A
Guide to the Rare and Unusual on TCM
By
Ed Garea
CONTINUING
FROM LAST MONTH . . .
Last
month we got through 29 of the “31 Days of Oscar,” picking an
Oscar winning or nominated film for each day of the month. (Last
year, it was “32 Days of Oscar,” so it’s improving.) But the
theme still has two days to go in March, so we shall begin this month
with the continuation of February’s format.
March
1: Mystery Street,
from 1950, is a nice, little procedural film, as pathologists use
forensics to solve what looks like a perfect crime. Ricardo Montalban
and Bruce Bennett make a good team as the crimefighters, and Elsa
Lanchester has a nice turn as a ditsy landlady. This superior B-movie
airs at noon.
March
2: Speaking of noon, another recommended film is also airing
at that time: Vivacious Lady (1938),
with Jimmy Stewart as a straight-laced botany professor who falls in
love with, and marries, nightclub performer Ginger Rogers. Marrying
her was the easy part. Now he has to take her home to meet his folks,
whose picture can be found into dictionary under “Conservative
Parents,” and the fiancee (Frances Mercer) he left behind. Both
Rogers and Stewart are at their best in director George Stevens’
raucous comedy.
MERLE
OBERON
Merle
Oberon is March’s “Star of the Month.” Born in India, she left
for London at age 17, beginning her career in forgettable supporting
parts in equally forgettable English films. She made an impression as
Ysobel d'Aunay in Men
of Tomorrow (1932),
catching the eye of producer Alexander Korda, who spotted her in the
tea line at the studio commissary. He changed her name from Estelle
Thompson to Merle Oberon and cast her as Anne Boleyn in The
Private Life of Henry VIII (1933),
the first British picture to be nominated for an Academy Award.
After her success in The
Scarlet Pimpernel (1934),
Korda took her to Hollywood, where she blossomed, becoming a star in
both England and the United States.
March
4: Our interest in Oberon is with her lesser-known films,
and filling the bill perfectly is Folies
Bergere de Paris (1935, 11:30 pm). Oberon is the
Baroness Cassini, wife of Maurice Chevalier, who has a dual role as
both the Baron and a look-alike entertainer, who impersonates the
Baron in this musical comedy. It’s not a great film, but has its
moments. We
couldn’t end the night without a mention of the film that
established her as a star, The
Private Life of Henry VIII, which airs at 4:30 in the
morning. To say the film is essential viewing is an understatement.
March
11: Two films have our attention. First up at 8:00 pm is
1944’s The Lodger,
a wonderfully atmospheric chiller about the lodgers at a London
boardinghouse who suspect their new tenant may be Jack the Ripper.
At
3:00 am is The Lion Has Wings,
a morale film from 1940 about the resistance to the Blitz. Filmed in
a unique for its time docudrama style, it features a top-notch cast
that includes Oberon, Ralph Richardson, and Flora Robson.
JEAN
HARLOW
March
3: An entire morning and afternoon is dedicated to the star
and is showcases her development from a wooden, stagy actress to the
free-wheeling comic actress we think of today. Of the films being
shown, our “Must See” is 1932’s Red-Headed
Woman from MGM (1:00 pm), with Harlow changing
her look from the trademarked Platinum Blonde to the titular red.
Redheads were seen in the public mythology as sexually charged femme
fatales with loose morals. Scripted by Anita Loos, the film is a
prototype of the “slobs vs. snobs” comedy with Harlow as Lil
Andrews, a stenographer out to bag her quarry in the form of her
boss, Bill Legendre (Chester Morris). He is so taken with her that he
divorces his wife and marries Lil. But things don’t work out as Lil
planned, as Bill’s high society friends look down on her,
preferring the company of his ex-wife, who lives right across the
street. Bored, Lil conducts a couple of affairs, one with her French
chauffeur. When Bill goes back to his ex, a confrontation breaks out
in which Lil tries to kill her husband. He refuses to prosecute, and
just when we think we’ve seen the last of Lil, she pops up two
years later in Paris, the kept mistress of a Paris millionaire who is
having an affair with her chauffeur (the same as in America) on the
side. Watch that driver carefully – he’s none other than Charles
Boyer, then a young actor on a six-month option to the studio.
Also
check out Hold Your Man (1933),
airing at 3:45, starring Clark Gable as a con man and Harlow as the
hard-boiled babe who falls for, and eventually takes the rap for him.
Next to Red Dust, it’s their best pairing.
INGMAR
BERGMAN
Sundays
in March feature late-night Bergman double-features, with Cries
and Whispers (1973) and A
Lesson in Love (1954) leading, beginning at
2:00 am on March 5. Of the two, the more interesting
is the latter. It hasn’t been run to death like Cries
and Whispers, and its story of a doctor and his wife (Gunnar
Björnstrand and Eva Dalhbeck), happily married for 15 years until
the doctor has an affair with one of his patients, is one that
Bergman returned to and developed in later films.
