TCM TiVo ALERT
For
November
8–November 14
DAVID’S
BEST BETS:
THE
BLACKBOARD JUNGLE (November 8, 6:00 pm): An
excellent JD movie with Glenn Ford as a teacher trying to
put high school kids on the right track. Sidney Poitier and Ford work
exceptionally well with Poitier as a defiant and
intelligent student who Ford sees promise in and
tries to help. Vic Morrow plays the worst of the worst kids
to near perfection. The scene in which Morrow’s
character cruelly destroys a teacher's most-beloved items,
his record collection, in class as the teacher tries to reach
the kids, is an incredibly haunting piece of cinema. And the
soundtrack is great, particularly the opening credits with “Rock
Around the Clock.” While many think of the film as the
first with a rock-and-roll song in it, it is so much more than
that.
LIMELIGHT (November 9, 10:30
pm): One of Charlie Chaplin's last and greatest films, Limelight is
tragic, touching, beautiful, captivating and funny. This movie
never fails to make me tear up with laughter or sadness. For someone
who mastered silent films, and went into sound practically kicking
and screaming, Chaplin's "talkies" are among his finest
movies. This 1952 film, Chaplin's final one made in the United
States, has him playing Calvero, a washed-up clown looking to make a
comeback. He meets Terry (Claire Bloom), a suicidal young ballet
dancer, and takes care of her while helping to revitalize her career.
The two are wonderful together. The final scene is one for the ages
with Calvero reuniting with his old partner (played by Buster Keaton)
on stage making a comeback that runs the gambit of emotions. It's the
only film to include Chaplin and Keaton, and one to not miss.
ED’S
BEST BETS:
LOVE
FINDS ANDY HARDY (November 13, 6:00 am): The Andy
Hardy series at MGM was the most profitable B-movies series ever
made. They were essentially B-movies with an A-budget and style. They
are also a guilty pleasure of mine. Sure, they were corny as hell and
tried to evoke an America that didn’t even exist at that time. But
they are a lot of fun to watch, although I think it all comes down to
how one feels about Mickey Rooney. This one tends to stand out due to
the supporting cast, specifically Lana Turner and Judy Garland.
Turner’s a wonder to behold here, with her natural auburn hair
(before it was bleached), and Garland plays the role of a young girl
with a crush on Andy Hardy almost to perfection. And she gets to
sing, as well. The plot, with Andy minding his friend Beezy’s
girlfriend (Turner) while he’s away, and the sidebar, with Mrs.
Hardy having to travel to Canada to nurse her sick mother, are
nominal. It’s the Rooney-Garland relationship that comes to the
center of the film. The only flaw in the pudding is that Andy’s
girlfriend, Polly Benedict, is also conveniently away for the
holidays, so we miss out on the gorgeous Ann Rutherford for most of
the film. Also look for the young Gene Reynolds (who went on to
become a prolific television director) as a young friend of Andy’s.
THE
UMBRELLAS OF CHERBOURG (November 13, 1:30 pm): Yet
another wonderful film shown at an inconvenient hour. This one is
definitely worth recording, or just taking a mental health day to
watch. Jacques Demy directed this unusual musical, in which every
line is sung, sort of like the latest incarnation of Les
Miserables. But unlike that movie, Umbrellas isn’t
nearly as annoying. The singing voices of the actors are wonderfully
dubbed. It stars Catherine Deneuve and Nino Castelnuovo as
star-crossed lovers separated when he has to go off to fight in
Algeria for the French Army. As they pledged their love until their
death, the circumstances make for a good test of the pledge. Demy
makes what could easily become a maudlin unintentional parody of the
Hollywood musical into a bittersweet, poetic slice of romantic life.
Though it’s set in the French town of Cherbourg (in Normandy), it
has the look of a Hollywood studio musical, thanks to the good
townspeople allowing Demy to paint their houses in loud, bright
colors. It’s a fragile line for Demy to traipse, but he pulls it
off with panache, and stay tuned for the final, moving scene in the
snow.
