A
Guide to the Rare and Unusual on TCM
By
Ed Garea
March
is renowned in the popular imagination for “coming in like a lion
and going out like a lamb.” Regarding TCM, March went in like a
lamb and is going out like a lion.
MERLE
OBERON
We
continue with our look at TCM’s Star of the Month. Last issue, we
noted how producer Alexander Korda discovered Oberon and basically
played Svengali to her Trilby. He also became her first husband when
they wed on June 3, 1939. The marriage lasted until June 4, 1945,
after which Oberon would wed three more times, the last being Robert
Wolders, from January 31, 1975, until her death from a massive stroke
on November 23, 1979.
March
18: First Comes Courage is
our pick for the evening. The 1943 film, airing at 8:00 pm, finds
Merle as a Norwegian resistance fighter who seduces German Wehrmacht
Major Carl Esmond in order to learn his military secrets. The most
interesting thing about the film was that it was the last project of
Dorothy Arzner, who chose it for its unique subject matter, which
would allow her to focus on Oberon’s character. However, Arzner
never had the chance to finish the film, as she contracted pneumonia
and was forced to hand the directorial reins over to Charles Vidor.
It was Arzner’s last hurrah in Hollywood, a sad ending for
Hollywood’s only female director for too many years.
March
25: Tonight
we recommend a film that’s being shown in the wee hours of the
morning: 2:30 am, to be exact. It’s Berlin
Express,
from RKO in 1948 and directed by the talented Jacques Tourneur. Merle
is Lucienne, the French secretary to German peace movement champion
Dr. Bernhardt (Paul Lukas), who has been kidnapped, plucked right off
the Berlin Express, by Nazi wehrvolves intent on derailing the
postwar peace process. With the help of American Lieutenant Robert
Ryan, Merle assembles a multi-national band (a Brit, a Russian, and a
fellow Frenchman) to rescue the good doctor. It sounds like an
exercise in train wreck cinema, but it all comes together nicely,
written by Harold Medford from a Curt Siodmak story and deftly
directed by Tourneur. The film makes use of some fascinating
historical footage of Germany immediately after the war. In fact, a
title card during the opening credits states that the photography in
Berlin and Frankfurt is used with the cooperation of the occupying
armies. It’s also a nice little thriller, as the good guys are
working against the clock to rescue the doc before the Nazis kill
him.
JERRY
LEWIS, PART 2
March
16 is the second night of TCM’s two-day tribute to the
comedian. Our recommendation for the evening is Martin Scorsese’s
dark satire, The King of
Comedy (1983), with Lewis as a talk show host
kidnapped by sociopath stand-up comic Robert De Niro and his
accomplice, Sandra Bernhard, in order that DeNiro might get a shot on
Lewis’ talk show. The highlight of the film is Bernhard, who, in a
supporting role, nearly walks away with the picture. Her performance
in this film made her into a sort of cult figure and led to
appearances on talk shows and parts in psychotronic films. She even
hosted a show on USA called Reel Wild Cinema (1994),
featuring scenes from various z-movies followed by jokes and
commentaries from the host and her guests. Obviously inspired
by Mystery Science Theater 3000, it lasted about two
short seasons.
It’s
surprising that in the two-day tribute, only one film is being shown
from a director who we think did more for Lewis than any other, and
that is Frank Tashlin, who directed Artists and Models
(shown March 15). Tashlin was famous for his work at the
Warner Bros. animation department. He was one of a trio of directors
(along with Tex Avery and Bob Clampett) who revolutionized cartoons
by introducing cinematic techniques, such as odd camera angles, fast
editing and montages. Tashlin felt stifled as an animator and
moonlighted writing gags for comedians such as Charley Chase and
Harpo Marx. Given a chance to direct by Bob Hope (taking over for
Sidney Lanfield in The Lemon Drop Kid, a film that
Tashlin wrote), Tashlin was able to apply the techniques he used in
directing animation to live action. And in Lewis he found his perfect
subject – a live-action cartoon. Tashlin helped Lewis perfect his
infantile slapstick routines in such films as The Geisha
Boy, Cinderfella, and The Disorderly
Orderly.
