TCM
TiVo ALERT
For
March
15–March 22
DAVID’S
BEST BETS:
BLOW-UP (March
17, 12:00 am): A sexy, sophisticated film about a "Swinging
London" photographer (David Hemmings), who believes he took
pictures of a murder. But did he? Michelangelo Antonioni does a
magnificent job directing his first English-language film, filled
with great suspense and a fascinating plot. The 1966 film is a visual
delight, perfectly capturing the time and location while not
compromising the quality of the story. On top of that, we get a
memorable cameo by the Yardbirds (the Jeff Beck/Jimmy Page version)
at a club with Beck doing his best Pete Townshend impersonation
smashing a guitar on stage.
THE
APARTMENT (March
22, 8:00 pm): Director Billy Wilder's follow-up to the overrated Some
Like It Hot, this
wonderful comedy-drama stars Jack Lemmon as an opportunistic office
worker who sort of sleeps his way to the top. Well, he lets his
office managers use his apartment as a place to have sex with their
various mistresses. Because of that, he gets promoted to the
personnel department, where his supervisor, Fred MacMurray, so
deliciously sleazy in this role, convinces his new assistant to let
him have the apartment on an exclusive basis. MacMurray's latest
mistress is the company's elevator operator (Shirley MacLaine), who
Lemmon likes a lot, but doesn't say anything to her. A fabulous
cast with one of Hollywood's best directors and an intelligent, funny
script, and you have 1960's Oscar winner for Best Picture. It was
nominated for nine others, winning four of
those. Incredibly, MacMurray wasn't even nominated for Best
Supporting Actor.
ED’S
BEST BETS:
THE
BEAST FROM 20,000 FATHOMS (March 19, 7:45 am): An
intelligently done piece of sci-fi, with amazing animation from Ray
Harryhausen and solid acting from Paul Christian, Paula Raymond,
Cecil Kellaway, and Donald Woods. It’s the first of the
monster-on-the-loose spectacles and the best. It was also
Harryhausen’s first solo assignment and he clearly made the most of
it, making the monster seem real. Director Eugene Lourie went on to
make The Giant Behemoth (airing right before this at
6:15 am) and Gorgo, which featured a
man-in-the-monster-suit.
THE
LONE WOLF SPY HUNT (March 19, 9:15 am): There are few
things more pleasurable to watch than a well-executed B-movie.
Starring Warren William as former thief turned gentleman detective
Michael Lanyard, Columbia’s “Lone Wolf” series enjoyed quite a
run as Lanyard, starring in nine films. Eric Blore would join the
cast in the next film, The Lone Wolf Strikes, as
Lanyard’s butler and Man Friday, Jamison. (After all, what’s a
gentleman detective without a good sidekick?) The film is a deft
mixture of screwball comedy and thrills as Lanyard battles an old
enemy who is trying to frame him for the theft of plans for a secret
weapon. With Ida Lupino in fine form as Lanyard’s neglected
girlfriend and Rita Hayworth as a femme fatale trying to seduce the
Lone Wolf into cracking the safe where the plans are stored. William
is always a pleasure to watch on screen and he’s perfect as
Lanyard.
WE
DISAGREE ON ... THE KING OF COMEDY (March 16, 9:30 pm)
ED:
B. A very dark satire from director Martin Scorsese
with Robert De Niro giving one of his patented sociopathic
performances. Jerry Lewis turns in a credible performance and not
once does he chase after Sandra Bernhard saying “Oooo-ooo, Lady!”
Johnny Carson was originally approached for the role of the TV talk
show host kidnapped by De Niro, but turned it down for fear of a
real-life copycat. Outside of Fassbinder, Scorsese is the most
humorless of modern directors, unless one counts schadenfreude as
humor.
DAVID:
A. I dislike Jerry Lewis, but he is outstanding in
this dark comedy. Somehow director Martin Scorsese is able to get
Lewis to deliver his best performance on screen as Jerry Langford, a
popular late-night talk-show host akin to Johnny Carson. The 1983
film was years ahead of its time resulting in mixed reviews upon its
release. It stars Robert De Niro, Scorsese's go-to actor at the time,
as Rupert Pupkin, a psychotic untalented comedian obsessed with
getting on Langford's popular show, believing it would be his big
break and lead to stardom. When that doesn't work, Pupkin with Masha
(Sandra Bernhard in her greatest role), a Langford stalker, kidnap
the host. The ransom is Pupkin gets to be the opening act on
Langford's show. He does exceptionally well and closes with one of my
favorite movie lines: "Better to be king for a night than
schmuck for a lifetime." The ending is open to interpretation.
Did Pupkin make it big or is it all in his head? It's an excellent
film that captures society's obsession with celebrity. It can be
uncomfortable to watch, but definitely worth seeing.
For the complete list of films on the TCM TiVo Alert, click here.
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