A
Guide to the Interesting and Unusual on TCM
By
Ed Garea
At
this point, we’re midway through, TCM’s annual salute to the
Oscars, to which the month of February is devoted, along with the
first three days in March. We received some good feedback on our
special format for this festival, so we’ll continue with what
obviously works.
But
before we go any further, let us remind readers that the Academy
Awards will be telecast February 28.
February
16: Our choice for the
day is Black
Legion, which will
be seen at 8:30 am. This is a great B-movie, modeled on the Warner’s
motto of “being ripped from the headlines.” The Black Legion, a
Ku Klux Klan splinter group, actually did exist and was at its height
in the mid-‘30s in the upper Midwest, particularly Michigan and
Ohio. Humphrey Bogart plays a disgruntled factory worker who joins
the group after he loses a promotion to a “foreigner.” After his
involvement in the man’s kidnapping and murder, both Bogart and the
group begin to unravel. It’s a fast-paced drama with a strong
performance from Bogart. Screenwriter Robert Lord was nominated for
Best Writing, Original Story.
February
17: Even though we’ve
seen it at least a gazillion times, our choice is I
Married a Witch (12:30
pm), director Rene Clair’s marvelous 1942 fantasy. Veronica Lake is
Jennifer, a woman condemned as a witch with her father (Cecil
Kellaway) and burned at the stake by Jonathan Wooley. When lightning
hits the oak tree under which their ashes are buried, the spirits of
both daughter and father are released and eventually gain corporeal
bodies. Her target is the descendent of Jonathan Wooley,
gubernatorial candidate Wallace Wooley (Frederic March), an exact
likeness of Jonathan. But instead of taking revenge, she falls in
love with him and they marry. She revels to him that she is a witch,
something Wallace refuses to believe until she begins using
witchcraft to further his campaign. You’d never guess from the
chemistry that Lake and March have that they absolutely loathed each
other off screen. Beautifully directed by Clair with some neat twists
and turns of the plot, this is one to catch. The film garnered only
one nomination for Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy
Picture (Roy Webb).
February
18: Among film buffs
there is an argument over which was the better MGM musical: Singin’
in the Rain or The
Band Wagon. We choose the
latter. The
Band Wagon, which
airs at 10:00 pm, is a near perfect mix of acting, songs, and plot.
Fred Astaire is completely charming as Tony Hunter, a Hollywood song
and dance man whose days as a big star are over and who tries to
re-establish himself on Broadway. His songwriting friends, Lily and
Lester Marton (Nanette Fabray and Oscar Levant), steer him to Theater
Genius Jeffrey Cordova (Jack Buchanan). Cordova’s idea is to make a
musical out of Faust, and to make his production even artier, he
enlists the services of ballet diva Gabrielle Gerard (Cyd Charisse).
Needless to say, the company is on course for a disaster, and after a
disastrous preview in New Haven (cleverly represented by showing an
egg after the show begins), the backers steal away. Tony, however,
thinks the musical can be salvaged if they keep the music and throw
away the art, and in the process wins over the beautiful Gabrielle,
who began their relationship by loathing his sort of dancing. Astaire
is his usual bouncy self, and Fabray and Levant are great playing the
musical team of Comden and Green. But it’s Buchanan who steals the
movie with his Jeffrey Cordova, who is a parody of Orson Welles.
Charisse is a very sexy presence, especially in the “Girl Hunt”
number, a spoof on the sex and violence of Mickey Spillane mysteries.
In fact, she’s sexy enough for us to overlook her flat reading of
her lines. But we didn’t come to see her act, we came to see her
dance, which she does very nicely. The real Betty Comden and Adolph
Green were nominated for Best Writing, Story and Screenplay; Mary Ann
Nyberg for Best Costume Design, Color; and Adolph Deutsch for Best
Music, Scoring of a Musical Picture.
