A
Guide to the Rare and Unusual on TCM
By
Ed Garea
STAR
OF THE MONTH
As
January winds down on TCM’s Star of the Month, Fred MacMurray, we’d
like to share a Facebook post we received from one of our most loyal
readers, Mary Lewis. She disagreed with our estimation of MacMurray
as one of the most underrated actors of his generation. Says Mary: “I
disagree with you about Fred MacMurray. In my opinion, he played the
same person in every movie he made.”
We’re
not about to disagree that he played the same person in every film.
Let’s quote Allen Swan (Peter O’Toole) from one of our favorite
pictures, My Favorite Year: “I’m not an actor, I’m
a movie star!” That’s what being a movie star was all about.
Clark Gable played the same person in all his films, as did James
Cagney, Humphrey Bogart, Bette Davis, Joan Crawford, and practically
every star in the studio system. It’s what being a movie star was
all about. The studio wanted it that way; once an actor became
popular they did not want him or her deviating from what brought in
the money. The public also wanted it that way, as they didn’t like
seeing their favorite stars in something not palatable. When Gable
starred in Parnell in 1937, the critical and public
reaction was so negative that in the future Gable stuck to playing
Gable. We would also agree with you that MacMurray was not a great
actor. But he was a good actor and proved it in many a movie. Talking
to people after seeing Double Indemnity, I often asked
what struck them the most. The answer, 9 times out of 10, was Fred
MacMurray’s performance. They knew him only from television and
didn’t think he had it in him.
January
20: A good night to watch MacMurray, as two of his best films are
on tap beginning at 8:00. First, it’s his bravura performance in
1954’s The Caine Mutiny.
He’s genially evil as Lt. Thomas Keefer, the Iago of the Caine who
instigates what will turn into a full-blown mutiny, and when later
called to testify at the trial of the mutineers, denies everything. I
once saw this at a revival house and when Jose Ferrer threw his drink
in MacMurray’s face near the end of the film, the entire theater
erupted in cheers. This is a film I can watch time and time again
just for the performances.
Following
at 10:15 is another MacMurray triumph of genial immorality – Billy
Wilder’s The Apartment,
from 1960. He plays J.D. Sheldrake, the boss of ambitious young clerk
C.C. Baxter (Jack Lemmon). He uses Baxter’s apartment for his
extramarital trysts with elevator operator Fran Kubelik (Shirley
MacLaine). MacMaurray, a last-minute replacement for Paul Douglas,
who died shortly before filming began, was so good at being so
despicable in the role that he received an avalanche of hate mail
from female moviegoers who were disappointed in his choice of roles
and begged him to play more sympathetic roles in the future. And he
did just that, signing on as the amiable Steve Douglas in My
Three Sons (1960-72) and playing leads in such Walt Disney
fare as The Absent-Minded Professor (1961).
January
27: It’s a Disney double feature for Fred at 8:00 with the
excellent The Absent-Minded
Professor (1961), and the not so excellent The
Shaggy Dog (1959). In the first, MacMurray is Ned
Brainard, a science teacher at Medfield College and in his spare time
a devoted experimenter whose experiments usually end with explosions.
After one such explosion, he finds he’s left with a gooey substance
that defies gravity that he calls “flubber.” When greedy tycoon
Alonzo Hawk (Keenan Wynn) threatens to close Medfield down, the
professor begins to use flubber to save the school, at one point
finding that a little on the bottoms of the soles of the basketball
team’s shoes gives them a great edge over opponents. Eventually the
professor uses flubber on his Model T to travel to the White House to
meet the president, completely upsetting the Pentagon’s defense
system and becoming a national hero. It’s a fun picture, punctuated
by MacMurray’s performance as the befuddled professor, and one that
children should like, even though it’s not in color.
At
10:00 pm, it Disney’s The Shaggy
Dog, with Fred as the father of teenager Wilby Daniels
(Tommy Kirk), who is turned into a “Bratislavian Sheepdog” though
a mysterious ring he accidentally takes home with him from the local
museum. To make a bad situation worse, father Fred is highly allergic
to dogs and plans to shoot the next one that he sees in his house.
