A
Guide to the Rare and Unusual on TCM
By
Ed Garea
STAR
OF THE MONTH
TCM’s
Star of the Month is Norma Shearer, who reigned as the queen of the
MGM lot from the days of the studio’s silent era through the late
'30s. Her career was cut short by the death of husband Irving
Thalberg, which took away her love of making movies, and the
post-Thalberg politics of the studio, which de-emphasized her role as
a star. Born in Montreal, Canada, she won a beauty contest at the age
of 14 in 1916. In 1920, her mother took Norma and sister Athole (who
later married Howard Hawks) to New York. Ziegfeld turned her down for
a role in his “Follies,” but she found work as an extra in movies
in addition to modeling.
When
he joined Louis Mayer in 1923, Thalberg, having remembered her from
her work in films, signed her to a contract and built her into a
star. Shearer spent much time, and money, seeing doctors to correct
her cross-eyed stare, which resulted from a muscle weakness in the
eye. After they married in 1927, he thought she should retire, but
she was now a star and wanted to keep it that way. Norma effortlessly
slid over into talking pictures, her first being The Trial of
Mary Dugan in 1929. In 1930, she won an Oscar for The
Divorcee. As the ‘30s progressed she cut down her schedule to
tend to Irving and their two children, appearing only in Thalberg’s
prestige projects, such as The Barretts of Wimpole Street
(1934) and Romeo and Juliet (1936). When
Thalberg dies from a second heart attack in 1936, Shearer wanted to
retire, but MGM more or less bullied her into signing a six-picture
contract. When her last film, Her Cardboard Lover (1942)
wrapped, Norma walked away from Hollywood, marrying ski instructor
Martin Arrouge, 11 years her junior, later that year. The marriage
lasted until her death in 1983 from pneumonia.
November
3: It’s a night of Shearer silents and all are worth watching.
Begin at 8:00 pm with Lady of the
Night (1924). It’s the old chestnut about a
young man named David (Malcolm McGregor), an ambitious young inventor
who must choose between two women: Florence, the pampered daughter of
an affluent judge, and Molly, an underprivileged dance hall girl.
Shearer plays both young women in a bravura performance that sealed
her status as a leading lady. The film, from screenwriters Alice D.G.
Miller and Adela Rogers St. John, is an unabashedly sentimental
tearjerker, but the thing to watch here is Shearer in the dual role.
She is positively magnetic as both young women, more interesting as
the jaded, streetwise Molly, but fun to watch nevertheless.
At
9:15 pm, it’s Norma in a more adult role – that of con artist
Dolly in the 1928 comedy, A Lady of
Chance. A devious but doll-faced gold digger who also
goes by the name “Angel Face,” she’s working a luxury hotel,
and zeroes in on a rich businessman. However, her plans go awry when
fellow crooks Bradley (Lowell Sherman) and his girlfriend Gwen (Gwen
Lee) glom onto the scheme and beat her to the punch. The resourceful
Dolly manages to swindle them and then sets her sights on gullible
inventor Steve Crandall (Johnny Mack Brown, incorrectly spelled as Mc Brown in the above movie card). Convinced he lives on a
plantation and has a fortune back down south, she travels with him to
meet his folks. When her two erstwhile cronies show up to blackmail
Steve, however, Dolly finds she’s fallen in love and goes straight
to help her man. This is a prime example of the star making the film,
for without Shearer, this movie would be about as interesting as
watching paint dry.
At
10:45, Norma stars opposite Ramon Novarro in The
Student Prince in Old Heidelberg (1928), a solid
version of Sigmund Romberg’s famous operetta and directed by
none other than Ernst Lubitsch. Novarro is the youthful Prince Karl
Heinrich, who leads a pampered and sheltered life as he’s being
tutored to someday assume the throne. His father, the overly strict
King Karl VII (Gustav Von Seyffertitz), keeps him away from the
ordinary pleasures of life, as that would distract from his overall
mission of succeeding Karl as king. However, his tutor, Dr Jutter
(Jean Hersholt), manages to sneak in glimpses of the outside world
that the prince finds so fascinating. It is when Dr. Juttner takes
the young prince to the university at Heidelberg that his world
begins to expand. While there he meets and falls in love with barmaid
Kathi (Shearer). Even though they both know that he cannot marry
someone below his station, the Prince and Kathi make the most of
their time together. When his father dies, he must unhappily return
and assume the throne. He still loves Kathi, even though he is
betrothed to a princess. Will they find happiness together? Tune in
and find out.
