TCM
TiVo ALERT
For
May
1–May 7
DAVID’S
BEST BETS:
FURY (May
3, 9:45 pm): Director Fritz Lang's first American film, this is
filled with suspense, revenge, mob rule, hostility, intolerance and
action. Spencer Tracy plays Joe Wilson, accused of a crime
he didn't commit. While he sits in jail, waiting for the police
investigation into the crime, the local townspeople get worked up and
go to lynch him. Unable to get inside, they torched the jail with
Wilson killed in the fire – or so it seems. The great
plot-twist is that Joe escapes, but presumed dead, with the
people responsible for the incident facing murder charges. With
the help of his brothers, Joe seeks revenge against his would-be
killers. Tracy does a great job going from a hardworking,
mild-mannered guy into one obsessed with anger and vengeance. The
film moves from a love story to suspense to a courtroom drama.
SEVEN
DAYS IN MAY (May
6, 6:30 am): In Seven
Days in May,
Burt Lancaster teams up with Kirk Douglas (the two co-starred in
seven movies during their cinematic careers) to make a memorable and
outstanding film. Lancaster is the head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
and is leading several of its members in a conspiracy to remove the
president (Fredric March) from office because he signed a nuclear
disarmament treaty with the Soviet Union. Douglas is a Marine Corps
colonel and military adviser who finds out about the proposed coup
and tells the president. It's among the best political thrillers ever
made. An interesting tidbit: the shots taken outside the White House
were done with the permission of President John F. Kennedy (those
scenes were done in 1963 before his assassination that
year), but Pentagon officials weren't cooperative, refusing to permit
Douglas to be filmed walking into that building.
ED’S
BEST BETS:
THE
DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL (May 7, 6:15 pm): The 1951
original, of course, is one of the greatest sci-fi films ever made
and a courageous retort to the hysteria of the day. Michael Rennie is
pitch perfect as Klaatu, an alien who comes here on a good will
mission and is shot for his troubles. He wants to convene a confab of
scientists and world leaders. The government, on the other hand, want
to keep him prisoner in order to pump information from him. There are
two things they hadn’t considered, however. One is that he is a
vastly superior being, able to see through our heavy-handed trickery,
and his robot, Gort, capable of burning the planet to a cinder.
Klaatu easily escapes the government’s attempts at imprisonment,
and grabbing a briefcase with the initials “J.C.” (How’s that
for symbolism?), ventures out into the world to contact the people he
needs to see by himself. It’s when he stops at a rooming house run
by Frances Bavier (Aunt Bee!) that he meets young war widow Patricia
Neal and her son, Billy Gray. They provide the humanity and drama as
the government launches a manhunt for Klaatu. Director Robert Wise
captures the hysteria of the times perfectly, and the film is the
first to feature a rational being from outer space who is not out to
kill or enslave us, though he does give the nations of Earth a stern
warning at the end. If you haven’t seen this one, catch it by all
means – and ignore the lame 2008 remake.
ALL
ABOUT EVE (May 7, 8:00 pm): One of the great films
about the theater with knockout performances from leads Bette Davis,
Gary Merrill, Anne Baxter, Celeste Holm and George Sanders. Sanders
won the Best Supporting Actor award for his role. Sophisticated and
cynical with a brilliant script by director Joseph Mankiewicz based
on the short story “The Wisdom of Eve” by Mary Orr. Life ended up
imitating art when Baxter pulled strings to be nominated for Best
Actress in addition to Davis. If she had stayed in the category of
Best Supporting, it is likely both she and Davis would have taken
home statuettes. It's one of those films that can be watched again
and again with no lessening of enjoyment.
WE
DISAGREE ON ... TASTE OF CHERRY (May 1, 2:15 am)
ED:
A. This is a most unusual film, to say the least. A
meditation on suicide in an Islamic country where, by Islamic law,
suicide is verboten. A brooding man rides on the
outskirts of Tehran in his Range Rover looking for someone who will
accept a large fee to bury him after he commits suicide. His
encounters with several candidates comprise the story of the film,
for the film is a meditation on death. The protagonist, faced with
his countrymen’s rejection of his proposals, offers a gamut of
rationalized arguments and enticements, from philosophical to
pathetically humorous. Slowly the film turns into a celebration of
life and all the heartaches and irrupting errands it entails, such as
death. The ending is left intentionally ambiguous – was
the director inviting us to muse on the characters in the film and
their arguments, or was the director leaving it unfinished to escape
the inevitable consequences to which the film was leading, and by
this ambiguity, escape the wrath of the Iranian authorities? It’s
left to the viewer to come to terms in this most interesting
introspective film.
DAVID:
C. This is a film I really want to like as it appears
on many lists and in several books as being a classic though it's
less than 20 years old. It won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film
Festival in 1997, and the subject matter – a guy trying to find
someone to toss dirt on his body after he commits suicide and instead
meets people who want to save him – is fascinating in concept.
However, the execution falls short, leaving me uninspired and
disappointed with the end result. It could be so much better. I don't
hate it as passionately as Roger Ebert did when he described it as
"excruciatingly boring" and a "lifeless drone."
The reason is I'm not interested in the characters in the film,
including the man trying to find someone to cover him up after he
commits suicide. I honestly don't care if he lives or dies. I just
want the film to either be better or be over. Some of the dialogue –
done in Persian – is interesting, but there really isn't much of a
quality film to watch. The story evolves at a snail's pace and by the
time we get to the finale, I'm left feeling nothing. If that's the
film's goal then mission accomplished. But I can't imagine that was
the intention.
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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