This site is devoted to the love of classic movies. What qualifies as a classic film or movie is somewhat subjective. There are certain films which endure because they strike an emotional chord long after their initial release. For example, a movie like "Casablanca" (1942) would qualify as a classic under that definition.
The Secret of Convict Lake (1951) is an American Western film directed by Michael Gordon and starring Glenn Ford, Gene Tierney, Ethel Barrymore, and Zachery Scott. The cinematography was by Leo Tover (The Snake Pit, The Heiress,and The Day The Earth Stood Still).
Six convicts escape from a Carson City prison in 1871 during a blizzard. One freezes to death, while the others find their way to Lake Monte Diablo, where eight women are on their own while their men are away prospecting. At first, the women are reluctant to have anything to do with the convicts, but eventually, they break down and offer them shelter and food. One of the men, Jim Canfield (Ford) is looking for the man who lied about him on the witness stand, which resulted in him going to prison. The man Canfield is looking for, Rudy Schaefer (Harry Carter) happens to be the man one of the women, Marcia Stoddard (Tierney), is planning to marry. Carter stole $40,000 and perjured himself, which led to Canfield being convicted of killing a mine owner and stealing his money. The convicts traveling with Canfield are convinced he hid the money somewhere in Lake Monte Diablo. Canfield denies he has the money hidden and explains he is only out for revenge; he plans on killing Schaefer for putting him in jail.
Will Canfield be successful in his quest for revenge? And what about the other convicts? What will their fates be?
Gene Tierney with rifle, flanked by Ann Dvorak on her right and Ruth Donnelly on her left; Ethel Barrymore in the doorway with a pistol
Michael Gordon (1909 - 1993) was an American film director who directed a wide variety of movies including melodramas, films noir, and comedies. His career as a director spanned almost 30 years. Some of his films include Cyrano de Begerac (1950), Pillow Talk (1959), Boys' Night Out (1962), and Move Over, Darling (1963). Actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt is his grandson by his daughter Jane.
Glenn Ford (1916 - 2006) was a Canadian-American actor who was one of the biggest box office draws for three decades. Ford acted on stage in California before being signed to a contract with Columbia Pictures. He appeared in mostly B movies until The Lady in Question (1940), the first time he was paired with fellow Columbia contract player, Rita Hayworth. After serving in the Coast Guard during World War II, Ford’s career began to take off. He and Hayworth had a huge hit with Gilda (1946) and A Stolen Life (1946) with Bette Davis. Ford came into his own in the 1950s with films like Blackboard Jungle (1955), Interrupted Melody (1955) with Eleanor Parker, Jubal (1956), and The Fastest Gun Alive (1956) with Jeanne Crain, all box office successes. By the end of the decade, Ford was one of the biggest stars in the world. Ford continued making movies in the 1960s but his successes were more uneven than in the previous decade but had hits with Experiment in Terror (1962) and The Courtship of Eddie’s Father (1963). In 1978, he played Clark Kent’s adoptive father in Superman. His last film role was Raw Nerve (1991).
Gene Tierney, Glenn Ford, and Ethel Barrymore
Ethel Barrymore (1879 - 1959) was an American stage and film actress and part of the famous Barrymore family of actors. Her equally famous brothers were Lionel and John Barrymore. Barrymore got her start on the stage and she was among its brightest stars for many years. Barrymore also had a successful career on the other side of the Atlantic in London, where she starred in Peter the Great. She achieved one of her biggest Broadway successes in W. Somerset Maugham’s comedy, The Constant Wife (1926). Barrymore was a popular character actress in film during the 1940s. She won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in None but the Lonely Heart (1944) opposite Cary Grant, who played her son. Other film roles include The Spiral Staircase (1946), The Paradine Case (1947), and Pinky (1949).