The
film that follows is seen today as a classic, mainly because it stars
Lon Chaney at the peak of his creative powers. He
Who Gets Slapped (1924), airing at 12:45 am.
Chaney is a scientist who is cheated out of his discovery. Humiliated
he withdraws from both his profession and society, becoming a clown
in the circus simply known as “He.” Shearer is Consuelo, a
bareback rider with whom Chaney falls in love. Tragically, when he
confesses his love to her, she laughs in his face, as she is in love
with her partner Bezano (John Gilbert). Chaney learns that Consuelo’s
father, Count Mancini (Tully Marshall) plans to marry his daughter to
Baron Regnard (Marc McDermott), and takes drastic measures that
backfire on almost all. It was said by Chaney to have been his
favorite role and is definitely worth watching.
November
10: On this night we follow Norma into the era of sound,
which is decidedly a mixed bag. Not every film she made was notable,
so we are choosing what, in our humble opinions, are the best of the
tonight’s bunch. We begin at 8:00 with a film that shows off the
sophistication of Shearer, 1931’s Private
Lives, a dazzling, witty adaptation of Noel Coward’s
stage play. Shearer and Robert Montgomery star as Amanda Prynne and
Elyot Chase, a divorced couple who are now married to other people
(Reginald Denny and Una Merkel). Unfortunately, their separate
honeymoons with the new spouses take them to the same hotel, where
the couples are staying in adjoining rooms. One thing leads to
another and Amanda and Elyot are once again in love, but for how
long? It’s a very funny comedy of manners, with all four actors
giving as good as each gets. Merkel, in particular, is a gem.
We
follow at 9:30 with Norma as Jan Ashe, the free-spirited daughter of
hard-drinking attorney Stephen Ashe (Lionel Barrymore) in 1932’s A
Free Soul. Although from a socially prominent family,
freethinking Stephen defends some of society’s most undesirable
characters. This time, it’s Ace Wilfong (Clark Gable), who is up
for murder. Naturally, Ace and Jan fall in love and want to marry as
she dumps her old beau Dwight (Leslie Howard). Stephen denies their
request, although Jan continues to see him. But the romance between
Jan and Ace turns violent when Ace jealously scolds her for leaving
him to go on vacation with her father. After attacking her, Ace
demands that she marry him. Jan says nothing doing and returns to old
beau Dwight. Ace follows, and when Dwight sees him manhandling her,
he shoots and kills Ace. Now it’s up to Stephen to defend Dwight.
This is a movie more famous for its Pre-Code shenanigans rather than
any dramatic quality. It’s amazing that Barrymore won the Best
Actor award for what is essentially one of the hammiest performances
of his career. However, it is entertaining, if only on a lower level,
and those who have not yet seen it would be well advised to give it
as peek.
At
12:45, it’s the film that put Shearer on the map as one of the most
risque actresses, The
Divorcee (1930). Jerry (Shearer) and Ted (Chester
Morris) have enjoyed three years of wedded bliss. But when she
discovers that he’s having an affair, she decides to play tit for
tat and have one herself, turning to Ted’s friend Don (Robert
Montgomery) for comfort. When Ted finds out, he refuses to accept her
having affairs with other men. Consequently, they divorce and go
their separate ways. Eventually they reconcile, but not before much
water passes under the bridge. The film is based on a novel
titled Ex-Wife that was so racy its author, Ursula
Parrott, published it anonymously. The Production Code Administration
wanted cuts to the novel before it was filmed. The studio promised
much, but gave little; the only note of consequence was in accepting
the suggestion that the original title not be used to the movie.
Shearer garnered her first Best Actress nomination for the role of
Jerry, though the odds were heavily favoring Greta Garbo for her
talkie debut, Anna Christie. However, when the award was
announced, it went to Shearer. Rumors persisted that Thalberg ordered
MGM’s employees to vote for his wife.
Finally,
at 3:30 am, it’s Shearer in an early talkie, The
Last of Mrs. Cheyney (1929). She plays the leader
of a group of suave, chic jewel thieves that prey on the rich. Her
downfall comes when she falls for one of her marks (Basil Rathbone).