At
3:15 am comes an interesting comedy from MGM, Callaway
Went Thataway (1951), a gentle proof of
television’s “Hopalong Cassidy” craze. Long-forgotten cowboy
actor “Smoky” Callaway's career gets a shot in the arm when his
old films begin playing on television and he builds a fan following
among youngsters. Unfortunately, Callaway has been missing from the
public for years. Desperate, the network assigns promoters Mike Frye
(MacMurray) and Deborah Patterson (Dorothy McGuire) to find the
cowboy star. They're unsuccessful in their search for the reclusive
actor. But while at a Colorado ranch, they're introduced to “Stretch”
Barnes (Howard Keel), a virtual double for Callaway. After a little
haggling, they sign Barnes and pass him off as Callaway.
Unfortunately, it all goes to Barnes’s head and there’s another
monster to deal with. And if things couldn’t get worse, the real
Callaway (also Keel) has resurfaced from his hideway in Mexico and it
not pleased to find a double in his stead.
Look
for Clark Gable, Esther Williams, and Elizabeth Taylor playing
themselves. Sharp eyes will spot Acquanetta, John Banner (Hogan’s
Heroes), Mae Clarke, Hugh Beaumont (Leave It to Beaver),
and Natalie Schafer (Gilligan’s Island) in small roles.
TCM
SPOTLIGHT
TCM
continues with its tribute to William Cameron Menzies, hosted by
Robert Osborne and Menzies biographer (and film
historian extraordinaire) James Curtis. We found it most
disappointing that this spotlight on the talented Menzies does not
include his 1953 low-budget masterpiece, Invaders From Mars.
The film was notable because it looked at an invasion from outer
space through the eyes of a young boy, played by Jimmy Hunt. Although
today, we tend to dismiss its failings, in our youth this film scared
the living bejeezus out of us, and still retains an impact today. The
idea of Martians kidnapping our parents and turning them into
complaint zombies is unsettling, and Menzies uses several tricks to
emphasize the terror. We’re surprised the network’s not showing
it because they’ve shown it a couple of times before.
January
21: Recommended tonight are Foreign
Correspondent (1940) at 8:00, Pride
of the Yankees (1942) at 10:15, and the
underrated Address Unknown (1944),
with a great performance from star Paul Lukas, at 3:15 am.
January
28: Tonight’s a late night at 11:30 pm with the
Menzies-directed astounding anti-commie shock feature, The
Whip Hand (1951). The film was originally about
Hitler escaping to America, where he plans to wipe out the U.S. with
germ warfare. However, RKO studio head Howard Hughes believed the
film was not commercial enough, so he ordered reshoots to change the
enemy from Nazis to commies, making the film even more of an exercise
in camp.
DR.
MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. DAY
January
18: Martin Luther King Jr. Day always means a schedule of
films by African-Americans or African-American themed. This year is
no different, but the real treat is in the morning and early
afternoon when a slate of “race films” is scheduled. “Race
film” is a term for films produced for black audiences and
featuring all-black casts. It’s estimated that about 500 or so of
these films were produced, and of these, only fewer than 100 still
remain. In the ‘20s, ‘30s, and ‘40s, films were segregated and
very few made by Hollywood studios were aimed at an African-American
audience. Because race films were made outside the Hollywood system,
they have tended to be ignored by mainstream film historians, but in
their day they were very popular with their target audiences.
In
the South, they were shown at “all-colored” theaters to comply
with segregation. In the North, which was not segregated, they were
usually shown at theaters in African-American neighborhoods. Some
large Northern white theaters in major cities often reserved special
time slots for black audiences, and the films were usually shown at
matinees or midnight shows. African-American stars who usually played
maids or comic relief roles in Hollywood pictures often starred in
these vehicles, which steered clear of stereotyping. Often made on a
shoestring, the studios that made these films made Poverty Row
studios like Monogram and PRC seem like MGM and Paramount in
comparison. But these films are important, as they provide us with a
look into a side of America that was sadly ignored. Ignore the
production values and concentrate on the historical significance
these films bring.
The
mini-marathon begins at 6:00 am with Broken
Strings (1940), a drama about an injured
violinist (Clarence Muse) who pushes his son (William Washington)
into a classical music career, even though the young man prefers
swing. At 7:00 am is the mystery Miracle
in Harlem (1948), with Sheila Guyse as a young
woman suspected of killing the grifter who swindled her. Midnight
Shadow (1939) airs next at 8:15 am, as Margaret
Wilson (Frances Redd) must figure out which of her suitors killed her
father, aided in her quest by bumbling would-be detective Junior
Lingley (Richard Bates).