Lewis,
of course, would go on to be parodied himself, most notably by Joe
Piscopo and Eddie Murphy on Saturday Night Live, and by
Eugene Levy as “Bobby Bittman” on SCTV. Jean-Luc
Godard once said of Lewis that “he is funny even when he’s not
being funny.” Obviously, he’s easy to please.
INGMAR
BERGMAN
March
20: The Bergman fest on TCM continues with Scenes
From a Marriage scheduled for 2:00 am. Originally
shot as six 50-minute episodes for Swedish television in 1973 and
edited down into a 169-minute feature film by Bergman the following
year, the film follows the changing fortunes of married couple Johan
(Erland Josephson) and Marianne (Liv Ullmann) 10 years into their
union and over the course of the next 10 years. This is one of the
most truthful, honest, brutal, and heartbreaking portraits of a
couple ever captured on film. Shot in documentary style, it’s like
cinéma vérité and one of the most intense character studies ever
committed to film.
March
27: Two disturbing films by Bergman are featured tonight,
1967’s Persona (3:00
am) and The Virgin Spring (1960),
at 4:30 am. Persona stars Liv Ullman (in her
Bergman debut) as Elisabet, an actress who has stopped speaking in
the middle of a performance. Her doctor sends her to a rather remote
seaside cottage, where she's cared for by a young nurse, named Alma
(Bibi Andersson). Alma speaks constantly to break the silence. At
first, she speaks about the books she’s read and trivial matters,
but as their relationship deepens Alma begins to speak about her own
anxieties and her relationship with her fiancé, who scolds her for
lacking ambition. Gradually the women, who bear a strong physical
resemblance to each other, begin to assume each other's identities.
The
Virgin Spring is about a devoutly Christian knight and
his family whose virginal daughter is raped and killed by a trio of
vagrants while on her way to church. The criminals make their way to
the family’s farm, where they are offered accommodations. It is
when one tries to sell the daughter’s undergarments to the mother
that they are found out, and the knight takes an extremely brutal
revenge upon the trio. Leonard Maltin points out that Wes Craven’s
1972 horror film, The Last House on the Left, is a remake
of The Virgin Spring.
AKIRA
KUROSAWA
March
23: It’s an entire morning and afternoon of Kurosawa
beginning at 6:00 am with No Regrets
For Our Youth from 1946. Setsuko Hara, in a breakout
performance, is Yukie, the privileged and frivolous daughter of a
university professor. Her world begins to come apart when he is fired
and arrested as a political criminal. Then, when her fiancé, Noge,
is executed as a spy, Yukie decides it is her duty to move to the
country home of Noge’s parents, where she works the fields with
Noge’s mother, remaining in the village after the war has ended and
her father is reinstated at the university. This was Kurosawa’s
fifth film and the only one to feature a woman in the main role.
Also
on the slate this morning is Stray
Dog (details in next week's TiVo Alert),
immediately following at 8:00 am; Seven
Samurai at 10:30; The
Bad Sleep Well (next week's featured “We Agree”
film in the TiVo Alert) at 2:15; and High
and Low at 5:15.
OUT
OF THE ORDINARY
March
17: As part of a TCM Spotlight on movies condemned by the
Catholic Legion of Decency (talk about a stretch), Luis Bunuel’s
1962 drama, Viridiana,
is airing at 8:00 pm. Sylvia Pinal is a young nun who has inherited a
fortune and decides to distribute it among the poor, finding that the
poor aren’t as noble and virtuous as she had previously believed.
Highly controversial in its time, the film was banned in Spain and
Italy.
March
19: Following the wonderful The
Great Escape (8:00), it’s Robert Bresson’s
intelligently made take on the subject, A
Man Escaped, from 1956, at 11:00 pm.