Zachary Scott (1914 - 1965) was an American actor on stage and most notably in film. He made his film debut in the film noir The Mask of Dimitrios (1944). As a contract player at Warner Bros., Scott was the perfect slick, film noir villain. Before his career in film noir took off, he starred in The Southerner (1945) directed by Jean Renoir. It would be his role as Monty Beragon in Mildred Pierce (1945) that would be his most enduring role with film fans. Scott worked in film, stage, and television until 1963. He died of a malignant brain tumor.
Gene Tierney in a costume test for the film, with the scenes listed for when it would be worn.
The Secret of Convict Lake trivia:
Dana Andrews and Linda Darnell were originally set to star as Jim Canfield and Marcia Stoddard respectively.
The story is fictional but it is inspired by a real incident where a posse had a shoot-out with escaped convicts from the Carson City prison. Convict Lake is a real place in California that was named after the incident.
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Discussion questions
What do you think the film’s major theme is? Does it have
one in your opinion?
Were you surprised by women’s roles in the film?
The film features a great cast of supporting actresses. Did
one actress’s performance stick out to you more than the others?
Did Gene Tierney and Glenn Ford have good on-screen
chemistry?
Did this movie remind you of other films you’ve seen?
Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939) is an American romantic
drama directed by Sam Wood and starring Robert Donat and Greer Garson in her
film debut. The supporting cast included John Mills and Paul Henried (billed as
Paul Von Hernried). The film was nominated for seven Academy Awards, including
Best Picture.
Schoolmaster Mr. Chipping, due to a cold, misses a first-day
assembly. In his 58 years teaching at the Brookfield public school, he never
missed a day. While convalescing, he falls asleep and relives his teaching
career. It’s a life filled with many challenges, heartache, and much joy.
Sam Wood (1883 – 1949) was an American film director
and producer. He established him self in the silent era, directing several
successful films starring Gloria Swanson. Wood made the transition to the sound
era with ease. Some of Wood’s most famous sound films include A Night at
the Opera (1935), A Day at the Races (1937), Goodbye Mr. Chips
(1939), The Pride of the Yankees (1942), and For Whom the Bell Tolls
(1943). He also directed several scenes in Gone with the Wind (1939), although
uncredited.
Robert Donat (1905 – 1958) was an English stage
and film star. During the 1930s, he was one of Britain’s top male stars. He is
perhaps best remembered for his roles in The 39 Steps and Goodbye
Mr. Chips (1939), winning the Best Actor Academy Award for the latter.
Hitchcock wanted Donat for the role of Detective Ted Spencer in Sabotage (1936)
and Secret Agent (1936); the latter role would have reunited
him with Carroll. Donat suffered from severe and chronic asthma, which affected
his film career. He only made a total of 20 films.
Greer Garson (1905 – 1996) was a British-American
film actress and singer. Garson was a top box office star from 1942 to 1946. She
received seven Academy Award nominations for Best Actress, winning for her performance
in Mrs. Miniver (1942). A favorite of M-G-M’s studio head Louis B.
Mayer, Garson was cast in some of the most popular pictures the studio produced,
including Pride and Prejudice (1940), Blossoms in the Dust
(1941), Random Harvest (1942), Madame Curie (1943), Mrs.
Parkington (1944), and The Valley of Decision (1945). Later in her
career, she was nominated for her seventh Best Actress Award for Sunrise at
Campobello (1960), playing Eleanor Roosevelt.
Greer Garson and Robert Donat
Goodbye, Mr. Chips trivia
Greer Garson’s performance is just under 25 minutes, but she was
nominated in the Best Actress category.
In the film, Donat’s character is 25 years older than Garson’s.
In reality, Garson was six months older than Donat.
Garson was signed by M-G-M in 1937, but rejected all the
minor roles she was offered until the role of Kathy Ellis in this movie.
The film was dedicated to Irving Thalberg.
John Mills was 30 years old, playing a teenage schoolboy.
This was the English-speaking film debut of Paul Henreid.
Filmed in the United Kingdom, with exterior shots filmed in
the village of Repton in Derbyshire.