Besides the performances of Shearer and Rathbone, the film is worth
seeing for the technical difficulties that came with the shift to
sound. Watch the actors talking into floral arrangements on the table
or a corsage one is wearing. There are times during the film when the
sound of the background music is indistinguishable from the
soundtrack and we find ourselves rewinding to hear what was said. But
it’s worth it, for some of the dialogue is absolutely sparkling,
such as the scene where Shearer and Rathbone face off in their
nightwear. As Shearer’s Fay Cheyney scrutinizes Rathbone’s Arthur
Dilling dressed to the nines in an obviously expensive silk dressing
gown and finds it not up to snuff, Rathbone can only say, “Oh, and
I chose the one that suits me best. How depressing! It must be me!”
Shearer’s nemesis Joan Crawford starred in a 1937 remake, hoping to
teach Norma a thing or two about acting, but falls pitifully short.
Crawford could never pass herself off as to the manor born. She
should’ve stuck to playing shopgirls.
TCM
SPOTLIGHT
The
TCM spotlight this month is on Southern writers and their films.
After presenting us with an extremely fascinating look at women
directors last month, it looks as if they’ve chosen to coast this
month.
November
4: The Adventures of Huckleberry
Finn, with Mickey Rooney and Rex Ingram, is a good
choice to lead off at 8:00 pm. Following at 9:45 is Gone
With the Wind. Some love it, while some hate it. But
those who love it have it on DVD, so it’s up to those who don’t
yet have it and neophytes to tune in. Me, I’m not a fan. And at the
wee hour of 4:15 am it’s the best of tonight’s bunch, John
Huston’s In This Our Life (1942),
a study of a crumbling Southern family, with Bette Davis in top form
as the bad sister, and Olivia de Havilland as the good sister.
November
11: At 8:00 pm, it’s easily the film of the night: Robert
Mitchum was never scarier than in The
Night of the Hunter (1955) as a faux preacher
whose real mission is not the salvation of souls, but the hiding
place of his late cellmate’s ill-gotten loot. He seduces and later
kills the widow (Shelly Winters) in his quest, and is about to murder
her children when neighbor Lillian Gish foils his plans for murder.
This film is a wonderful parable of greed, corruption, and the saving
grace of redemption directed by Charles Laughton. It was Laughton’s
first, and only, film. When it proved a box office flop upon its
release. Laughton decided to stick with acting, which was cinema’s
loss, for this is one of the best films ever made and a superb
example of the psychological thriller. Hitchcock could not have done
any better.
At
9:45 comes Wise Blood (1979),
director John Huston’s failed attempt to translate the great
Flannery O’Connor to the screen. At 11:45 it’s – once again –
To Kill a Mockingbird (1962),
a brilliantly realized version of Harper Lee’s classic novel.
OUT
OF THE ORDINARY
November
1: The evening’s highlight is I,
Vitteloni, an early effort from Federico Fellini in
1953. It’s a magnificent film about the efforts of five young
friends having to cope with their emerging adulthood and their wish
to escape the boredom and confinement of their provincial hometown.
Think of an Italian version of American Graffiti,
but with much more depth. It’s a fascinating study of small town
life and would anticipate his later Amarcord. It’s
also the film that gave Alberto Sordi his first big break. I cannot
recommend this film more; in fact, some critics see it as Fellini’s
masterpiece, and this with La Strada, The
Nights of Cabiria, La Dolce Vita,
and 8½ still to come.
November
5: At 8:00 pm. it’s one of the greatest films ever made,
1937’s La Grande Illusion,
from director Jean Renoir, a moving and compelling story of French
POWs and their German captors in World War I. Starring Jean Gabin,
Pierre Fresnay, and Marcel Dalio as the French POWs and a masterful
performance by Eric von Stroheim as their commandant. It was the
first foreign film to be nominated by the Academy for Best Picture in
1937, and was one of the first films Joseph Goebbels seized when the
Germans marched into France, as Renoir was his Public Enemy No. 1. It
was thought for years that an air raid by the Allies in 1942
destroyed it, but it turns out that a German film archivist named
Frank Hansel had smuggled the original negative back to Berlin. When
the Russians captured Berlin the film was moved to a Soviet archive
and unknowingly sent back to France during the mid ‘60s in a swap
with an archive in Toulouse. Meanwhile, at the same time, Renoir had
restored a copy of the film from an old muddy print, but with so many
prints of the film now available, the original negative wasn’t
discovered until the early ‘90s. Renoir’s assistant director on
the film was Jacques Becker, who went on to make some wonderful films
of his own.