March
30: One of the best films of recent times, The
Artist, is airing at 8:00 pm. Written and directed by
French filmmaker Michel Hazanavicius, it’s the story of George
Valentin (Jean Dujardin), a major star at Kinograph Studios. At the
red-carpet premiere of his latest film he meets Peppy Miller
(Berenice Bejo), who he helps get a leg up at the studio. However,
the coming of sound sinks his career while making her into a major
star. It’s a wonderful homage to the silent era and its techniques,
and the plot has a slight echo of A Star is Born. Both
leads are excellent, but Bejo stands out as an actress to watch. Look
for the scene were she scours the streets of Hollywood looking for
her wayward husband. We can hear the strains of the soundtrack
to Vertigo. Hazanavicius has presented us with a totally
enchanting film from beginning to end; a true love letter to
Hollywood.
March
31: At the ungodly hour of 3:45 comes one of the best caper
movies ever made – Jules Dassin’s Rififi,
from 1954. A quartet of jewel thieves come together to pull off a
heist of the Paris equivalent of Tiffany’s, but in the end find
each other to be more dangerous than the police. The heist itself
takes up nearly half an hour and is conducted in complete silence.
This is the sort of film that pulls us in to its world of criminals,
schemes and double-crosses. It starts slowly, but once it gets going,
we don’t want to look away. The script is based on Auguste Le
Breton’s 1953 novel Du Rififi chez les hommes. Dassin and
Ren Wheeler helped Le Breton adapt it for the screen. Le Breton also
wrote the screenplay for Jean-Pierre Melville’s 1956 crime
masterpiece, Bob le flambeur.
WARREN
WILLIAM
March
18: At 12:45 pm, it’s William and Joan Blondell in a
delightful Pre-Code “battle of the sexes,” Smarty (1934).
Blondell’s constant teasing of husband William finally has him to
the point where he hauls off and socks her, prompting a divorce. But
she finds that when she marries her divorce lawyer, Edward Everett
Horton, on the rebound, she has just entered into a new fresh hell.
Things eventually work out, but not without some real bumps in the
road.
March
19: William returns as Michael Lanyard in one of our
favorite series – The Lone Wolf, one of the better
gentleman-detective franchises, and a character he would go on to
play in eight more films. We begin at 9:15 am with the first, and
probably the best, in the series, The
Lone Wolf Spy Hunt (1939). Spies in Washington
D.C. kidnap Lanyard in an attempt to force him to crack a safe
containing precious military secrets. Looks for Rita Hayworth in an
early role as a femme fatale.
March
26: One again at 9:15 William returns as Michael Lanyard,
this time in 1940’s The Lone Wolf
Meets a Lady. This time he must come to the aid of a
socialite (Jean Muir) whose $100,000 necklace has been lifted on the
eve of her wedding. Eric Blore joins William as Jamison, butler and
Man Friday.
FATTY
ARBUCKLE
March
20: Beginning at midnight and running until 2:00 am is a
compilation of shorts by Fatty Arbuckle. With the exception of the
first, That Little Band of
Gold (1915), in which he starred with Mabel
Normand, the others are merely directed by him. After his series of
trials for the death of starlet Virginia Rappe, in which he was
ultimately found not guilty, Fatty was persona non grata with
the studios and public alike. He caught on with small studio
Educational Films and directed under the alias of Will B. Goodrich.
Besides That Little Band of Gold,
shorts to look for include Curses!, starring
his nephew Al “Fuzzy” St. John, and Fool’s
Luck.
PRE-CODE
March
18: A mini-marathon of Pre-Code films takes place from 6:00
am to 2:00 pm. None really stand out, aside from Smarty (mentioned
earlier), but it’s always good for the Pre-Code completists to add
a few notches to the reel.
March
21: Being shown are a run of films by B-director Nick
Grinde: The Bishop Murder Case (1930),
with Basil Rathbone as Philo Vance; Remote
Control (1930), with William Haines; and
Shopworn (1932), with
Stanwyck and Regis Toomey. The fun begins at 6:00 am.