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Discussion questions
Robert Donat was up against Clark Gable in Gone with the
Wind for the Best Actor award. Would you have awarded Donat the Oscar over
Gable?
What did you think of Greer Garson’s film debut? Did she
deserve the Best Actress nod?
Would you recommend this film to your friends?
Did you have a favorite scene or piece of dialogue?
Did this remind you of any other films you’ve seen?
Anatomy of a Murder (1959) is an American courtroom
drama directed by Otto Preminger and starring James Stewart, Lee Remick, Ben
Gazzara, Arthur O’Connell, Eve Arden, and Kathryn Grant. The supporting cast
includes George C. Scott, Orson Bean, and Murray Hamilton. The musical score is
by Duke Ellington.
Lawyer Paul Biegler (Stewart), a former district attorney,
is contacted by Laura Manion (Remick) to defend her husband, US Army Lieutenant
Frederick “Manny” Manion. Manny was arrested for murdering innkeeper Bernard “Barney”
Quill. Manny doesn’t deny murdering Quill, but he said he did so because he
raped his wife.
Biegler, a small-town lawyer in the Upper Peninsula of
Michigan, uses all his knowledge of the law to defend Manny. Will his
folksy lawyer strategy get Manny acquitted, or will the sophisticated prosecuting
attorney, Claude Dancer (Scott), get Manny convicted of murder?
Otto Preminger (1905 -1986) was an American film
director who made more than 35 feature films during a five-decade career. Born
in the Austro-Hungarian Empire into a Jewish family. Preminger was drawn to acting from an
early age and became the apprentice of famed stage director Max Reinhardt. In
1935, he was recruited by Twentieth Century-Fox to apprentice as a director at
the studio. After a rocky start, Preminger established himself as an A-list
director after Rouben Mamoulian was fired from Laura (1944).
The film noir classic made major stars of Gene Tierney and Dana Andrews and is
considered one of the best film noirs of all time. While under contract to Fox,
Preminger directed Fallen Angel (1945), Centennial
Summer (1946), Forever Amber (1947), and Daisy
Kenyon (1947). After he left Fox, Preminger became a maverick,
constantly clashing with members of the Production Code. He released two films
without the approval of the Production Code: The Moon is Blue (1953)
and The Man with the Golden Arm (1955). Both films were
financial successes and helped bring an end to the Code entirely. Later
successes for Preminger include Anatomy of a Murder (1959)
and Exodus (1960).
James Stewart (1908 - 1997) was an American
actor whose career spanned almost five decades and 80 films. Stewart often
portrayed the ideal of the average American who was decent and honest. Stewart
signed a seven-year contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, where he appeared in a
variety of supporting roles in B and A pictures. It wasn’t until he was
loaned out to Columbia Pictures to costar in Frank Capra’s You Can’t
Take It With You (1938) that his home studio began to take notice.
Still, his best roles were on loan to other studios, including Mr. Smith
Goes to Washington (1939) at Columbia again and Destry Rides
Again (1939) at Universal. M-G-M eventually cast him in The
Philadelphia Story (1940) where he won the Academy Award for Best
Actor, which cemented his reputation as a leading man and star. From there, he
went on to make The Shop Around the Corner (1940) and The
Mortal Storm (1940). After serving in the United States Army from 1941
- 1945, Stewart returned to Hollywood where he continued as a popular leading
man. During the 1950s, Steward made two films with director Alfred Hitchcock, which are considered two of the director’s best films: Rear Window (1954)
and Vertigo (1958). Vertigo was voted the
greatest film ever made by Sight & Sound in 2012.
