A
Guide to the Rare and Unusual on TCM
By
Ed Garea
STAR
OF THE MONTH
David
Niven is the Star of the Month for October. I have always found him a
most interesting actor, the perfect personification of the Englishman
abroad. From the fragile, debonair figures he played in the movies we
would never suspect that he was a career soldier at one point, having
graduated from the Royal Military College at Sandhurst. It was there
that he acquired the “officer and a gentleman” persona which
later became his trademark. But after a few years as a lieutenant
with the Highland Light Infantry, he began to chafe under military
life and resigned his commission in 1933. He came to Hollywood and
found work as an extra and stuntman. Sam Goldwyn spotted him
in Mutiny on the Bounty and signed him to a
contract.
Under Goldwyn’s management, Niven blossomed into a star with solid supporting turns in Dodsworth, Rose-Marie, and The Charge of the Light Brigade (all 1936), and leading roles in The Dawn Patrol (1938), Wuthering Heights, Raffles, and Bachelor Mother, with Ginger Rogers (all 1939).
Under Goldwyn’s management, Niven blossomed into a star with solid supporting turns in Dodsworth, Rose-Marie, and The Charge of the Light Brigade (all 1936), and leading roles in The Dawn Patrol (1938), Wuthering Heights, Raffles, and Bachelor Mother, with Ginger Rogers (all 1939).
When
the Second World War broke out, Niven returned to England and
rejoined the Army as a lieutenant, serving in the Commandos. He also
served with the Army Film Unit appearing in The First of the
Few (1942) and The Way Ahead (1944). He
served in France with the “Phantom Signals Unit,” which located
and reported enemy positions and kept rear commanders informed on
changing battle lines. Niven ended the war as a lieutenant-colonel
and received the Legion of Merit, an American military decoration
presented by Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower himself.
Niven
resumed his film career in 1946, making three highly regarded
classics: A Matter of Life and Death (1946), The
Bishop’s Wife (1947), and Enchantment(1948). A
falling-out with Goldwyn over money led to Niven being barred from
Hollywood work in the early 1950s. Instead he found work in
low-budget and independent productions, most notably Otto
Preminger’s The Moon is Blue (1953), for which he
won a Golden Globe.
The
Hollywood ban ended in 1956 when Niven won acclaim for his role as
Phileas Fogg in Mike Todd’s Around the World in 80 Days.
In 1958, he won the Best Actor Oscar for Separate Tables.
He would go on to star in another 30 films, including such classics
as The Guns of Navarone (1961), The Pink
Panther (1963), the underrated Where the Spies
Are (1965), Murder By Death (1976), Death
on the Nile (1978), and The Sea Wolves (1980).
October
5: Four outstanding Niven flicks. Begin at 8:00 pm
with Raffles, and
stay for the funny Bachelor
Mother (9:30 pm), the thrilling The
Dawn Patrol (11:00 pm), and the all-time
five-hanky picture, Wuthering
Heights (1:00 am).
October
6: Can’t go wrong with Charge
of the Light Brigade at 8:00 am and The
Prisoner of Zenda at 10:00 am.
October
12: Sit back and enjoy Niven in one of his best films, A
Matter of Life and Death at 8:00 pm. Then
it’s The Bishop’s Wife,
a holiday classic that grows in repute each year, at 10 pm. At
Midnight it’s The First of the
Few, a wonderful film about the birth of the Spitfire
fighting plane, followed at 2:15 am by The
Way Ahead, Niven’s other war film and just as
compelling. Close out the night with the weepy Enchantment at
3:45 am.
TCM
SPOTLIGHT: TRAILBLAZING WOMEN
The
TCM Spotlight is titled “Trailblazing Women.” What they mean is
women directors. 48 women directors will be profiled over 9 nights
this month. Directing, like most other roles behind the camera, was a
job shut out to women, even though the first film director was most
likely a woman.
Alice
Guy was a secretary to Leon Gaumont, who went from his camera-making
business to found Gaumont studios. One afternoon, Alice and her boss
attended a screening of the Lumiere’s Workers Leaving the
Lumiere Factory. Alice was gobsmacked by what she saw. Reflecting
on the film later she began to see the potential of film if she could
move it away from the “demonstration films,” simply scenes of
people leaving a factory, or watching a train pull into a station,
for instance. What, she thought, if storytelling elements could be
woven into the film. She asked Gaumont for permission to make a film.
He agreed, but only if she did it on her own time; she was too
valuable as a secretary.
Her
first film – and arguably the first narrative film – was La
Fee aux Choux (The Cabbage Fairy) in 1896. It’s a humorous
story of a woman who grows children in a cabbage patch. From 1896 to
1906, she was Gaumont’s head of production, exploring the
boundaries of film, producing films featuring dancing, color tinting,
and expanded story lines. She also experimented with audio recordings
in conjunction with the screen images in Gaumont’s “Chronophone”
system, which employed a vertical-cut disc synchronized to the film.
She also experimented with special effects with double exposure
masking techniques and running film backward. In 1906, she made The
Life of Christ, a big-budget production featuring more than 300
extras.
During
the early days of silent’s women were well represented in film.
Lois Weber, who cut her teeth working for Alice Guy when Guy came to
America, made films featuring social significance, questioning
society’s priorities. Such films as Where Are My
Children? (1916), The Hand That Rocks the
Cradle (1917), and The Blot (1921) were box
office hits, which in turn made her the highest paid director in the
country. Weber was lucky enough to work for Carl Laemmle, the
unorthodox head of Universal Studios. Laemmle also employed such as
Ida May Park, Ruth Ann Baldwin, Ruth Stonehouse, Lule Warrenton, and
Grace Cunard. Cleo Madison starred in and made her own films at
Universal.
