TCM
TiVo ALERT
For
January
15–January 22
DAVID’S
BEST BETS:
DEAD
END (January 15, 3:15 am): I hate the Dead End
Kids/East Side Kids/Bowery Boys. But their first movie: a gritty,
authentic look at life in the slums of New York City is a keeper.
It's based on a play of the same name and the movie is filmed like a
play. Humphrey Bogart as Baby Face Martin, a gangster who returns to
his childhood neighborhood, shows flashes of brilliance in
this 1937 film that would return in movies such
as Casablanca, The Big Sleep, The
Maltese Falcon and Key Largo. As for the Kids,
Billy Halop (as Tommy Gordon, the leader of the gang) is one of the
most annoying movie actors I've seen. This is easily his best role as
it's downhill for him after this film. Also, the other kids – Leo
Gorcey, Huntz Hall and Billy Jordan – peak with this film. The film
also sports nice performances by Joel McCrea as an unemployed
architect down on his luck and Claire Trevor as the neighborhood
prostitute with syphilis.
SLEEPER (January
16, 4:00 pm): Besides Take
the Money and Run, Sleeper is
the best, most clever and entertaining of Woody Allen's "earlier,
funnier movies." Allen's character, Miles Monroe, is frozen in
1973 when a routine gall bladder operation goes bad. He's defrosted
200 years later by doctors who are members of a resistance
group living in a police state. The gags are fast and
funny. One of my favorites is when the scientists ask Miles about
life 200 years earlier, including this gem.
Allen's interaction with Diane Keaton (Luna, a self-centered
socialite) is pure magic, particularly when she helps Miles relive a
scene from his younger days and when the two are disguised as
surgeons stealing the government leader's nose – all that's
left of him after a rebel bomb blows up the rest of him. While the
dialogue is smart and funny, Allen also proves himself to be an
incredibly talented physical actor. Allen's slapstick
comedic talent – think Charlie Chaplin and Buster
Keaton – shines best in this role.
ED’S
BEST BETS:
STAGECOACH (January 15, 8:00 pm): This John Ford movie was not only a big hit with
moviegoers at the time, but also marked a change in the maturing of
the Western, emphasizing character development over mere bang-bang,
shoot ‘em up action and bringing the Western out of the Bs and onto
the top of the marquee. Oh yeah, there’s lots of action sequences
in the film, but they’re nicely balanced by characters with depth
and about whom we actually care. Even John Wayne does a nice job
here, though it took Ford lots of work to wrangle a good performance
out of him. Watch for the Indian attack and keep your eye on the
peerless stunt work by second unit director Yakima Canutt. In his
Westerns, Ford always provided work for neighboring Navaho tribesmen,
and even made sure they received union wages. They, in turn (as per
his biography) named him “Natani Nez,” which means “Tall
Leader.”
SENSE
AND SENSIBILITY (January 22, 10:00 pm): Emma
Thompson’s delightful adaptation of Jane Austen’s oft-forgotten
first novel won her the Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay. It also
landed on many critics’ ten-best lists and helped propel Kate
Winslet to stardom. But more than that, this is simply a delightful
film, produced by Lindsay Doran and directed by Ang Lee. When the
film was first announced, it may have seemed that Lee was a strange
choice, but anyone who saw his films The Wedding
Banquet (1993), and Eat Drink Man Woman (1995)
knew he would make this film one worth watching. Besides Winslet,
Hugh Grant, Alan Rickman, and Thompson herself combine for one of the
best ensemble performances of the ‘90s, guided by Lee’s firm
hand, with the chemistry between Thompson and Winslet absolutely
enthralling. Leave it to Emma Thompson to resurrect the intelligent
romantic comedy.
WE
DISAGREE ON ... COOLEY HIGH (January 18, 12:00 am)
ED:
B. Cooley High has often been referred
to, unfairly, as the “black American Graffiti.” It’s
better than American Graffiti and represents a huge
step forward in African-American cinema as it puts an end to the
“Blaxploitation” era by showing that young African-Americans can
indeed live normal lives and get up to the hijinx their white
counterparts have been doing for decades. Both the cast, with
standout performances from leads Glynn Turman and Lawrence
Hilton-Jacobs, and the direction by Michael Schultz are superb.
Writer Eric Monte (who conceived The Jeffersons, and
brought about Good Times with Michael Evans) has
written a warm, funny tale of young kids enjoying life to its fullest
until two of the group get mixed up with a pair of career criminals
and are falsely arrested for stealing a Cadillac. It’s a
bittersweet journey through the maze known as high school, and the
cast pulled it off admirably.
DAVID:
A. What I love and admire about Cooley
High is its honesty in telling a funny, tragic and poignant
story about two close friends – Preach (Glynn Turman) and Cochise
(Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs) – enjoying life as seniors at Edwin G.
Cooley Vocational High School in Chicago in the mid-1960s. The two
have big dreams though they are always looking for a good time with
women, drinking, getting high and shooting dice. While they are
barely in class during the movie, the two have big dreams. Preach
hopes to become a writer while Cochise's ticket gets punched for a
college scholarship as he's one of the best basketball players in the
city. The funniest scene in this 1975 film has the two of them on a
joy ride with two older guys from the neighborhood who steal a car.
Preach, who often makes up elaborate stories, convinces everyone he's
an excellent driver. He's behind the wheel when the vehicle pulls up
next to a police car, and he panics. They end up on a high-speed
chase, finally eluding the cops in a warehouse only to have Preach
crash the car into another vehicle. Everything is OK until the two
are pulled out of class accused of grand theft auto. The two guys who
stole the car are busted and while out on bail, they look for Preach
and Cochise mistakenly thinking the boys squealed on them to the
police. The little adventure results in a tragic ending. This all
occurs with an amazing soundtrack largely consisting of Motown songs.
When the film ends with the Four Tops' "(Reach Out) I'll Be
There," I admit to tearing up even though I've seen the movie at
least a dozen times. Based on this film, Hilton-Jacobs was almost
immediately cast as Freddie "Boom Boom" Washington on
the Welcome Back, Kotter TV show. Already a
blaxploitation veteran, that is where Turman primarily remained until
the genre died out. He showed up more than a decade later on the
awful A Different World TV show, spending five
seasons as a college math teacher/retired Army colonel. The first
time I saw the words "Cooley High" was during the closing
credits of the TV show What's Happening!! (yes, it
has two exclamation points). The credits said the show was based
on Cooley High even though the only similarities
were Preach and Raj, the show's lead character, both wore black
plastic-frame glasses and the casts were primarily black.
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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