNER (September 5,
8:15 am): I'm a huge fan of the British kitchen sink/angry young man
film genre, and there are very, very few finer than this one. Colin
Smith (Tom Courtenay in his brilliant film debut) is a
rebellious teenager in post-World War II England who ends up in a
juvenile delinquent institution. While there, he discovers he has a
talent for long-distance running. He's able to avoid the hard labor
the other boys must endure because of his abilities. But the anger
and resentment against a system that chews kids like him up and spits
them out when they are no longer of any use is always in the back of
his mind. The day of the big race against the nearby public school is
an opportunity to shine leave Colin conflicted. In the end, he does
what he believes to be the right thing to maintain his integrity and
independence despite the consequences.
THE
LION IN WINTER (September 7, 6:00 am): I've never
shied away from expressing my intense dislike for Katharine Hepburn's
acting. I think she had very little talent, and is the most overrated
mainstream actress in the history of cinema. But I've got to give the
devil her due - she is absolutely brilliant in The Lion in
Winter, a 1968 film in which she stars as Eleanor of Aquitaine in
the year 1183. She is imprisoned by her husband, Henry II (Peter
O'Toole delivering yet another fantastic performance), as the
two greatly differ over which of their sons will be next in line to
the thrown of England. While not historically accurate, it's a wildly
entertaining film with Hepburn and O'Toole trading
biting lines with each other. One of my favorites has the two of them
walking arm-in-arm smiling at their subjects while Eleanor is giving
Henry grief. He says, "Give me a little peace." Without
skipping a beat, Eleanor responds: "A little? Why so modest? How
about eternal peace? Now, that's a thought." A great story,
great costumes, great directing and a great cast that also includes
Anthony Hopkins in his film debut, Timothy Dalton and Nigel Terry.
ED'S
BEST BETS:
THE
BANK DICK (September 4, 8:00 pm): W.C. Fields
was never funnier than in this film about a no-account who is given a
job as a bank guard after he unwittingly foils a robbery. His
daughter’s nitwit fiancé works there and Fields soon gets him
involved in using the bank’s money to finance a stock scheme that
looks as if it will go bust, so they must distract the bank examiner
(a wonderfully fussy Franklin Pangborn) until the money can be
returned. It all results is a crazy and hilarious car chase when the
bank is robbed again.
IT’S A GIFT (September 4, 9:30 pm): This 1934 Paramount production was probably W.C. Fields’ funniest film. He plays a downtrodden, henpecked grocer living in Camden, N.J., who wants desperately to own an orange grove in California, so he buys one sight unseen and moves his family out to California. It’s a beautiful melding of comedy routines and plot, with Charles Sellon as a blind grocery customer and T. Roy Barnes as a salesman who interrupts Fields’ sleep looking for Carl LaFong. It’s Fields at his delightfully cynical best.
WE DISAGREE ON ... IT HAPPENED AT THE WORLD’S FAIR (Sept. 6, 4:00 pm)
ED: C. Elvis films are exercises in mediocrity, mainly because his manager, Colonel Tom Parker, never allowed his client to step outside what was thought to be a winning formula. As a result we never got to see Elvis in anything that wasn’t predictable and heavily telegraphed. But some are more excruciating than others. This film is a case in point. It starts out well with Elvis and Gary Lockwood as bush pilots who lose their plane because of Lockwood’s gambling debts. Trying to earn money to retrieve it they hitch it to Seattle, where the World’s Fair just happens to be. Once there, Danny tries to earn money in a poker game (Hasn’t he ever heard of Las Vegas?) while Elvis takes care of a small girl named Sue Lin (Vicky Tiu) who became separated from her Uncle Walter (Kam Tong). When cute little Sue gets sick from pigging out on junk food, Elvis takes her to the clinic, where he meets attractive nurse Diane Warren (Joan O’Brien) and, of course, is smitten. And if you can’t guess what’s going to happen next, you’ve never seen an Elvis picture. The only interesting things about this cardboard comedy is seeing Kurt Russell as a kid Elvis pays to kick him in the shins to attract the nurse’s attention, and the late, gorgeous, scorching supernova (to quote IMdB reviewer pooch-8) Yvonne Craig. Russell would later go on to play The King himself in the 1979 TV movie Elvis.
DAVID:
D+. I'm a huge fan of Elvis Presley films, even many
of the bad ones. Elvis had a ton of potential, but opted during a
long stretch of time to stick to the "Formula," in which he
played the same type of character with a minimal plot, and an
over-reliance on his charisma and a pretty co-star. Some of them are
absolutely charming like Clambake, Spinout and Kid
Galahad. Some of them are horribly stupid with no redeeming
qualities such as Harum Scarum, The Trouble
With Girls, and this movie. It Happened at the World's
Fair (1962) is painfully boring and way too long at 105
minutes with the World's Fair in Seattle theoretically used in an
effort to entertain the audience. It fails to do that. You can tell
Elvis wishes he was anywhere else but in this film. It's hard to
blame him. The effort at creating a plot is embarrassingly bad. For
someone like me who loves Elvis and watched this entire movie as I'm
a Presley completist, there is nothing to enjoy. You'd think there would be a good song as Elvis sings 10 of
them in this movie. But unfortunately there isn't a single catchy one to be found.
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