A
Guide to the Rare and Unusual on TCM
By
Ed Garea
STAR
OF THE MONTH
We
continue with David Niven, October’s Star of the Month. While most
of the programming scheduled for the two remaining days of his reign
is mediocre, there are three classics definitely worth watching.
One
interesting thing about Niven’s career is his appearance as James
Bond in the 1967 version of Casino Royale. Niven had been
Bond creator Ian Fleming’s first choice to portray the super spy in
1962’s Dr. No. Fleming was said to have written the
book with Niven in mind and even sent Niven a copy of the text. Niven
is also the only actor mentioned by name in a Fleming work. In On
Her Majesty’s Secret Service, Bond visits an exclusive ski
resort in Switzerland where he is told that Niven is also a frequent
visitor. In You Only Live Twice, Niven is referred to as the
only real gentleman in Hollywood. This begs the question of whether
or not Niven was the inspiration for James Bond. No, Fleming based
his hero on another spy named Dusan “Dusko” Popov, a triple agent
during World War II who, besides being a brilliant spy, was also a
ladies man with an extravagant lifestyle.
Another
highlight of Niven’s life was during his co-hosting assignment on
the 46th Annual Oscars Ceremony when a naked man
streaked behind him across the stage. His response became a
classic: "Isn't it fascinating to
think that probably the only laugh that man will ever get in his life
is by stripping off and showing his shortcomings?"
In
July 1982, Blake Edwards engaged Niven to reprise his role of Sir
Charles Lytton in cameo appearances in Trail of the Pink
Panther and Curse of the Pink Panther, but by this
timer Niven’s health problems (ALS) were such that his voice had to
be dubbed by Rich Little. Those cameo were to be Niven’s final film
appearances.
Besides
acting, Niven also found fame as a writer. He wrote two novels (Round
the Rugged Rocks, 1951; and Go Slowly, Come Back Quickly,
1981) an autobiography (The Moon’s a Balloon, 1971) and a
collection of reminiscences (Bring On The Empty Horses, 1975).
He
married twice, the first to Primula Susan Rollo, the daughter of a
prominent English barrister, in 1918. The couple had two sons, David,
Jr. and Jamie. The marriage lasted until Primula’s accidental death
in 1946. In 1958, he married Swedish fashion model Hjordis Paulina
Tersmeden; the marriage lasted until Niven’s death in 1983.
October
19: The only pick of the night is Around
the World in 80 Days (1956), an engaging movie
starring Niven and an all-star cast, including Cantinflas, Robert
Morley, Noel Coward, Buster Keaton, and Sir John Gielgud. Mike Todd’s
version of the Jules Verne tale is highly entertaining, with a great
score from Victor Young and a strong screenplay from James Poe, John
Farrow and S.J. Perelman.
October
26: Two films running back to back are the choices this
night. First up is the pleasant family comedy Please
Don’t Eat the Daises (1960) starring Niven and
Doris Day as a drama critic and his family trying to adjust to life
in the country. It’s based on Jean Kerr’s stories about life with
critic husband Walter Kerr and their family. It’s followed by a
marvelous ‘60s comedy, The
Impossible Years (1968) with Niven as a famed
psychiatrist whose nerves and patience are tested to the limit when
his daughter starts dating. It’s based on the wildly successful
Broadway play of the same name written by Arthur Marx, Groucho’s
son.
October
27: In the spillover from the night before is an underrated
gem, Where the Spies Are (1965).
It’s one of the better Bond-style spy spoofs with Niven as a
country doctor who is persuaded to become a spy. His reason? A
promised 1937 Chrysler LeBaron to replace his wrecked 1937 Cord
Phaeton. It costars Francoise Dorleac, well known as the older sister
of Catherine Deneuve. Dorlac’s career was starting to really take
off when she was killed when her sports car flipped and burned in
Nice, France, on June 26, 1967. She was only 25 years old.
TCM
SPOTLIGHT: TRAILBLAZING WOMEN
As
the Spotlight feature continues, the movies being shown (except for
October 27) date no earlier than 1980. It became a little easier for
women to break into the directorial side of the cinema by that time,
as compared to earlier times when women directors became famous as
much for their scarcity as for their talent.
After
Dorothy Arzner retired in 1943, there were no women directors working
in Hollywood until 1949. During filming of the independent
production Not Wanted in 1949, director Elmer
Clifton suffered a crippling stroke. Producer Ida Lupino took his
place and finished the film. She also developed a taste for
directing, but there weren’t any openings. So she took the
independent route, directing low-budget films to be released by
Eagle-Lion and RKO. The first film that brought her to the attention
of both critics and public alike was Outrage (1950),
an independent production released through RKO. It was a stark and
open look at a subject that was taboo in Hollywood, that of rape. The
film performed very well at the box office and led to an RKO contract
as a director, where she made The Hitch-Hiker and The
Bigamist (both in 1953). However, though both films did
well, she remained shutout in Hollywood and turned to television,
where she carved out a pretty respectable career. The glass ceiling
proved so suffocating that even a director with Lupino’s record
couldn’t get a gig.