On
March 13, both Bergman films are well worth viewing. The
first, Sawdust and Tinsel (1953,
3:00 am) is a well done allegorical film centered on a circus owner
(Ake Gronberg) and his oversexed mistress (Harriet Andersson). Like
Fellini, Bergman often staged his films in the world of performers,
using the allegory to drive home his point about human nature and the
futility trapped within. Following at 3:45 am is The
Devil’s Eye (1961). Don Juan (Jarl Kulie) makes
a wager with Satan (Stig Jarrel) that he can seduce a minister’s
wife (Bibi Andersson) whose chastity is giving Satan fits. How she
reacts to Don Juan’s attempted seduction is the crux of the film.
OUT
OF THE ORDINARY
March
7: Jose
Ferrer gives a masterful performance as Toulouse-Lautrec in John
Huston’s Moulin
Rouge (1953),
airing at 10:30 pm. Huston brilliantly captures the atmosphere
of Paris’s Montmartre, its denizens, and Lautrec’s view of life.
The highlight for us is Zsa Zsa Gabor as singer Jane Avril, one of
Lautrec’s subjects. Her acting, or lack thereof, almost brings the
film down with her. Huston wanted to replace her, but the producers
wouldn’t allow it. (Wonder why?)
March
7: At 12:30 am, TCM is airing Jean Cocteau’s compelling
film, Orpheus (1950),
starring Jean Marias, Edouard Dermit, and Marie Dea as Eurydice in
Cocteau’s take on the classic Greek fable. Maria Casares is
fascinating as the Princess of Death, with whom the poet Orphee
becomes obsessed in this modernized updating. Also take note of the
superb score by Georges Auric. Even though it comes across a little
heavy-handed at times, Cocteau still pulls of a hypnotic visual treat
that we simply cannot imagine being made today. If ever a film
deserved the title of Masterpiece, it is this one.
HEY
ABBOTT!
TCM
is slowly beginning to show films from Universal Studios, and
on March 8 at midnight the station is airing one of
Abbott and Costello’s better films, Who
Done It? from 1942. The boys are soda jerks who
dream of writing radio mysteries. They pitch their latest idea right
in the middle of a real murder, when the station owner is killed
during a broadcast. The boys get a brainstorm, figuring that if they
can solve the murder, the station will hire them as writers. They
pretend to be policemen, a ruse everyone is buying, including the
killer. Well plotted, with a few good bits by the boys. Watch for
Mary Wickes as a wise-cracking secretary in the mold of Joan Davis,
and William Bendix as a cop who challenges Lou in the lack-of-brains
department.
JERRY
LEWIS, PART 1
On March
15 TCM honors Jerry Lewis with a two-day celebration of his
90th birthday. At 8:00 pm, it’s The
Stooge (1952), followed by The
Caddy (1953), Artists
and Models (1955), You’re
Never Too Young (1955), and At
War With the Army (1950), airing at 4:00 am.
PSYCHOTRONICA
AND THE B HIVE
March
7: Three buddies travel to Hawaii in search of the perfect
wave in Columbia’s Ride the Wild
Surf (1964), starring Fabian, Shelley Fabares,
and Tab Hunter. TCM’s article on the film has it as a cut above the
rest. Unfortunately, we’ve seen it and can’t agree, though we do
like Jan and Dean’s theme song. Anyway, it’s on at 6:00 pm for
those interested.
March
10: At 1:30 am, it’s the one and only Mamie Van Doren in
the 1957 Warner film Untamed Youth.
When she and sister Lori Nelson are picked up on charges of vagrancy,
crooked judge Lurlene Tuttle has them shipped off to boyfriend John
Russell’s work camp, picking cotton by day and ripping it up
dancing at night. It’s a four-star camp classic, co-starring Eddie
Cochran as “Bong.” To quote Leonard Maltin: “You know
something's wrong when Mamie sings four songs and Cochran only one.”
As with all Van Doren’s cinematic exploits, it’s required
viewing.
March
13: At noon comes a superior ghost story, The
Uninvited (1944). Ray Milland and Ruth Hussey are
a brother and sister who purchase a spooky old place on the Cornish
coast of England. Gail Russell is the previous owner’s
granddaughter, a medium who tries to exorcise the ghost that haunting
the place, which turns out to be the spirit of her dead mother. It’s
a rarity for the time: a serious ghost story and well worth the time.
March
14: It’s a Bomba mini-marathon, with three of the Jungle
Lord’s films being shown, beginning with the first in the
series, Bomba the Jungle Boy,
at 7:15 am. Preceding them is the 1954 Bowery Boys entry, Jungle
Gents, in which the gang traveled to Africa to search
for diamonds after discovering that Sach (Huntz Hall) can smell
them.
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