A
Guide to the Rare and Unusual on TCM
By
Ed Garea
STAR
OF THE MONTH: SUSAN HAYWARD
September
17: We begin with two epics: Demetrius
and the Gladiators (Fox, 1954) at 8:00 pm,
with Victor Mature, Michael Rennie and Jay Robinson (look for an
early Anne Bancroft as Paula), and one of the all-time stinkers, The
Conquerer (RKO, 1956) following at 10:00 pm. (For
more, see below). At midnight, it’s Hayward as Lillian Roth in the
biopic I’ll Cry Tomorrow (MGM,
1955), followed by I Want To
Live! (UA, 1958), with Hayward as gassed criminal
Barbara Graham. The film, based on fact, does a pretty good job of
making a case of innocence for Graham, but read John Gilmore’s L.A.
Despair (available at Amazon) for the real story on the
Ice Blonde.
September
24: The Marriage-Go-Round (Fox,
1960) starts things off at 8:00 pm, followed by Fanny Hurst’s
classic tearjerker, Back
Street (Universal, 1961), at 9:45. At 11:45,
it’s Valley of the Dolls (Fox,
1967), another all-time stinker, and at 2:00 am, it’s Stolen
Hours (UA, 1963).
TCM
SPOTLIGHT
September
22: William Wyler has the spotlight beginning at 8:00 pm
with Mrs. Miniver (MGM,
1942). He also helms the documentaries Memphis
Belle: The Story of a Flying Fortress (1943) at
10:30 pm and Thunderbolt (1947)
at 11:30 pm before bowing out with The
Best Years of Our Lives (RKO, 1946). Robert
Taylor closes out the night at 3:30 am narrating The
Fighting Lady (1944), the story of the U.S.S.
Yorktown.
September
29: For the final installment, director George Stevens is
featured. We begin, as usual, at 8:00 pm with his wonderful comedy
about the wartime housing shortage in Washington D.C., The
More the Merrier (Columbia, 1943) with Jean
Arthur, Joel McCrea, and Charles Coburn, who steals the film. His
short on those about to face justice at Nuremburg, That
Justice Be Done (1945), airs at 10:00 pm,
followed by his documentary, The
Nazi Plan (1945) at 10:15 pm. Rounding things out
at 12:30 am is his moving and touching The
Diary of Anne Frank (Fox, 1959).
SNAFU!
September
22: The Snafu cartoons for the night are The
Home Front (10:25 pm), Fighting
Tools (11:25 pm), and Going
Home (12:25 am).
September
29: There’s only one Snafu cartoon scheduled tonight, but
it’s the hilarious Censored (1944)
at 9:55 pm.
NOTABLE
September 25: An
afternoon of Robert Bresson films begins at 11:45 with the
classic Diary of a Country
Priest (1951). Following in order are A
Man Escaped (1956) at 1:45
pm., Pickpocket (1959),
a phenomenological examination of the art of lifting wallets, at 3:30
pm., Le Proces de Jeanne
d’Arc (1962) at 5:00 pm, and closing out the
festival, the moving Au Hasard
Balthazar (1966) at 6:15. There are few directors
with Bresson’s talent for introspection and even less who know how
to use that talent to its utmost. If you’ve never seen a Bresson
film before, you’re in for a real treat. There’s not much in the
way of overt action, but you’ll be thinking about these films long
after you’ve seen them.
In
the evening, it’s a festival of James Dean appearances in
television dramas. Before his big break in movies Dean worked the
small medium. These shows are almost never seen outside maybe of
public television and are worth catching, especially for the James
Dean fan.
September
27: A double feature of the great Lon Chaney in two of his
best silent’s beginning with He
Who Gets Slapped (MGM, 1924), which gave Norma
Shearer her big break, at 12:15 am, and Laugh,
Clown, Laugh with Loretta Young (MGM, 1928) at
1:30 am. As with all Chaney films, both are a must.
GODARD
September
16: An entire evening of films directed by Jean-Luc Godard
begins at 8:00 pm with the incomparable Breathless (1960).
At 9:45, it’s his acclaimed short, Charlotte
et son Jules (Charlotte and Jules) from
1960. Pierrot le Fou (1965),
a type of Bonnie and Clyde escapade with Jean-Paul Belmondo and Anna
Karina, airs at 10:15, followed by Masculin-Feminin (1966)
at 12:15 am. At 2:15 am, it’s Godard’s take on the Lemmy Caution
mysteries, Alphaville,
from 1965 and starring Eddie Constantine and Anna Karina. Wrapping up
the night, Karina, Belmondo, and Jean-Claude Brialy in the 1961
romance (of sorts), A Woman is a
Woman. Keep in mind that these films were made during
the early period of Godard’s career, when his movies still made a
modicum of sense, before he decided to deconstruct the meaning of
film narrative, and so should prove somewhat entertaining.
ABBOTT
AND COSTELLO
September
18: It’s an entire night of Abbott and Costello, including two
TCM premieres – Hold That Ghost at
8:00 pm, and In the Navy at
11:15. The catch of the night is Hold That Ghost (Universal,
1941), a hilarious comedy that sees the hapless duo inherit a haunted
house and have to fight off gangsters looking for hidden loot. It’s
followed at 9:45 by Buck
Privates (Universal, 1941), the first and
funniest of their service comedies. At 1:00 am, it’s their version
of Rio Rita (MGM,
1942), with Lost in a Harem (MGM,
1944) airing at 2:45 am and Abbott
and Costello Meet Captain Kidd (WB, 1952)
rounding out the evening at 4:30 am.