WE
DISAGREE ON ... TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD (November 11, 11:45
pm)
ED:
A+. This is one of those rare film adaptations of a
classic novel that managed to please both fans of the book and its
author. It is a beautiful time capsule of an era more naïve than
today, when just men, whether black or white, stood up for what was
right, and had to tread carefully due to the mores of society at that
time. Director Robert Mulligan does a fine job of capturing the
sleepy Alabama town of Maycomb, and Horton Foote’s screenplay keeps
the relationships at the heart of the book intact. For although the
book is set during a crisis time of race relations in the South, the
film keeps its focus on the relationship between Scout, a tomboyish
six-year old, her older brother, Jem, and Atticus, their attorney
father. Although the front porch sociology of the film seems at bit
fatuous at times – Tom Robinson, the black man railroaded for a
supposed rape, is just too good to be true, and Gregory Peck (not one
of my favorite actors) lays it on a bit too thick at times, almost as
if he’s imagining himself as the next Lincoln or Supreme Court
Chief Justice. But, aside from that, the film adaptation retains its
essential viewpoint of life from a child’s point of view. We must
be careful not to view the happenings in 1932 Alabama through the
prism of 2015 America. As a film it is excellent; as a statement,
which is film set in the past cannot hope to be, it falls far short.
Roger Ebert, for instance, thought it unreal that Ewell, the man who
framed Tom Robinson for rape, could, after his death walk up to the
other members of Robinson’s African-American community and sneer in
their faces, “call one of them ‘boy’, and not be touched."
Ebert obviously doesn’t understand the hold that Jim Crow had on
the South in those days. That’s part of the problem with viewing
the film, through a contemporary lens. View it as a film and all will
be fine.
DAVID:
B-. Gregory Peck is magnificent as Atticus Finch (he
won the Best Actor Oscar for his portrayal) and the actors who play
his two children, Mary Badham as Scout and Phillip Alford as Jem, are
quite good. However, this film lays the morality of the characters on
far too thick and for far too long. I agree with Ed that it's not
fair to view this 1962 film about life in the Deep South during the
1930s from what we know today. However, the film doesn't hold up well
today. I appreciate what it's trying to say about life in a small
Alabama town 80 years ago despite some of the over-the-top scenes.
One in particular has Scout unknowingly break up a lynch mob prepared
to storm the local jail to kill a black man falsely accused of raping
a white woman by innocently shaming one of the mob's leaders. It's
just too good to be true. While Peck is superb, he's able to do so
while reciting some really corny lines. The film is too long at 129
minutes. It's supposed to relate the viewpoint of the children in the
film, but too often they fade into the background such as during the
trial of Tom Robinson, the black man falsely accused of rape. While
there are shortcomings to the movie, overall, it's an engaging film
that is worth seeing. But I wouldn't include it in any discussion
about cinema's all-time classics.
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.
I just love your guys' blog. One thing, it is "Poiter" not Portier. But agree about Blackbord. Riveting stuff. Also, the discussion of Mockingbird could get quite interesting. Recently, with Harper Lee finally publishing a new book, there has been quite a bit of attention on the book and the film. Both, BTW are favorites of mine. Interesting comment about Peck by David - I always liked him, but my first exposure was, oddly, "The Omen". One bit of trivia, that you are probably aware of, one of the chartacters in Mockingbird is based on the real-life Truman Capote, as a kid. Harper Lee grew up with Capote. I recently read Capote's amazing "Other Voices, Other Rooms" in a graduate class. Reminded me of Mockingbird, in terms of the contextual setting - there is even an element of the American Gothic in Mockingbird.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the praise and the loyalty to our blog, Eric. We truly appreciate it! I checked and corrected Poitier. Turns out we were both wrong. Apparently it's a tricky name :) "The Omen" is a most unusual way to be introduced to Gregory Peck, but he's actually pretty good in it. I didn't learn about the Lee-Capote connection until I saw "Capote." Ed is exceptionally well-read and the most intelligent person I know so he probably knew they were lifelong friends when they were growing up.
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