Despite
the progress made since the ‘80s, there is still a long way to go,
but at least the foot is firmly in the door.
October
20: We lead off at 8:00 with the Penny Marshall classic, A
League of Their Own (1992), a film famous for its
line “There’s no crying in baseball!” At 10:15 pm, it’s Nora
Ephron’s Sleepless in
Seattle (1993), starring Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan.
Barbra Streisand’s The Prince of
Tides (1991) takes over at 12:15 am, then it’s
a lovely underrated film, Wrestling
Ernest Hemingway (1993), from director Randa
Haines, starring Robert Duvall and Richard Harris as two lonely
retires that strike up an tenuous friendship. Finally, at 5:00 am
it’s Jodie Foster’s disappointing Home
for the Holidays (1995).
October
22: It’s a night of independent productions from
African-American directors, beginning at 8:00 with the late Kathleen
Collins directing Losing
Ground (1982). At 9:45, it’s Julie Dash’s
engaging look at the Gullah culture of the islands off South Carolina
and Georgia, Daughters of the
Dust (1991). Just
Another Girl in the I.R.T.(1992), from Leslie Harris,
follows at 11:45 pm. And Ava DuVernay’s recent feature about a
woman who is forced to drop out of medical school when her husband is
incarcerated, Middle of
Nowhere (2012), airs at 1:30 am.
October
27: It’s an evening of films from European and Indian
directors. Begin at 8:00 with the original Gigi (1948)
from director Jacqueline Audry. Audry, who learned her craft working
under the great G.W. Pabst, fashioned quite an interesting tale about
a teenage girl (Daniele Delorme) who is being trained to be a
courtesan by her grandmother, Mamita (Yvonne de Bray), and her
courtesan aunt Alicia (Gaby Morlay). This is light years away from
MGM’s 1958 adaptation that took the stuffing out of the original
and rendered it into just another harmless musical.
At
9:30, it’s Agnes Varda’s classic, Cleo
From 5 to 7 (1962), a compelling drama about two
hours in the life of a French singer awaiting the results of her
cancer test. While it may sound a tad unexciting, it is anything but.
Varda’s genius is in constructing a meaningful drama about a
superficial woman’s two-hour journey through the city’s streets
neatly contrasting Cleo’s fear of death with the celebration of
life going on all around her. Whether encountering friends, lovers,
or total strangers we notice her beginning to realize the shallowness
of her own life and slowly beginning to look at the world properly,
with a sense of the eternal and freedom. Look for cameos by Jean-Luc
Godard, Anna Karina and Jean-Claude Brialy as actors in a silent film
seen by Cleo and her friend.
At
11:15 pm, it’s Salaam
Bombay! (1988) from Mira Nair. A boy, Krisna, is
abandoned by his mother at the Apollo Circus and told that he can
only return home when he has the 500 rupees to pay for the bicycle of
his brother that he wrecked. Nair shows his progression on the
streets of Bombay, as each day is a test of survival with the hope
that somehow he’ll be able to raise the money that will let him
come home. It is a movie that, once seen, will remain always within
our consciousness.
Lina
Wertmuller, the queen of the surreal and unexpected, takes over at
1:15 am with her masterly Love and
Anarchy (1973). Frequent star Giancarlo Giannini
is a farmer whose close friend has been killed by Fascists. Outraged,
he decides to kill Mussolini. His anarchist connections take him to
Rome where he links up with his anarchist contact, a highly popular
prostitute named Salome who works in a Roman bordello that also
happens to be popular with the Fascists, especially Mussolini’s
head of security. The film is typical Wertmuller – takes a while to
get going, but once it does, we’re hooked.
Last,
and certainly least, is an effort from the late Chantal
Akerman, Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du
Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (1975), airing at 3:15
am. It’s an interesting film about a lonely widow who is forced to
turn to prostitution to make ends meet, but it moves at a snail’s
pace and at 3 hours and 21 minutes is just too long.
October
29: A mixed bag this evening with the best bets being
Kathryn Bigelow’s war drama, The
Hurt Locker (2008), and Salma Hayek in Julie
Taymor’s Frida (2002),
about the life and loves of Mexican artist Frida Kahlo. Both are well
worth the time and effort.
