TCM TiVo
ALERT
For
October
15–October 22
DAVID’S
BEST BETS:
HARLAN
COUNTY U.S.A. (October 15, 9:30 pm): A powerful
advocacy documentary about southeastern Kentucky mine workers who go
on a lengthy strike in part because the proposed labor contract from a subsidiary of the Duke Power Co. includes a provision banning union strikes. The
documentary team, led by Barbara Kopple, the director and producer,
spent a couple of years filming the strikers. There are some
extraordinarily intimate scenes about the struggles of the strikers
and their families during the lengthy work stoppage. There is no
narration to the film – but there are a few key pieces of information
that is shown on the screen – with the strikers and their families
telling their stories. After a while, the national union's presence
is gone leaving the local workers to fight one of the nation's
largest energy companies, and still one to this day, on their own.
One of the film's flaws is it's told almost entirely from the side of
the workers. But that was because the company had no interest in
participating in the film. Even with that challenge, the film is
exceptional. It won the 1977 Oscar for Best Documentary.
THE
PETRIFIED FOREST (October
17, 10:00 pm): This is film noir before the term was coined. In one
of his first major roles, Humphrey Bogart plays Duke Mantee, a
notorious gangster on the run. Bogart was so great in this 1936 film
as the heavy – bringing depth, emotion and character to the
role – that Warner Brothers spent nearly five years
casting Bogart in other movies as the bad guy. But very few were
of this quality. Duke and his gang end up in a diner near the
Petrified Forest in Arizona with the police chasing them. The
gang takes everyone inside hostage, including Alan Squier
(Leslie Howard), a once great writer who is now an alcoholic. Not
fearing death because of what life has become for him, Squier engages
Duke in conversation, pushing his buttons. The interaction between
the two is outstanding. The film is an adaption of the play that
featured Howard and Bogart in the same roles. Also at the dinner is
Gabrielle Maple (Bette Davis), who owns it with her father and
grandfather. Davis is excellent and even subdued as a secondary
character.
ED’S
BEST BETS:
THREE
ON A MATCH (October 15, 7:15 am): The Pre-Code era
was noted for producing some pretty strong films, and this entry was
amongst the strongest. Ann Dvorak, Joan Blondell, and Bette Davis are
three childhood friends who have a reunion at a restaurant and vow to
stay in touch. They then light their cigarettes on one match, hence
the title. The famous superstition predicts bad things for those who
do so, and each suffers her share of the bad life. However, the one
who falls the furthest gives the movie both its twist and its
reputation as among the most lurid of the Pre-code films. Humphrey
Bogart is on hand as well as (what else?) a gangster. He turns in a
good performance, as does Warren William, playing a good guy for
once. For those new to Pre-Code films, this is one to watch.
THE
PRODUCERS (October 21, 8:00 pm): Mel Brooks began his
directorial career with a film reviled at the time by many critics,
but now justly seen as one of the classics of cinema. Two Broadway
producers (Zero Mostel and Gene Wilder) discover that they can make
more money putting on a flop than financing a hit. All they have to
do is raise more cash than they need for the play. But they just find
a sure-fire flop, for they have pre-sold somewhere around 10,000% of
the play, and if it’s a hit, they can’t pay off the backers.
Their vehicle is a musical titled “Springtime for Hitler,” the
love story of Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun in song. They chose the
worst director, the worst actor, and have signed the play’s author,
a nutty Nazi living in Greenwich Village. I won’t say any more in
case you’re one of the few that hasn’t yet seen this classic.
WE
DISAGREE ON ... HEAVY METAL (October 17, 4:15 am)
ED:
B+. Heavy Metal is a quirky animated
adaptation of the cult magazine that was originally adapted from a
French adult comic book and which predated the rise of the graphic
novel. Though the animation was quickly surpassed in quality by the
Japanese anime of the mid-‘80s, the strength of the movie lies in
its stories, most of which are quite enjoyable, with one, “B-17,”
being a classic of its genre. Another strong point of the film is its
soundtrack, featuring the likes of Devo, Sammy Hagar, Blue
Oyster Cult, Donald Fagan, Stevie Nicks, Nazareth, Grand Funk
Railroad, Journey, Cheap Trick, Black Sabbath, Don Felder, Riggs, and
Trust. Besides the dated animation, another drawback of the film is
its cult status, which has quickly worn off as its audience died off.
Like the vast majority of films, it cannot transcend its zeitgeist
and so is relegated to antiquity. Watching it can be like seeing a
film from the early sound days. However, in the final analysis this
only becomes another reason for seeing it, as it’s an example of a
genre that has not survived into the present.
DAVID:
D+. To be blunt, this movie is garbage and a huge waste of
90 minutes. The "stories" are pointless except to show tons
of gratuitous sex and violence in cartoon form. Inspired by the
graphic novel of the same name, the viewer goes from one ridiculous
scene to the next. Some are connected, but good luck figuring out
what's happening. You'd think that with the cartoon sex and violence
that it would keep the attention of the viewer. You'd be wrong. It's
rather dull and lifeless. The movie came out in 1981 when I was 14
years old. I was the exact target audience for this film. At that
age, many guys are into sex and violence even if it's with animated
characters. I wasn't impressed then and after seeing it again two
years ago, I'm even less impressed. While many of the musicians whose
songs are used in this movie are excellent, the ones in this film are
largely throw-away. The only song most people recognize is Journey's
"Open Arms." There's also an inferior remake by Devo of
"Working in the Coal Mine." The only reason this film
doesn't get an F grade is because some of the characters' voices are
done by legendary SCTV actors, including John Candy,
Eugene Levy and Joe Flaherty – and I'm a huge fan of that classic TV
show.
For the complete list of films on the TCM TiVo Alert, click here.
For the complete list of films on the TCM TiVo Alert, click here.
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