Lee Remick (1935 – 1991) was an American actress and
singer. She made her film debut in A Face in the Crowd (1957) directed
by Elia Kazan. She quickly established herself as a Major leading actress in
films like Wild River (1960), Days of Wine and Roses (1962),
which earned her a Best Actress Oscar nomination, No Way to Treat a Lady
(1968), The Detective (1968), The Omen (1976), and The
Europeans (1979). Remick also received a Best Actress Tony nomination for
her lead performance in Wait Until Dark (1966), a role that Audrey
Hepburn would portray in the screen version in 1967.She received Golden Globe
Awards for her television work. She won a BAFTA TV Award for Best Actress for
her performance in Jennie: Lady Churchill (1974).
Ben Gazzara (1930 – 2012) was an American actor,
director, appearing on stage, film, and television. His big break came with his
starring role as Brick in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1955 -1956). This led
to a successful film career starting with Anatomy of a Murder (1959). He
starred on television in Run for Your Life (1965 -1968). Gazzara was a
frequent collaborator of John Cassavetes, working with him on the films Husbands
(1970) and The Killing of a Chinese Bookie (1976). Some of his movies
include The Bridge at Remagen (1969), Voyage of the Damned
(1976), and Saint Jack (1979).
Anatomy of a Murder trivia
The film pushed the boundaries of the Production Code by
using words like “bitch,” “contraception,” and “rape,” words not heard in
American films before.
James Stewart’s father found the film offensive and took out
an ad in his local paper advising people not to see it.
Much of the movie was filmed on location in Marquette
County, Michigan.
Lana Turner turned down the role of Laura, leaving the door
open for Remick, Preminger’s first choice.
James Stewart received his last Oscar-nominated performance.
It was George C. Scott’s first Academy Award nomination.
The film was banned in Chicago upon its initial release.
Ben Gazzara and James Stewart
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Lee Remick, Eve Arden, and James Stewart
Discussion questions
This film was shocking for its frankness when dealing with a
subject like rape and murder. Did you find anything about the film shocking or
surprising?
Three actors from the film were nominated for Academy
Awards: James Stewart, Best Actor; Arthur O’Connell, Best Supporting Actor; and
George C. Scott, also for Best Supporting Actor. Did you think their
performances were worthy of the nominations?
What did you think of the jazz score by Duke Ellington? Do
you think it worked with the movie?
What did you make of the Lee Remick character? Do you think
she was telling the truth about her relationship with Barney?
Did the Michigan location add to the film’s authenticity?
The Iron Curtain (1948) is an American espionage
thriller directed by William A. Wellman and starring Dana Andrews and Gene
Tierney. It is based on the memoirs of Igor Gouzenko, a Russian code
deciphering expert working at the Soviet embassy in Ottawa, Canada, in 1943. The
supporting cast includes June Havoc, Berry Kroeger, and Edna Best. This was the
first about the Cold War.
Dana Andrews plays Igor Gouzenko, an expert at deciphering
codes, who arrives at the Soviet embassy in Ottawa to help set up a base of
operations to spy on the Canadian government. At first, Igor is loyal to the
Russian cause, but once his pregnant wife, Anna (Tierney), arrives, he begins to
have second thoughts.
Is capitalism as evil as he has been taught? Does Russia
deserve his loyalty?
Once it is decided that Igor is to be sent back to Moscow, he faces a difficult decision.
Gene Tierney and Dana Adrews
William A. Wellman (1896 – 1975) was an American
film director. He started his directorial career in silent films. Wellman
directed Wings (1927), which was the first film to win the
Academy Award for Best Picture at the 1st Academy Awards ceremony. Wellman
directed two classic films released in 1937: Nothing Sacred and A
Star is Born. Other important films directed by Wellman include Beau
Geste (1939), Roxie Hart (1942), The Story of
G.I. Joe (1945), Yellow Sky (1948), Battleground (1949),
and The High and the Mighty (1954).
Dana Andrews (1909 – 1992) was an American stage
and film actor. During the 1940s, Andrews was a major star and leading man in Laura (1944), State Fair (1945), A
Walk in the Sun (1945), The Best Years of Our Lives (1946), Canyon
Passage (1946), Boomerang! (1947), and Daisy
Kenyon (1947) co-starring Joan Crawford and Henry Fonda. During the
1950s, film roles were harder to come by, but he had success in Elephant
Walk (1954) co-starring Elizabeth Taylor and Peter Finch, While
the City Sleeps (1956), and Curse of the Demon (1957).
