|
Post by I Love Melvin on Jun 19, 2023 21:57:24 GMT
Daytime July 12 Love Triangles Red Dust (Clark Gable, Jean Harlow) (MGM, 1932) Manhattan Melodrama (William Powell, Myrna Loy) (MGM, 1934) Forsaking All Others (Joan Crawford, Clark Gable) (MGM, 1934) Goodbye, My Fancy (Joan Crawford, Robert Young) (Warner Bros., 1951) Fanny (Leslie Caron, Horst Buccholz) (Warner Bros., 1961) The Sins of Rachel Cade (Angie Dickinson, Roger Moore) (Warner Bros., 1961) Jules et Jim (Jeanne Moreau, Oskar Werner) (Dist. in the US by Janus, 1962) And speaking of Angie Dickinson, please don't miss The Sins of Rachel Cade if you haven't seen it. It was a rare lead role for her and she did a fine job in it, playing a medical missionary in the Congo, with Peter Finch as her administrator and Roger Moore as an RAF doctor who became her patient. It's based on a novel called simply Rachel Cade but apparently Warners added "The Sins of..." as a proactive hedge against potential criticism of the fact that she became pregnant by Moore. Interestingly, her most compelling relationship was with her Congolese assistant played by Errol John, who understood her and supported her in ways neither of the other men did.
|
|
|
Post by sewhite2000 on Jun 20, 2023 3:58:52 GMT
Primetime July 13 Night Two of the Month-Long Theme on B-Movies. One slot has yet to be announced. Murder in the Private Car (Charlie Ruggles, Una Merkel) (MGM, 1934) Isle of Missing Men (John Howard, Helen Gilbert) (Monogram, 1942) Dead Man's Eyes (Lon Chaney Jr., Jean Parker) (Universal, 1944) Prison Ship (Nina Foch, Robert Lowery) (Columbia, 1945)
Late Night Attorneys Young Man with Ideas (Glenn Ford, Ruth Roman) (MGM, 1952) Illegal (Edward G. Robinson, Nina Foch) (Warner Bros., 1955)
|
|
|
Post by sewhite2000 on Jun 20, 2023 4:27:21 GMT
Daytime July 14 Animals, Insects & Reptiles There's a 1944 Warner Bros. short narrated by Knox Manning that looks at three animal parks in Miami and a 1954 MGM Pete Smith sort that compares raising human and animal babies. I'm only listing the features. Where East is East (Lon Chaney, Lupe Velez) (MGM, 1929) The Leopard Man (Dennis O'Keefe, Jean Brooks) (RKO, 1943) Night of the Lepus (Stuart Whitman, Janet Leigh) (MGM, 1972) Rattlers (Sam Chew Jr., Elizabeth Chauvet) (Boxoffice International Pictures, 1976) The Swarm (Michael Caine, Katharine Ross) (Warner Bros., 1978) Of Unknown Origin (Peter Weller, Jennifer Dale) (Warner Bros., 1983) Razorback (Gregory Harrison, Arkie Whitely) (Dist. in the US by J&M Entertainment, 1984)
|
|
|
Post by sewhite2000 on Jun 20, 2023 4:50:23 GMT
Primetime July 14 Night Two of the SOTM Stars of the '70s Edited to include one more movie airing very early the morning of July 15 Shaft (Richard Roundtree, Moses Gunn) (MGM, 1971) The Candidate (Robert Redford, Peter Boyle) (Warner Bros., 1972) The All-American Boy (Jon Voight, Nancie Phillips) (Warner Bros., 1973) The Fortune (Warren Beatty, Jack Nicholson) (Columbia, 1975) The Goodbye Girl (Marsha Mason, Richard Dreyfuss) (MGM, 1977) Hooper (Burt Reynolds, Sally Field) (Warner Bros., 1978) Every Which Way But Loose (Clint Eastwood, Sondra Locke) (Warner Bros., 1978)
|
|
|
Post by sewhite2000 on Jun 20, 2023 21:40:07 GMT
Morning July 15 Saturday Matinee I'm only listing the features, and it looks like there's only one. Young Dr. Kildare (Lew Ayres, Lionel Barrymore) (MGM, 1938)
Musical Matinee The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (Catherine Deneuve, Nino Castelnuovo) (Dist. in the US by Roissy Films, 1964)
Afternoon Random Programming The Lady from Shanghai (Orson Welles, Rita Hayworth) (Columbia, 1947) Take the High Ground! (Richard Widmark, Elaine Stewart) (MGM, 1953) The FBI Story (James Stewart, Vera Miles) (Warner Bros., 1959)
|
|
|
Post by sewhite2000 on Jun 21, 2023 3:47:23 GMT
Primetime July 15 The theme and the first of the two movies have yet to be announced, but given what's listed, it could be a number of things. '80s teen sex comedies, maybe, or '80s movies with huge pop artist soundtracks. They could throw in Heavy Metal if it's the second Rock & Roll High School if it's the first (or the second).