Gene
Gauntier began as an actress, but quickly found her calling as a
writer and director, turning out several one-reelers in a single day.
Helen Gardner turned from acting at Vitagraph to owning her own
production company. Nell Shipman was famous for wildlife adventure
films, and Jeanie McPherson, another actress turned from being in
front of the camera to behind as she made a lasting mark as the
writer of many of Cecil B. DeMille’s epics. And, of course, there
was Frances Marion, who directed several films starring her husband
Fred Thomason and her best friend Mary Pickford before turning
exclusively to writing, finding it far less stressful.
However,
as smaller studios went out of business or were incorporated into
larger ones, directing opportunities for women also faded. As film
found its voice with the coming of sound, women lost theirs. The
Depression only made a bad situation worse, as women were now seen to
be taking jobs away from men. The only woman director to survive into
The Depression was Dorothy Arzner, who in 1936 was the first woman to
join the fledgling Director’s Guild of America. She quit in 1943,
moving to UCLA to teach directing and screenwriting.
October
1: The silent era is featured, with Alice Guy’s The
Birth, Life and Death of Christ one to see
beginning at 8:00 pm. Actually, all the featured films are worth
seeing, especially The Blot from
Lois Weber (10:15 pm).
October
6: Dorothy Arzner’s Dance,
Girl, Dance (1940), with Maureen O’Hara, is on
tap at 8:00 pm, followed by Ida Lupino’s Outrage (1950)
at 9:45 pm. Also worth catching is Elaine May’s The
Heartbreak Kid (1972), airing at 11:15 pm.
October
8: Try Barbara Loden’s Wanda (1970)
at 8:00 pm., and Martha Coolidge’s comedy, Valley
Girl (1983), at 11:15 pm.
October
13: Joan Micklin Silver’s wonderful Crossing
Delancey (1988) airs at 8:00 pm. Our other
recommendation is Euzhan Pulcy’s A
Dry White Season (1989), at 11:45 pm).
October
15: It’s Documentaries Night. We recommend Barbara
Kopple’s Harlan County,
U.S.A. from 1976, which airs at 9:30 pm; Connie
Field’s The Life and Times of
Rosie the Riveter (1980) at 11:30 pm; and
Penelope Spheeris’ take on the L.A. music scene, The
Decline of Western Civilization (1981), at 2:45
am.
OUT
OF THE ORDINARY
October
4: At 2:30 am, it’s director G.W.
Pabst’s Kameradschaft (1931),
a moving film about a tunnel collapse that traps French miners. They
are rescued when German miners across the border tunnel in to save
them. It was an attempt by producer Seymour Nebenzahl to foster a
common unity from the rubble of nationalism that arose after World
War I. When the Nazis came to power, they banned the film and
Nebenzahl fled to America where he made films for PRC and United
Artists. Apart from his campy remake of G.W.
Pabst’s L’Atlantide as Siren
of Atlantis (UA, 1949), he is most famous for his 1951
Columbia remake of M, with David Wayne in the
Peter Lorre role.
October
11: At
the odd hour of 3:45 am, it’s Pier Paolo Pasolini’s Mamma
Roma (1962),
with a breathtaking performance by Anna Magnani as a former
streetwalker who tries to save her son from a life of crime and take
him to better surroundings.
PSYCHOTRONICA
October
2: A night of haunted house movies. Best of the lot is
William Castle’s 1958 opus, House
on Haunted Hill (10:00 pm), and Robert Wise’s
chiller, The Haunting (11:30
pm). The Haunting is a masterpiece of horror
in the Val Lewton vein (Wise once worked for Lewton), proving that
the biggest scares come from our imagination.
October
4: At 12:45 am, it’s Lon Chaney in his 1925 masterpiece, The
Phantom of the Opera. It’s always worth seeing and
Chaney has lost none of his power over the years. Forget the remakes,
this is still the one to see.
October
9: Start the day with a mystery that makes no sense, Murder
in the Private Car (MGM, 1934), starring Charlie
Ruggles and Una Merkel. It’s silly and incoherent, with an ending
that comes too late to save it. Ruggles stars as an amateur detective
trying to solve the crime that has taken place aboard a moving train.
The film tries to be a comedy-mystery, but the humor falls flat on
its face. Still, it has lots of camp value and is worth a peek.
A
night with the theme “Rogue Body Parts” kicks off at 8:00 pm
with Peter Lorre in the excellent and eerie take on “The Hands of
Orlac,” Mad Love from
MGM in 1935. It’s followed at 9:30 with another great Lorre
performance in the classic The Beast
With Five Fingers (1946). At 1:00 am, it’s that
1962 laff riot, The Brain That
Wouldn’t Die, a film that put the final nail in the
career of actress Virginia Leith. What was she thinking when she
agreed to star in this one? More to the point, who was her agent?
Leith did go on to a fame of sorts when the folks at MST 3000
popularized her character as “Jan in the Pan” and made her a cult
figure among bad movie buffs. As ridiculous as it is, it’s a Must
See, especially for those who love bad movies.
Finally,
at 4:35 am, it’s one of the most exotic and disturbing films from
France, Eyes Without a Face (1959).
Directed by Georges Franju, it’s the story of a surgeon (Pierre
Brasseur) who kidnaps young women and grafts their faces onto that of
his disfigured daughter (Edith Scob). It’s a “can’t miss” if
you’ve never seen it and a “must see again” if you have. Hell,
I even like the Billy Idol song of the same name, a tribute to the
film.
October
14: At
midnight, it’s the premiere of Stanley Kubrick’s urban
dystopia, A
Clockwork Orange (1971),
the film that made Malcolm McDowell into a star.
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