In 1958, he replaced Henry Fonda on Broadway in Two for the Seesaw.
Gene Tierney (1920 – 1991) was an American
actress. Tierney got her start on the stage where she played the ingenue lead
in The Male Animal. Tierney made her movie debut in 1940 in The
Return of Frank James starring Henry Fonda. She worked steadily in the
early 1940s but established herself as a top box office star with Laura (1944).
She starred in Leave Her to Heaven the next year, which was the
biggest hit of the year and Fox’s biggest moneymaking success until The
Robe (1953). Other successes for Tierney include Dragonwyck (1946), The
Razor’s Edge (1946), and The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947).
The Iron Curtain trivia
The film was shot on location in Ottawa.
Soviet sympathizers tried to disrupt location shooting, but
were unsuccessful.
The fourth of five movies Andrews and Tierney made together.
The film was the number one movie in America during its
first two weeks of release and was a commercial success.
New York Times film critic Bosley Crowther said the film
would negatively impact U.S. Soviet relations. Producer Darryl F. Zanuck
responded to Crowther’s review in a much-publicized letter to the critic.
Twentieth Century Fox considered The Iron Curtain to
be one of their biggest films of the year; the film’s score was played with the
studio logo instead of the Fox fanfare.
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Discussion questions
Considering this film was made at a time when the Cold War
was just beginning, does it hold up as entertainment?
Did the film’s documentary-style narrative appeal to you?
Do you think the film was realistic in its portrayal of the
Russian spies?
Did the on-location filming at to the film’s realism?
How do you think the film was received by audiences in 1948?
Did the film remind you of other movies you’ve seen?
Forgetting that the film is based on a true story, does it work as a political thriller?
The film was criticized for using music from Russian composers. What did you think of the film score? Does it work?
True Confession (1937) is an American screwball
comedy directed by Wesley Ruggles and starring Carole Lombard, Fred MacMurray,
and John Barrymore. The supporting cast included Una Merkel, Porter Hall, Edgar
Kennedy, Fritz Feld, and Hattie McDaniel.
Carole Lombard plays Helen Bartlett, a housewife and aspiring
fiction writer. Helen is a habitual storyteller; she is often fast and loose
with the truth. Helen bangs out short stories on her portable typewriter at
home while her husband, Ken (MacMurray), tries to establish his fledgling law
practice. He has a problem: he’s only interested in taking on clients who are
truthful and innocent. He is the complete opposite of Helen. Ken’s refusal to
take on “guilty” clients causes friction between the young couple struggling to
make ends meet. Helen writes stories in an attempt to help with the family
finances, which Ken resents. When Helen is conjuring up a lie, her tongue is
planted firmly in her cheek, and you can see the wheels turning in her head.
When Helen applies for a private secretary position at an
incredibly generous salary, her best friend, Daisy (Una Merkel), smells a rat.
Helen’s boss, Otto Krayler (John T. Murray), really doesn’t want a secretary, but
rather a playmate. On her very first day on the job, Krayler makes a pass at
Helen and she quits in a huff. Later, she realizes that she left her hat and
coat at Krayler’s lavish apartment. When she and Daisy go to retrieve them, the
two discover that Krayler has been murdered and that, according to Detective
Darsey (Edgar Kennedy), Helen is the prime suspect!
How is Helen going to get out of this mess?
Fred MacMurray, Carole Lombard, and John Barrymore
True Confession trivia
Lombard lobbied to get John Barrymore hired to play Charlie
Jasper. She also insisted that he get star billing.
This was the fourth and final film that Lombard and Fred
MacMurray made together. All four of their films were box office successes.