February
19: Can there be any
other choice this day than The
Thin Man (10:00
pm)? William Powell and Myrna Loy were the perfect match as Nick and
Nora Charles, so much so that people actually thought they were
married in real life. If not, they should’ve been. The mystery
plays a decided second fiddle to the antics of Nick and Nora, who
have a knack for making alcoholism seem most appealing, though the
producers try to make up for it by having Nick assemble all the
suspects in a room before naming the guilty party, a tactic that
proved so popular with audiences it was repeated in every Thin
Man sequel from then
onward. But this is the first, and by far the best of the series, and
it received four Oscar nominations: Best Picture, Best Actor
(Powell), Best Director (W.S. Van Dyke), and Best Writing, Adaptation
(Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett).
February
20: Spencer Tracy was
never more endearing than as Stanley Banks, who reluctantly gives
daughter Kay (Elizabeth Taylor) away in Father
of the Bride (4:15
pm). Under the deft hand of director Vincente Minnelli, the film
proves that marriage is far from a simple affair. When we watch Tracy
in the role of the doting father, we feel that no one else could play
it. However, Tracy almost didn’t play the role. Jack Benny told
studio head Dore Schary that he would like to play the role and
Schary foolishly agreed to give him a test. When he wasn’t deemed
right for the part, Minnelli and Schary turned to Tracy, but Tracy’s
nose was out of joint after he learned he was the second choice for a
part it was assumed he was a natural to play, and he turned the role
down flat. Schary arranged for Katharine Hepburn to throw a dinner
party, and it was there that Schary took Tracy aside and convinced
him to take the part. 17-year old Elizabeth Taylor was the only
choice for Tracy’s daughter, and to ramp up the publicity even
more, on the day when the studio announced her casting, she announced
her engagement to Conrad Hilton, Jr., telling the press that the
thought of planning her own wedding and playing a bride at the same
time was “positively drooly.” The film was also a triumph for
Coca-Cola, who benefited from the product placement in the film,
where Tracy offers guests a Coke at the engagement party. Tracy
received a nomination for Best Actor, the film for Best Picture, and
Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett were nominated for Best Writing,
Screenplay.
February
21: What a lousy time to
show such a great movie, airing The
Adventures of Robin Hood at
6:00 am. It’s one of the greatest action movies in film history,
with a role Errol Flynn was born to play. In fact, it’s perfectly
cast all around, with Claude Rains as the devious King John, Basil
Rathbone at his villainous best as Sir Guy of Gisbourne, and Olivia
de Havilland impossibly beautiful as Maid Marian. One of the delights
of the film is its inability to take itself seriously, as the cast
seems to be performing their roles with a wink and a nod. The casting
genius even extends to the minor roles: Can anyone else other than
Alan Hale play Little John? And no one but Eugene Palette can play
Friar Tuck with such confidence. Warner Brothers had three strokes of
genius in making the film: First, they replaced the staid William
Keighley during filming with Michael Curtiz, who knew how to get the
action into an action film. Second, they cast Errol Flynn as Robin.
Believe it or not, James Cagney was the first choice for the role.
Cagney’s good, but this is out of his league. We could no more see
him as Robin Hood as we could see Flynn playing Rocky Sullivan
in Angels With Dirty
Faces. And thirdly, they shot
the film in Technicolor, which made it even more mesmerizing and
appealing. We’ve seen this movie more times than we can count, but
we’re always willing to see it again. Nominated for four Oscars,
including Best Picture, it won three: Best Art Direction (Carl Jules
Weyl), Best Film Editing (Ralph Dawson), and Best Music, Original
Score (Erich Wolfgang Korngold).
February
22: Billy Wilder is a
particular favorite of ours over at The Celluloid Club, and his 1948
comedy, A
Foreign Affair, is
perfect for this day. Set in Postwar Berlin, it’s a satirical
contrast between the values of the American Heartland with the
cynicism and poverty of a devastated Berlin. Jean Arthur is an
upright – and uptight – Congresswoman from Iowa who comes to
Berlin to look into reports of wholesale corruption and “moral
malaria” infesting the occupying American forces. Even her name,
Phoebe Frost,” is a tip-off to the sort of person she is. As her
guide, she enlists Army Captain John Pringle (John Lund) and finds
herself falling in love with him, unaware that he is romantically
involved with German cabaret singer Erika von Schluetow (Marlene
Dietrich) who, it later transpires, can lead them to a Nazi bigwig
who was once her lover. The film opened to decidedly mixed reviews
and a wholesale condemnation from Congress, who did not find it funny
to be satirized. The Army banned its being shown in Germany,
especially to the troops, who were engaged in the same sort of
blatant fraternization and black-marketeering depicted in the film.
