Tag: TCM

  • John Williams Night on TCM

    John Williams Night on TCM

    The always masterful programmers over at Turner Classic Movies: TCM are devoting prime time tonight to the artistry of John Williams. Williams, of course, is the world’s most famous (and most successful) film composer, having written music for “Jaws,” “Star Wars,” “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” “Superman,” “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” “E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial,” “Jurassic Park,” “Schindler’s List,” the first three “Harry Potter” films, and well, I’m sure you could name a half dozen others.

    His longest collaboration has been with director Steven Spielberg, with 26 features (most recently, “Lincoln”) and counting. TCM will be kicking off what should be an exceedingly interesting evening for Williams aficionados with Spielberg’s theatrical debut, the undershown “The Sugarland Express” (1974), at 8 p.m. ET. Goldie Hawn and William Atherton play a Texas couple – Atherton an escaped convict – who lead the police on a wild chase as they attempt to prevent the adoption of their son. Along the way, they become unlikely folk heroes. That’s harmonica legend Toots Thielemans on the soundtrack.

    That’s followed at 10 p.m. with a rebroadcast of “AFI Master Class – The Art of Collaboration: Spielberg-Williams,” in which the two screen titans discuss their 40 year association before an audience of aspiring filmmakers at the AFI Conservatory.

    Then at 11 p.m. comes the rare opportunity to see “The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing” (1973), with Burt Reynolds as the head of a band of train-robbers in the old west, again on the run, forced by circumstance to ride with the wife (Sarah Miles) of the Wells Fargo agent who pursues them. The music (actually replacing a rejected score by Michel Legrand) melds a pop-tinged main title with the Williams sound we all know and love.

    Experience John Williams before “Jaws” (1975) and “Star Wars” (1977) made him a household name, tonight on TCM.

    Music from “The Sugarland Express”:

    And from “The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing”:

    PHOTO: Williams in the ‘70s

  • Eli Wallach Tribute on TCM Monday

    Eli Wallach Tribute on TCM Monday

    Turner Classic Movies: TCM has announced an 11-hour Eli Wallach tribute, to run on Monday, beginning at 9 a.m.

    Featured films will include:

    9:00 AM Kisses for My President
    11:00 AM Act One
    1:00 PM How the West Was Won
    3:45 PM The Misfits
    6:00 PM Baby Doll

    Sorry to say, Don Siegel’s “The Lineup” will not be among them.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgkh-nei9hw

    I wish they would have given him the prime time treatment. He certainly deserves it.

  • TCM Pirate Movies All June Long Arrr!

    TCM Pirate Movies All June Long Arrr!

    All right, I know I already posted today, but Turner Classic Movies: TCM is showing pirate movies every Friday night in June. No Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., alas, though tonight offers the rare opportunity to see the original silent version of “The Sea Hawk” (8 p.m. ET), which hews much closer to the Rafael Sabatini novel than the classic version with Errol Flynn.

    Next Friday offers a smiley, bare-chested Burt Lancaster as “The Crimson Pirate” (also 8 p.m.). Lancaster’s equally toothy, mute sidekick is none other than Nick Cravat, who he’d met as a boy at summer camp. The two literally ran away and joined the circus, creating an acrobatic act called Lang and Cravat in 1930s. Cravat later appeared in nine of Lancaster’s films. He also played the gremlin in the classic “Twilight Zone” episode, “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet.”

    June 20 is all-Flynn, at least until 3:45 a.m., which means I will finally get a chance to see “Against All Flags” (8 p.m.) Doubtful that it is one of Flynn’s better vehicles, though it does offer the opportunity to see Maureen O’Hara in pirate garb.

    I’m also curious to see “The Boy and the Pirates” (June 27, 10 p.m.), directed by B-movie sci-fi/horror maestro Bert I. Gordon. Gordon’s house composer, Albert Glasser, though very much on a budget, clearly attempts to channel Erich Wolfgang Korngold’s pirate scores of the classic era.

    I may have to do something on “Picture Perfect” soon!

    AAAAAAAARRRRRRRRGGGGGHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • TCM Memorial Day War Movie Marathon Picks

    TCM Memorial Day War Movie Marathon Picks

    Turner Classic Movies: TCM has commenced its annual three-day war movie marathon for Memorial Day weekend. While I can’t say that it’s my favorite genre, I can recommend a number of TCM’s selections.

    “Objective, Burma!” (today, 3:15 p.m. ET) Errol Flynn trades his sword for a machine gun and parachutes behind enemy lines to take out a Japanese post. It may not sound like your cup of tea, but believe it or not, it is one of Flynn’s most exciting films.

    “No Time for Sergeants” (tomorrow, 8 p.m. ET) Watch this alongside “A Face in the Crowd” to understand the full range of Andy Griffith’s talent. If you’re a fan of Mayberry, this one likely will be more your speed (Griffith plays a manipulative SOB in the other), with a number of premonitions, especially one scene which pairs Griffith with future co-star Don Knotts. Myron McCormick is especially fun as Griffith’s long-suffering drill sergeant.

    “Dawn Patrol” (Monday, 4 a.m. ET) Errol Flynn and David Niven are WWI flyers; Basil Rathbone is their commanding officer. With that cast, as far as I’m concerned, this film can do no wrong.

    “Sergeant York” (Monday, 7:30 a.m. ET) One part patriotic flag-waver and two parts hillbilly hootenanny. Inspired by the real-life exploits of backwoods sharpshooter Alvin York, the film provides Gary Cooper with one of his best roles. It’s especially interesting when York struggles to reconcile pacifism with duty to one’s country. But it’s really the hillbilly antics that make it worth watching.

    “Friendly Persuasion” (Monday, 10 a.m.) Another Gary Cooper classic. This time Coop plays a Quaker who must come to terms with a war (in this case, the Civil War) which again challenges his pacifist beliefs. Fun domestic interactions with Dorothy McGuire.

    “Twelve O’ Clock High” (Monday, 8 p.m.) Gregory Peck whips into shape a bad-luck unit of high altitude daylight bombers. An examination of the toll combat takes on men, it’s a war movie with more soul and depth than most.

    “The Best Years of Our Lives” (Monday, 10:30 p.m.) One of my all-time favorite classic films, about American soldiers trying to readjust to civilian life following WWII. Poignant and beautiful, with a real sense of what made this country great.

    Obviously, my recommendations won’t necessarily correspond to somebody else’s preferences. (Some of the more manly among you will undoubtedly prefer tonight’s line up of “The Dirty Dozen,” “Where Eagles Dare” and “Kelly’s Heroes.”)

    Anybody care to share their favorite war movies? Sound off below.

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