November
8: It’s Fellini’s La
Strada at 2:00 am, followed by Without
Pity (1948) from director Alberto Lattuada and
written by Fellini. This is the touching story of a woman (Carla Del
Poggio) reduced to prostitution and the black GI (John Kitzmuller)
who falls in love with her. Kitzmuller, interestingly, was a real GI
stationed in Italy during the war. He stayed behind after the war and
went into acting, where he became the stock black American or African
character. He made quite a few sword and sandal movies when the genre
was hot in the late ‘50s to early ‘60s. His most famous role was
that of Quarrel in Dr. No (1962). Also look
for Giuletta Masina as Del Poggio’s best friend.
November
12: The night is dedicated to the efforts of Milestone
Films. Besides the early In the Land
of the Head Hunters (8:00 pm) from 1914, which
should be seen due to the year it was made, other tidbits worth
looking into are I am Cuba (9:15)
a documentary from Mosfilm in 1964 about the adjustment of Cuba to
Castro’s new regime, and Come Back,
Africa (1960), a documentary about the harsh
realities of living under apartheid in South Africa that is being
aired at 3:15 am.. While both are certainly worth watching, it’s
the latter that is a Must See. I Am Cuba is
in reality a propaganda piece partially written by the Russian poet
and filmmaker Yevgeny Yevtushenko, the latter is a devastating look
at the lives of black South Africans living in a brutal regime.
November
15: It’s Fellini once again, in what may have been his
wife’s (Giuletta Masina) greatest performance: The
Nights of Cabiria (1957). Masina dazzles in an
almost flawless performance as a prostitute in Rome looking for real
love and attracting only the worst of men. It would be the basis for
the Broadway and film musical, Sweet Charity.
Following
after at 4:15 am is Rossellini’s powerful The
Flowers of St. Francis (1950). It’s the story
of St. Francis of Assisi, a man who renounced his family’s wealth
to lead a band of followers into poverty, and ultimately grace, in
the service of God. It starred non-actors and was co-written by
Rossellini, Federico Fellini, and two Italian priests.
PSYCHOTRONICA
November
6: Begin at 10:00 pm with the best of the adaptations of
Agatha Christie’s Ten Little Indians, And
Then There Were None (1945). It boasts a sterling
cast that includes Walter Huston, Louis Hayward, Barry Fitzgerald,
Roland Young, June Duprez, Mischa Auer, C. Aubrey Smith, Judith
Anderson, and Richard Haydn. The plot is pure Christie: 10 people are
invited to a mansion on an isolated island by a host who is nowhere
to be seen. He has left a phonograph keyed to a song based on the
nursery rhyme, Ten Little Indians. On the dining room table is a
centerpiece comprised of a ring on which 10 Indians stand in a
circle. Each time a guest is killed, one of the Indians is smashed. A
combination of tough seas and no transport means the guests must wait
until the ferry returns a couple of days later. One by one the guests
are murdered. Who’s doing the killing? Is it their unseen host? Or
is the killer one of them? Christie, known as a meticulous and
ingenious plotter, couldn’t have had a better person to direct this
film than Rene Clair, who matches her step for step, utilizing the
camera brilliantly to fully capture the suspense that builds up as
the film progresses. Like Christie, Clair knows that suspense comes
not from what happens, but from what is about to happen. As with any
good old dark house thriller, it’s the use of shadows, of something
coming out of the dark, which stokes the tension. And this film is
the best of the genre.
At
midnight comes It, the Terror From
Beyond Space (1958). Though the title
seemingly gives it all away, this little independent B boasts an
above average script, courtesy of Jerome Bixby, and a competent cast.