Even co-writer Charles Brackett had trouble with setting the film in
a destroyed city, but Wilder saw the comic possibilities in a clash
of paternalistic American values with those of a ravaged city where
the citizenry will do anything to survive, nicely packaged in a love
triangle between victor and defeated. The film won two Oscar
nominations: Best Writing, Screenplay (Billy Wilder, Charles
Brackett, and Richard L. Breen), and Best Cinematography, Black and
White (Charles Lang).
February
23: It’s another
horrible time for a wonderful movie. Bette Davis and Claude Rains are
marvelous in the heart-tugging Mr.
Skeffington (5:45
am), with Bette as the gold-digging Fanny Trellis Skeffington
changing over the years from headstrong young beauty to aged,
withered crone, marrying the rich Job Skeffington (Rains) for his
money along the way. To capture the verve of the young Fanny, Davis
raised her voice an octave higher than usual, and for the scenes
where she loses her youthful looks after surviving diphtheria, she
spent hours in the makeup chair with Perc Westmore creating an
uncanny portrait of what she would look like in real life in her
later years when Spy magazine,
in their “Separated at Birth” feature, compared the aged Davis to
the apple tree from The
Wizard of Oz. Rains, who as
we well know will try to steal any picture he’s in, walks away with
this one at the end. Years after their estrangement, Job was in
Europe and was thrown by the Nazis into a concentration camp. Now
broken and blind, the withered Job still sees Fanny as the beauty she
once was, and she, knowing this, welcomes him back home. Rains pulls
out all the stops as Job and makes himself, and not Davis, the focus
of the ending. It’s a great four-hanky picture that saw Davis and
Rains nominated for Best Actress and Best Actor respectively.
February
24: We’re in a bit of
a quandary today, with so many wonderful films on the slate. But our
recommendation is ‘G’
Men with
Jimmy Cagney from Warner Bros. at 1:00 pm. Cagney is in top form as
“Brock” Davis, a lawyer put through law school by powerful
gangster “Mac” McKay (William Harrigan). When Davis’ friend, an
FBI agent, is shot dead by other of gangdom’s finest, Davis joins
the FBI. After receiving his training, he travels to New York City
and tells the mobsters, including McKay, that he will return to get
each and every one of them. And get them he does, putting his
knowledge of the gangland to good use with both guns blazing.
Margaret Lindsay and the underrated Ann Dvorak are on hand to supply
the eye candy, and Robert Armstrong and Lloyd Nolan (in his film
debut) are part of the Good Guys at the Bureau. Barton MacLane is the
main heel and acquits himself nicely. By the way, note the absence of
submachine guns. The newly enforced Production Code outlawed the use
of the weapon as it was thought it would corrupt the youth of
America. The film airs at 12:30 pm. It was nominated for Best
Writing, Original Story (Darryl F. Zanuck) in 1936.
February
25: How about one of the
greatest Westerns ever made? Howard Hawks and Red
River, airing at
11:15 pm, is our choice. It’s sort of a remake of Mutiny
on the Bounty set
during a cattle drive, with John Wayne’s Thomas Dunston in the
Captain Bligh role. Opposing him in the Fletcher Christian role is
Montgomery Clift as Dunston’s adopted son, Matthew Garth. Dunston’s
tyrannical ways during the drive put the men at severe risk and
drives them to the breaking point. In order to get the drive through
to Abeliene, Garth is forced to take over. Dunston’s not taking
this lying down and promises revenge. By keeping the revolt in the
family the film takes on a theme from classical tragedy – the need
for the son to challenge and surpass the father if things are to move
forward. The film is perfectly cast and Wayne delivers an outstanding
performance. He should have been nominated for Best Actor, and Hawks
for Best Director, but all the film could garner in the way of
nominations was Best Writing, Motion Picture Story (Borden Chase),
and Best Film Editing (Christian Nyby). We should also credit
cinematographer Russell Harlan for his breathtaking photography.