HOPALONG
CASSIDY (WELL, SORT OF)
Before
he hit fame and fortune in 1935 by taking the role of Hopalong
Cassidy and making it into a fixture of pop culture, William Boyd
labored as a stuntman until given a chance to star in a few
low-budget oaters, in which he gave such a compelling performance
that the role of Cassidy was offered to him a few years later. Boyd,
though, was no newcomer to film. He started as an extra for Cecil
DeMille in Why Change Your Wife? (1920).
DeMille saw something in him and in 1926 he was the romantic lead in
the director’s The Volga Boatman.
He became a matinee idol, earning in excess of $100,000 a year. But
by the end of silent movies Boyd was without a contract and hopes of
employment. By mistake his picture was run in a newspaper story about
the arrest of another actor with a similar name (William “Stage”
Boyd) on gambling, liquor and morals charges. Rather than quit and
run, Boyd stick around, doing extra work, stunt work, whatever it
took to earn a few bucks. David O. Selznick looked beyond the
headlines and put Boyd back into films as a star in B-Westerns,
working as “Bill Boyd” to eliminate confusion. His break came
when he took the role of Hopalong Cassidy. He changed the original
pulp-fiction character to its opposite: Hoppy didn’t use tobacco,
drink, or swear. He rarely kissed the girl and the bad guy always
drew first. The film and the 65 others that followed made Saturday
matinees a paying prospect for theaters due to the huge youth
audience he drew.
On September
21 TCM is airing two of his pre-Hoppy Westerns. Up first at
11:30 am is Lucky Devils (RKO,
1933) starring Boyd and William Gargan as two stuntmen competing for
the same woman (Dorothy Wilson). Look for Creighton Chaney (later Lon
Chaney, Jr.) in a small role as “Frankie.” Following at 12:45 pm,
Boyd stars in Men of America (RKO,
1932) as a rancher framed when gangsters on the lam murder a farmer.
To avoid being lynched, Boyd must round up the baddies.
PSYCHOTRONICA
September
19: In the morning, start off with the latest chapter of
the Batman and Robin serial
at 10:00 am. Then settle in for Bulldog
Drummond Comes Back (Paramount, 1937) with
John Howard as Drummond and John Barrymore as Colonel Nielson at
10:30. Then, in the wee hours of the morning, it’s a blaxploitation
double feature beginning at 2:00 am with Max Julien in The
Mack (Cinerama Releasing, 1973), and at 4:00 am,
it’s Three the Hard Way (Allied
Artists, 1974).
September 20: It’s
a B-detective double feature double-header beginning at 8 pm. First
up, from Monogram, Sidney Toler as Charlie Chan in 1946’s Dark
Alibi, followed by Dangerous
Money (also 1946) at 9:15. Stay tuned for the
Falcon, George Sanders, in The Gay
Falcon (RKO, 1941), the first in the series, at
10:30, and A
Date With The Falcon (RKO, 1941) at 11:45 pm.
September
21: At 1:45 pm, it’s that great old dark house
mystery, The Phantom of
Crestwood (RKO, 1932), starring Ricardo Cortez
and Karen Morley. What can you say about a movie where the leading
lady gets knocked off early? It’s a lot of fun and should hold your
interest.
September
22: It’s a morning and afternoon of robots beginning at
9:00 am when Patricia Neal must utter the magic words to stop the
robot Gort from incinerating the Earth in The
Day the Earth Stood Still (Fox, 1951). At 10:45 am,
it’s Robby the Robot in Forbidden
Planet (MGM, 1956). Robby returns at 12:30 pm
in The Invisible Boy (MGM,
1957). Following at 2:15 is one of the great terrible Mexican
horrors, The Robot Vs. The Aztec
Mummy (Cinematogrfica Caldern, 1958), a picture
that can only be described as “different.” At 3:30 pm, it’s
Stanley Kubrick’s sci-fi classic 2001:
A Space Odyssey (MGM, 1968), and at 6:15 pm the
day ends with Yul Brenner, Richard Benjamin and James Brolin
in Westworld (MGM,
1973).
September
23: The night belongs to Kerwin Matthews starting at 8:00 pm
with the classic Ray Harryhausen animated The
7th Voyage
of Sinbad (Columbia, 1958), The
3 Worlds of Gulliver (Columbia, 1960), also
animated by Harryhausen, at 9:45, Jack
the Giant Killer (UA, 1962) at 11:30, The
Pirates of Blood River (Hammer/Columbia) with
Christopher Lee at 1:15 am, and The
Warrior Empress (Columbia, 1961) with Tina Louise
at 3:00 am. Finally, at 4:45, it’s Matthews with Lee J. Cobb in the
drama, The Garment Jungle (Columbia,
1957).
September
26: After
a morning of the Batman
and Robin serial
at 10:00 am, stay tuned for Bulldog
Drummond’s Revenge (Paramount,
1937) at 10:30. Then you’ll have to wait for late night and the
Japanese gonzo haunted house feature, Hausu (Toho,
1977) at 3:00 am, followed by the last appearance of the gorgeous
Faith Domergue in the disappointing The
House of the Seven Corpses (International Amusements Corp., 1974) at 4:30 am.
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