FROM
THE DISNEY VAULTS
October
28: Included are three cartoons scheduled at 8:00 pm including
the 1933 Disney cartoon classic, Three Little Pigs. It was one
of the most popular films, period, of the Depression and the Big Bad
Wolf was said to have been a symbol of the Depression. The version we
will see is most likely the edited version. In the original version,
pulled from theaters shortly after its debut and replaced with a less
disturbing version, the Wolf disguises himself as a Jewish peddler to
gain entry into the pigs’ house. This may be why it was reportedly
one of Adolf Hitler’s favorite films. He was said to have loved
whistling the track “Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf,” which
also became a hit in America as well.
PSYCHOTRONICA
October
16: It’s a night devoted to “Killer Kids.” The best
bets this night actually begin at 1:45 am with Village
of the Damned (1960). George Sanders and Barbara
Shelley must save the world from a brood of blond children all born
on the same day to women in a British village impregnated in a most
unusual manner. The children are not of this Earth and by looking at
someone they can drive him or her to their death.
Following
at 3:15 am is Curse of the Cat
People (1944), a most unusual horror film from
producer Val Lewton and RKO. Originally positioned as a sequel to
1942’s successful Cat People, it really not a sequel but a
wonderfully atmospheric story of a lonely little girl who conjures up
an image of her father’s first wife. For those looking for straight
horror, dial somewhere else. For those looking for an excellent,
moody adult fantasy, this is for you.
From
director Jaromil Jires comes Valerie
and Her Week of Wonder (1970). Based closely on
Vtezslav Nezval’s fantasy novel of the same name, it’s a surreal
tale of the sexual coming of age of a young woman told through a
monstrous metaphor: vampires, who prey on the innocent to drain their
youth and vitality. The film went through the usual process in
Czechoslovakia, released, and later repressed. It was almost totally
forgotten, consigned to the dustbins of cinema history, but
word-of-mouth among cinephiles and revival screenings kept it alive
and in the cinema consciousness. It also served as the role model for
other films that combined the feminine and the monstrous, such
as Lemora: A Child Tale of the
Supernatural (1973), Carrie (1976), and The
Company of Wolves (2012).
October
23: Best bets tonight include The
Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939) at 10:30 pm with
Charles Laughton giving a wonderful performance as the hunchback with
Maureen O’Hara providing excellent support.
At
2:00 am, it’s one the classics of the genre, The
Picture of Dorian Gray (1945), adapted from the
Oscar Wilde work and starring George Sanders and Hurd Hatfield. It’s
followed at 4:00 am by that old Hammer standard, The
Curse of Frankenstein (1957), starring Peter
Cushing and Christopher Lee.
October
29: It’s a whole morning and afternoon of horror, with the
best being The Devil-Doll (1936)
at 9:15 am, and the Roger Corman schmiel double feature of Bucket
of Blood (1959) and Little
Shop of Horrors (1960) at 5 pm.
October
30: It’s an entire day of horror. Best bets are the Hammer
version of The Mummy (1959),
at 8:15 am; Dracula, Prince of
Darkness (1966), at 9:45 am, and Frankenstein
Must Be Destroyed! (1970) at 3:00 pm. A curiosity
for fans of the English detective series Foyle’s
War will be Dracula
A.D., 1972 (1972), as Inspector Foyle himself,
Michael Kitchen, is featured in a supporting role.
The
evening is devoted to the one and only Val Lewton, with Cat
People (1942) at 8:00 pm, the wonderful Martin
Scorsese documentary, Martin
Scorsese Presents, Val Lewton: The Man in the Shadows at
9:30, The Seventh Victim (1943)
at 11:00, The Leopard Man (1943)
at 12:15 am, The Ghost Ship (1943)
at 1:30 am, The Body Snatcher (1945)
at 2:45 am, Isle of the Dead (1945)
at 4:15 am, and, finally, Bedlam (1946)
at 5:30 am. All are recommended; the last three are starring Boris
Karloff, an added treat for horror fans.
October
31: Halloween continues the horror marathon. Best bets
are Doctor X (1932)
at 7:00 am, the underrated White
Zombie (1932) with Bela Lugosi at 8:30 am,
Vincent Price in The Tingler (1959)
at 3:00 pm and House of Wax (1953)
at 4:30.
The
evening brings us an encore airing of The
Picture of Dorian Gray (1945) at 8:00 pm, Curse
of the Demon (1958) at 10:00 pm, the
excellent Dead of Night (1945)
from Ealing Studios, at 11:30 pm, and Tod Browning’s Mark
of the Vampire (1935) with Bela Lugosi and Lionel
Barrymore, at 1:30 am.
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