March
29: At 9:15 am. it’s Warner Baxter and Myrna Loy in Woody
Van Dyke’s comedy-drama, Penthouse (1933).
Baxter is a lawyer framed by the mob who must rely on the help of
call girl Loy to clear himself. With Mae Clarke and Nat Pendleton.
Loy is totally enchanting.
March
31: It’s Bette Davis and Margaret Lindsay as sisters in
the rarely shown Fog Over
Frisco (1934), airing at 6:30 am. Bette is the
bad sister, consorting with gangsters and other low lifes in a stolen
securities scheme. Lindsay is the good sister, who tries to help her
sister out of the mess. Lyle Talbot, Robert Barrat, and William
Demarest co-star.
BAD MOVIE ALERT
March
21: Humphrey Bogart and Barbara Stanwyck stink up the screen
in The Two Mrs. Carrolls,
airing at 8:00 pm. Made in 1945 but not released until 1947, Bogart
is a nutzoid artist who paints his wives as Angels of Death and then
kills them. Guess who his new wife is? In the climatic chase scene,
Bogie and Babs make more faces than Bugs Bunny after seeing the
orange monster in Hair-Raising Hare. With Alexis
Smith, who Bogie is penciling in as Babs’s replacement.
March
27: It’s Easter, and what would Easter be without the
all-time stinker The Silver
Chalice (1954). Starring the young Paul Newman as
Basil the silversmith who is charged with engraving the Holy Grail.
Co-starring Virginia Mayo, who does what she does best in these types
of movies – vamp, and Jack Palance, who leaves no piece of scenery
unchewed.
March
31: Robert Taylor displays his limited range in 1944’s Song
Over Russia (11:30 am) as an American symphonic
conductor enamored with Tchaikovsky on tour in Russia. Naturally he
falls in love with, and marries, a Russian peasant woman (Susan
Peters) who shares his fondness, but then those nasty old Nazis
invade the Motherland, John, who wants to beat it back to New York,
stays and fights alongside his bride.
PSYCHOTRONICA
AND THE B HIVE
March
19: It’s a monstrous douane-feature from director Eugene
Lourie, beginning at 6:15 am with The
Giant Behemoth (1959) and followed at 7:45 by The
Beast From 20,000 Fathoms (1953).
10:30
am sees The Bowery Boys go undercover to expose a gang in Angels
in Disguise (1949).
March
23: The evening is devoted to selected episodes from classic
serials of the ‘30s and ‘40s. Among those featured are
Batman (1943), Batman
and Robin (1949), Superman (1948), Atom
Man vs. Superman (1950), The
Green Hornet (1940), Buck
Rogers (1939), Flash
Gordon (1940), The
Phantom (1943), Ace
Drummond (1936),
and Dick Tracy (1937).
Several of these have run on Saturday mornings, and it would be nice
to see the others featured as well.
March
24: At 2:15 am, it’s a different kind of vampire
picture, Lemora: A Child’s Tale of
the Supernatural (1973). Set in 1920s Georgia, a
female vampire (Leslie Gilb) tricks a 13-year old choirgirl who came
back to her hometown to see her dying father (Cheryl Smith) into
visiting her home in the woods. The strong sexual overtones and the
corruption of innocence earned the film a condemnation from the
Catholic Church, but the film relies on atmosphere and performances
rather than nudity as it does an excellent job showing a child’s
fears. Cheryl “Rainbeaux” Smith went on to appear in Jonathan
Demme’s Caged Heat, among other psychotronic
films.
March
30: At
11:15 pm, Arthur Franz stars as the serial killer compelled to shoot
women in producer Stanley Kramer’s The
Sniper (1952).
Directed by Edward Dmytryk, the film differs from the usual manhunt
by delving into the psychological reasons as well as raising
questions about treating the mentally ill and how to identify and
cure the most extreme cases. This is Stanley
Kramer, after all.
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