Fast Times at Ridgmont High (Jennifer Jason Leigh, Brian Backer) (Universal, 1982)
Noir Alley Shockproof (Cornel Wilde, Patricia Knight) (Columbia, 1949)
Late Night On the Run The Getaway also airs on Night One of the SOTM theme of Stars of the '70s. I think it's the first non-Noir Alley movie to get two airings this month? I'm too sleepy to scroll back and see if I have listed others already. If some adventururous soul wants to look into that, be my guest. Otherwise, i'll check it out tomorrow maybe. Dark Passage (Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall) (Warner Bros., 1947) The Getaway (Steve McQuenn, Ali MacGraw) (National General, 1972)
|
|
|
Post by sewhite2000 on Jun 21, 2023 4:22:16 GMT
Morning July 16 Random Programming (or Melvyn Douglas, maybe?) Theodora Goes Wild (Irene Dunne, Melvyn Douglas) (Columbia, 1936) Third Finger, Left Hand (Myrna Loy, Melvyn Douglas) (MGM, 1940)
After the Noir Alley repeat Gaslight (Charles Boyer, Ingrid Bergman) (MGM, 1944) Dial M for Murder (Grace Kelly, Robert Cummings) (Warner Bros., 1954) The Cobweb (Richard Widmark, Gloria Grahame) (MGM, 1955) Marriage on the Rocks (Frank Sinatra, Deborah Kerr) (Warner Bros., 1965)
|
|
|
Post by sewhite2000 on Jun 21, 2023 4:52:22 GMT
Primetime July 16 Night Three of the Month-Long Theme on Disability. I have no idea what the connection between the two films is. Never Fear (Sally Forrest, Keefe Brasselle) (Eagle-Lion, 1949) Bright Road (Dorothy Dandridge, Philip Hepburn) (MGM, 1953)
There's a Robert Osborne Private Screenings from 2014. The guest isn't mentioned. Then:
Silent Sunday Nights Lewis Milestone The Racket (Thomas Meighan, Marie Prevost) (Paramount, 1928)
TCM Imports Francois Truffaut. More specifically it is, I think, the third and fourth films in the Antoine Doinel series, the kid from The 400 Blows in his 20s in the first one and in his 30s in the second one. Bed and Board (Jean-Pierre Leaud, Claude Jade) (Dist. in the US by Columbia, 1971) Love on the Run (Jean-Pierre Leaud, Claude Jade) (Dist. in the US by New World, 1979)
|
|
|
Post by Fading Fast on Jun 21, 2023 5:38:30 GMT
Primetime July 16 Night Three of the Month-Long Theme on Disability. I have no idea what the connection between the two films is. Never Fear (Sally Forrest, Keefe Brasselle) (Eagle-Lion, 1949) Bright Road (Dorothy Dandridge, Philip Hepburn) (MGM, 1953) There's a Robert Osborne Private Screenings from 2014. The guest isn't mentioned. Then: Silent Sunday Nights Lewis Milestone The Racket (Thomas Meighan, Marie Prevost) (Paramount, 1928) TCM Imports Francois Truffaut. More specifically it is, I think, the third and fourth films in the Antoine Doinel series, the kid from The 400 Blows in his 20s in the first one and in his 30s in the second one. Bed and Board (Jean-Pierre Leaud, Claude Jade) (Dist. in the US by Columbia, 1971) Love on the Run (Jean-Pierre Leaud, Claude Jade) (Dist. in the US by New World, 1979) I haven't yet seen either of the two imports listed, but "TCM Imports" is one of my favorite TCM segments as it shows movies, many that are quite good, that I really doubt I'd find on my own. Last year, TCM showed several Japanese films by noted director YasujirĂ´ Ozu that are incredible movies, but that also are wonderful time travel to post-war Japan. I would probably have never seen these films if not for TCM.
|
|
|
Post by I Love Melvin on Jun 21, 2023 12:27:36 GMT
Primetime July 15 The theme and the first of the two movies have yet to be announced, but given what's listed, it could be a number of things. '80s teen sex comedies, maybe, or '80s movies with huge pop artist soundtracks. They could throw in Heavy Metal if it's the second Rock & Roll High School if it's the first (or the second). Fast Times at Ridgmont High (Jennifer Jason Leigh, Brian Backer) (Universal, 1982) You're probably right that Fast Times is there for the teenage angle or the music. It was based on a book by Cameron Crowe, who later wrote and directed Say Anything, Jerry McGuire and Almost Famous, so that's a possible connection. Also, it was a breakout role for Sean Penn and it was directed by a woman (Amy Heckerling), so it'll be interesting to see what fills in around it. In any case, it's been years since I've seen it so I'm looking forward to it.
|
|
|
Post by sewhite2000 on Jun 28, 2023 3:00:10 GMT
Daytime July 17 James Cagney's 124th Birthday The Public Enemy (James Cagney, Jean Harlow) (Warner Bros., 1931) Winner Take All (James Cagney, Marian Nixon) (Warner Bros., 1932) Footlight Parade (James Cagney, Joan Blondell) (Warner Bros., 1933) The St. Louis Kid (James Cagney, Patricia Ellis) (Warner Bros., 1934) The Roaring Twenties (James Cagney, Priscilla Lane) (Warner Bros., 1939) City for Conquest (James Cagney, Ann Sheridan) (Warner Bros., 1940) Love Me or Leave Me (James Cagney, Doris Day) (MGM, 1955)
|
|
|
Post by intrepid37 on Jun 28, 2023 6:51:09 GMT
Nice to see a Horst Bucholtz movie. Outside of Mag 7 we don't see much of him.
|
|
|
Post by sagebrush on Jul 6, 2023 22:41:52 GMT
July 2023 on TCM Song: "Night Flight" by Franc Moody
TCM hasn't even uploaded their July montage to their YouTube channel yet.
|
|
|
Post by I Love Melvin on Jul 6, 2023 22:54:53 GMT
TCM hasn't even uploaded their July montage to their YouTube channel yet. Since they're firing everybody it's probably the janitor's job now and he hasn't gotten around to it.
|
|
|
Post by lydecker on Jul 7, 2023 14:26:19 GMT
TCM hasn't even uploaded their July montage to their YouTube channel yet. Since they're firing everybody it's probably the janitor's job now and he hasn't gotten around to it. You've got that right. But Spielberg and Scorsese have "every confidence" that Zaslav "loves" TCM!
|
|