Harlan had cut his teeth as photographer for the Hopalong
Cassidy series.
February
26: At 8:00 pm, it’s
the greatest horror spoof ever made, Mel Brooks’s Young
Frankenstein. Even
non-horror fans will love this tribute to the great Universal horrors
of the ‘30s with Gene Wilder as the descendant of Victor
Frankenstein. Marty Feldman steals the show as Frankenstein’s Man
Friday, Igor, a hunchback whose hump mysteriously moves from one side
of his back to the other. As the Monster, Peter Boyle plays it just
right and Madeline Kahn is wonderful as Frankenstein tetchy fiancée.
Look for the scene where the Monster stops at the house of the blind
hermit, played by Gene Hackman. Brooks was so dedicated to getting
everything right that be brought in Kenneth Strickland to recreate
the great electrical effects he made for the originals. It was
nominated for Best Writing, Screenplay Adapted From Other Material
(Mel Brooks and Gene Wilder), and Best Sound (Richard Portman and
Gene S. Cantamessa).
February
27: Our pick this day
airs at 8:00 am, but it’s worth it: Gaslight,
from MGM in 1944, starring Charles Boyer and Ingrid Bergman. Based on
the hit London stage play, it was filmed before, in 1939, with Anton
Walbrook and Diana Wynyard in the leads. But MGM added gloss, bigger
stars, and superb direction from George Cukor, who wrung an
Oscar-winning performance out of Bergman. Nominated for seven awards,
including Best Picture, Best Actor, and Best Supporting Actress
(Angela Lansbury), it won for Best Actress and Best Art Direction -
Interior Decoration, Black and White (Cedric Gibbons, William
Ferrari, Edwin B. Willis, and Paul Huldschinsky).
February
28: As long as we
recommended Goodfellas in
our last column, we should recommend the film that influenced its
director, Martin Scorsese: The
Public Enemy,
which comes on at the wee hour of 2:00 am. It’s one of the
hardest-hitting – and best – gangster films ever made, with
Jimmy Cagney in the performance that made him a star. Director
William Wellman pulls no punches, showing us the less glamorous side
of gangsterdom. The film also contains some superb supporting
performances from Leslie Fenton, Donald Cook, Murray Kinnell, and
especially Robert Emmet O’Connor. And let’s not forget the
wonderful Mae Clarke, who takes a grapefruit right in the kisser from
Cagney for her troubles. Incredibly, it was nominated for only one
Oscar, that for Best Writing, Original Story (John Bright and Kubec
Glasmon).
February
29: We close out the
month with a film from Howard Hawks that Dave and I consider one of
our favorites Only
Angels Have Wings,
which is showing at the civilized hour of 8:00 pm. The plot centers
on a favorite theme of Hawks – a group of pilots facing death every
day as they risk their lives flying for an airfreight company in
South America that schedules regular flights over the Andes. The
fragile peace among the pilots is put to the test when cabaret singer
Jean Arthur comes into their world, and the peace is further
endangered when new flyer Bat McPherson (Richard Barthelmess) arrives
with his wife Judy (Rita Hayworth) in tow. McPherson has a bad
reputation among the other flyers because he turned yellow and left
Thomas Mitchell’s brother to die. Cary Grant, as the head of the
company, is magnificent playing against his suave image. As Geoff
Carter, he’s rude and obnoxious almost to the point of total
unlikability. His relationship with Arthur provides much of the
sub-plot drama, while the film also gives Hayworth a star showcase.
We regard this as a Must See. It was nominated for Best
Cinematography, Black and White (Joseph Walker), and Best Effects,
Special Effects (Roy Davidson - photogenic, and Edwin C. Hahn -
sound).
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