Lena
Horne stars in the 1938 musical The
Duke is Tops at 9:15 am. She plays singer Ethel
Andrews, whose burgeoning career affects her relationship with Duke
Davis, her good-hearted boyfriend/manager (Ralph Cooper). Be warned:
the production values in this film are near zero, but Horne’s
winning performance gives us a glimpse into her immense talent.
At
10:30 am comes Herb Jeffries, “The Bronze Buckaroo,” starring
in Harlem Rides the Range (1939).
the first singing black cowboy film, I first saw this in 1980 at the
Beacon Theater in New York as part of the Medved Brothers “Worst
Film Festival.” Believe me, the film is not as bad as all that; no
better or worse than the Westerns being churned out by Monogram and
PRC. Let’s just say the Medveds have a talent for exaggeration.
It’s a fun film, just watch for yourselves. The plot has Our Hero
Herb, along with his trusty steed, Stardust, protecting the beautiful
heir (Artie Young) to a radium mine.
Spirit
of Youth (1938) is up next at 11:30 am. Made for
major studio wannabe Grand National Films. It stars Joe Louis
(yes, the Joe Louis) as promising boxer Joe
Thomas. It parallels many events in Louis’s life and boasts an
all-star supporting cast that includes Clarence Muse, Edna Mae
Harris, Mae Turner, and Mantan Moreland.
The
musical drama Swing! (1938),
from director Oscar Micheaux, closes out the festival at 12:45 pm.
Ted Gregory (Carman Newsome) is trying to be the first black producer
to mount a show on Broadway. As if that wasn’t hard enough, he’s
also having major trouble with his star singer, Eloise Jackson (Hazel
Diaz). His secretary, Lena Powell (Dorothy Van Engle), suggests
hiring her old friend Amanda Jenkins (Cora Green) as the wardrobe
mistress. When Eloise falls down drunk and breaks her leg, Gregory
replaces her with Amanda, who saves the show.
PRE-CODE
GEMS
We’ve
been getting requests to include Pre-Code films in this column, so,
as befits our aim, we will focus on the rarely shown Pre-Codes.
January
21: Two interesting films from Warner Brothers, beginning at
11:15 am with Lloyd Bacon’s 1932 comedy, Crooner.
Ted Taylor (David Manners) is a struggling young saxophone player
with a passable voice. When his audience complains that they can’t
hear him, a patron hands him a megaphone. By singing through the
megaphone (a la Rudy Vallee), Ted now becomes a big star,
with a swelled head to match. Ann Dvorak plays his long-suffering
love interest. As with anything directed by Lloyd Bacon, Crooner is
predictable, but fun nevertheless.
Following
at 12:30 pm is another Bacon entry, the rarely seen The
Famous Ferguson Case (1932), starring the one and
only Joan Blondell as one of a flock of New York City reporters that
descend upon the small upstate town of Cornwall after its leading
citizen, financier George Ferguson is killed. While the New York
reporters, save for Blondell, are looking for sensational “news,”
local reporter Bruce Foster (Tom Brown), who runs the
Cornwall Courier, teaches the city slickers a thing or
two on how to dig for real news instead of spinning the story to meet
their own needs. Blondell is a New York reporter who gets fed up with
the modus operandi of her co-workers. It has a good
cast that acquits themselves nicely, but Bacon bungles the story, and
the writing by Harvey Thew and Granville Moore doesn’t help
matters, either. But it’s always good to watch Blondell in action,
even if she is wasted, as she is here.
January
29: At 10:45 am, it’s Warren William in one of his great
sleazebag portrayals in Bedside (1932).
William is an expelled medical student who buys a medical degree from
a junkie doctor and cons his way into a lucrative career as a quack
for high-society hypochondriacs. It’s far-fetched, sure, but
William is always fun to watch.
Kay
Francis dons the stethoscope at 12:15 pm in Doctor
Monica (1934). She is a
successful obstetrician who
can’t conceive a child of her own. Unbeknownst to her, well-known
author husband John (Warren William) knocks up one of her
acquaintances, Mary Hathaway (Jean Muir), and then hightails it to
Europe for an extended trip. He is unaware of the pregnancy, as his
wife is unaware of her husband’s paternity. When Monica learns of
Mary’s situation, she helps with prenatal care and plans to deliver
the baby. Then, overhearing a phone call from Mary to John, she
learns the truth. She delivers the baby, then tells hubby she wants a
divorce. Meanwhile, Mary does the self-sacrificing thing by going up
in her plane and committing suicide, leaving the baby in the
possession of Monica and John. It seems silly and campy today, but
the film’s frank treatment of adult subjects such as adultery and
illegitimacy led censors to cut a large part of it before it hit the
screen.