Director Edward L. Cahn, not noted as one of the better directors of
his time, keeps the pacing sharp and the suspense continuous. A
rescue mission to Mars in 1973(!) picks up the last survivor of the
previous expedition. It’s assumed that he did in his crewmates, but
the real killer is a Martian who has stowed away on the ship. To live
he needs blood and he’ll go anything to get it. Though the
production values are near zero – we can easily see the zipper on
the back of the Martian (Ray “Crash” Corrigan) – the script and
the pacing more than makes up for the deficiencies. The crew must
find and kill their visitor before he kills them, which is a
difficult task, as he likes to play hide and seek in the airshafts of
the ship. Screenwriter Dan O’Bannon lifted the film’s premise and
turned it into Alien for director Ridley Scott in 1979.
Forget the production values, just ride along with the crew. A good
time is guaranteed.
Rounding
out the fare at 3:30 am is frumpy Bette Davis playing a frumpy killer
nanny in the equally frumpy The
Nanny, from 1965.
November
7: Those of us who are Bowery Boys fans (and we know who we
are) should have the cockles of our hearts warmed by the fact that
TCM is beginning a new cycle of Bowery Boys films airing each
Saturday at 10:30 am. We begin with the first of the series, Live
Wires (1946), which sees Slip, Sach, and the boys
plying their trade as skip tracers, repossessing
goods from people who are behind on their payments. It’s
a remake of He Couldn’t Take It, from 1933 (Written by
Dore Schary!), which was remade as Here Comes Kelly in
1943. Directed by the able Phil Karlson, Live Wires is
an entertaining mix of crime and slapstick, highlighted by a scene
where Slip is to collect from someone named “Patsy Clark.”
Figuring Patsy’s a woman, he’s in for the surprise of his life
when he discovers that Patsy is a man in the form of Mike Mazurki.
November
14: Again, at 10:30 am it’s another Bowery Boys
feature. In Fast Company (1946)
finds the gang embroiled in a taxi war brought on by the crooked
manager of a taxicab company eager to eliminate the competition in
the form of independent cabbies. It’s directed by Del Lord, who
helmed many a Three Stooges short.
SO
BAD IT’S GOOD
Tune
in November 6 at 1:30 am for the one and only Joan Crawford starring
in one of her most ridiculous features: Berserk (1967),
from schlockmeister Herman Cohen, who also produced Joan’s
unforgettable Trog three years later. Joan stars as
Monica Rivers, whose circus is beset by a slasher.
Murder-in-the-circus films were always popular, but the ‘60s
spawned three color classics: the 1960 Circus of Horrors,
with Anton Diffring; the 1967 Circus of
Fear (aka Psycho-Circus), with Christopher Lee;
and Berserk, originally titled “Circus of
Blood.” All three have a killer on the run plying his trade in a
circus, which increases attendance. And all three were made in color,
which allows for plenty of blood, the red stuff that takes the place
of shadows – and sex – in the horror movie. Berserk goes
the others one better, though, in that it stars Crawford. Joan is
aptly hilarious, wearing a ringmaster’s outfit more suited for a
woman half her age that exposes her long legs, accompanied by an
outlandish bleached blonde hairdo, and spouting such lines as “Just
remember, I was the one who gave you all a home!” She also has an
attractive studmuffin on the hook (Ty Hardin), and during their love
scenes, her appearance in see-through night apparel is truly
something to behold. She also has a bitchy relationship with the
circus’s other diva, played by Diana Dors, that degenerates into a
cat fight after one takes offense to the other’s heckling. But
stick around for the conclusion, when the killer is revealed along
with the laughable reasons why the killings were committed. All this
ends in a chase outside the tent, where the killer is conveniently
electrocuted. As with all of Joan’s later films, it’s a must.
Bring on those dancing poodles!
Once again... a smorgasbord of hand-picked "mind candy" out of the TCM schedule! Thanks guys, great job! Way too much to comment on; but as I had the pleasure to meet Jerome Bixby in LA back in the late 70's I'd like to add (for those unfamiliar with him) that he penned the short story that was the basis for the iconic Twilight Zone episode "It's a Good Life" with 5-year old terror, Billy Mumy... as well as the screenplay for "Fantastic Voyage" ('66) and last but not least, he was "uncredited" for designing some of the Sets for "It! The Terror from Beyond Space"
ReplyDeleteWe're always trying to come up with interesting and rarely-seen films and let the readers know information about them. Thanks so much for the support! It must have been great to meet Jerome Bixby - such a talent.
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