OUT
OF THE ORDINARY
January
17: A night of films featuring “threesomes” begins at
8:00 pm with Ernst Lubitsch’s witty and urbane Design
for Living (1932) with Miriam Hopkins as an
independent woman who can’t choose between suitors Frederic March
and Gary Cooper. The evening continues at 9:45 with Jeanne Moreau
balancing Oskar Werner and Henri Serre in Truffaut’s 1962
classic, Jules and Jim.
Cut to 2:00 am and it’s the wild and wacky Czech New Wave
feature, Valerie and Her Week of
Wonders from 1970. Finally, at 3:30 am, Fellini
takes the helm with his 1965 comedy/drama/fantasy Juliet
of the Spirits featuring an outstanding performance by
Giuletta Masina as a woman whose world comes crashing down when she
learns of her husband’s infidelity.
January
21: At 3:15 pm, it's the rarely seen Special
Agent from Warner Brothers in 1936 with George
Brent as an IRS agent who poses as a news reporter to get the goods
on mobster Ricardo Cortez, and Bette Davis in another of her
forgettable roles of the time as Cortez’s bookkeeper
January
29: At 10:15 pm, it’s the TCM premiere of the
Oscar-winning Vietnam War documentary Hearts
and Minds (1975). The title comes from a phrase
by President Lyndon Johnson to justify our increasing involvement in
Vietnam: “The ultimate victory will depend on the hearts and minds
of the people who actually live out there.” The documentary seeks
to address three questions: (1) Why did we get involved in Vietnam;
(2) what did we do there; and (3) and how did our involvement affect
us at home? The film raises more questions than it answers, but it
looks at a particularly painful chapter in American history with
even-handedness and intelligence.
January
31: Beginning
at 2:00 am, it’s a double feature starting with the superb 1960
Korean horror/drama The
Housemaid
about an unstable and unbalanced maid who destroys her employer’s
family. It’s followed at 4:00 am by Director Henri-Georges
Clouzot’s unforgettable 1955 drama, Diabolique.
Clouzot manages to out-Hitchcock Alfred Hitchcock in this tale of a
cruel headmaster (Paul Meurisse) who is murdered by his
long-suffering wife (Vera Clouzot) and his mistress (Simone
Signoret). Clouzot’s masterpiece influenced both Hitchcock (in
making Psycho)
and Stanley Kubrick (in making The
Shining). This
is a film not to be missed.
PSYCHOTRONICA
AND THE B-HIVE
January
16: We begin with the Bowery Boys in Jinx
Money (1948) at 10:30 am, followed by the Ursula
Andress adventure She (1965)
at noon, and wait until 2:00 am for the 1976 independent production
of Alice, Sweet Alice. After
a young girl is brutally murdered during her first communion, her
weird older sister becomes the main suspect. Look for Brooke
Shields as the victim, Lillian Roth as a therapist, and Antonino
“Argentina” Rocca as a pallbearer. Shot on location in Paterson,
N.J.
January
23: The Gothic horror film, The
Church (1989) from Italian director Michele Soavi
airs at 2:00 am, followed by Hammer Studio’s and director Terence
Fisher’s underrated Gothic contribution, The
Devil’s Bride (1968), starring Christopher Lee
and Charles Gray (Rocky Horror Picture Show).
January
25: TCM devotes the entire morning and afternoon to the
works of macabre master Tod Browning. Among the Browning classics
shown are The Unholy Three (1925)
at 6:15 am; the eerie The
Show (1927) at 9:15am; West
of Zanzibar (1928) at 10:15; the rarely shown
1929 early talkie The Thirteenth
Chair, with Bela Lugosi in a pre-Dracula role at
noon; Freaks (1932)
at 2:45 pm; and the nearly forgotten Miracles
for Sale (1939) at 6:30 pm.
January
30: At 10:45 am, it’s the Bowery Boys in Trouble
Makers (1948).
January
31: At midnight, it’s the great psychotronic silent, The
Magician (1926) starring Paul Wegener as a
bizarre doctor/hypnotist/scientist/alchemist enamored with sculptress
Alice Terry, who is injured when one of her sculptures falls on her.
Rarely shown, it’s definitely one to record and watch.
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