True Confession was released within weeks of the more
famous Lombard film Nothing Sacred. Ironically, True Confession
was the bigger box office hit.
The film was remade in 1946 as Cross My Heart
starring Betty Hutton.
This blogger thinks this film was a template for the I
Love Lucy television situation comedy.
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Una Merkel, Carol Lombard
Discussion questions
Why do you think Lombard fans preferred this film over Nothing
Sacred, released the same year?
Was Lombard believable as a congenital liar?
What did you think of the girlfriend chemistry between Lombard
and Una Merkel? Did their friendship remind you of another famous girlfriend
team?
As noted in the trivia section, this was the fourth and last
film that MacMurray and Lombard made. Did you think they had good on-screen
chemistry?
What did you think of John Barrymore’s performance? Was
Lombard right in insisting he be cast in the role of Charlie Jasper?
Did the film remind you of any other films you’ve seen?
The Lost Weekend is a 1945 American drama directed by
Billy Wilder and starring Ray Milland and Jane Wyman. The screenplay was
written by Wilder and Charles Brackett based on the novel by Charles R.
Jackson. The cinematography is by John F. Seitz, and the music is by Miklos
Rozsa.
New York writer Don Birnam (Milland) is packing for a
weekend vacation with his brother Wick (Philip Terry). Don, who is an
alcoholic, is desperately trying to get out of traveling out of town. When his girlfriend Helen St. James (Wyman) arrives
with gifts and two tickets to an afternoon concert, Don suggests that Wick go to the concert instead of him. Don’s goal is to get drunk and forget about
the weekend trip.
So begins a downward spiral into severe alcoholism, where Don
will do anything for a drink.
Will Don be able to claw his way back to sobriety and a
stable life with Helen?
Ray Milland and Jane Wyman
Billy Wilder (1906 - 2002) was an Austrian-born
American film director, screenwriter, and producer. He won six Academy Awards
for his writing and direction and was nominated twenty-one times over a career
that spanned five decades. Wilder started his career as a writer, penning the
screenplays for Ninotchka (1939), Ball of Fire (1942), Double
Indemnity (1945), The Lost Weekend (1946), Sunset
Boulevard (1951) Boulevard (1951), Sabrina (1955), Some
Like it Hot (1960), and The Apartment (1961). As a
director, he won Academy Awards for directing The Lost Weekend (1946)
and The Apartment (1961). Wilder directed fourteen
different actors in Oscar-nominated roles. He is considered one of the most
versatile directors from Hollywood’s Classical period.
Ray Milland (1907 – 1986) was a Welsh-American
movie star and film director. He won a Best Actor Oscar for portraying an
alcoholic writer in Billy Wilder’s The Lost Weekend (1945).
Milland played bit parts at M-G-M and Paramount. While at Paramount, he was
loaned to Universal to for a lead in the Deanna Durbin movie Three
Smart Girls (1936). The success of the film led to him being cast in
leading roles. He became one of Paramount’s biggest stars, remaining there for
almost 20 years. Other films starring Milland include The Major and the
Minor (1942), Reap the Wild Wind (1942), where he had
top billing over John Wayne, the horror classic The Uninvited (1944), The
Big Clock (1948), and Dial M for Murder (1954). Later
in his career, he starred as Ryan O’Neal’s father in Love Story (1970).
Jane Wyman (1917 – 2007) was an American actress. Wyman
starred in movies and television and won a Best Actress Academy Award for her
performance in Johnny Belinda (1948). She received four nominations for
Best Actress between 1946 and 1954. She had a huge success with the primetime
soap opera Falcon Crest (1981 – 1990), where she played the conniving family
matriarch Angela Channing. Other Wyman films include The Lost Weekend
(1945), The Yearling (1946), Magnificent Obsession (1954), All
That Heaven Allows (1955), and Pollyanna (1960).
Ray Milland
The Lost Weekend trivia
Billy Wilder claimed that the liquor industry offered Paramount
$5 million not to release the film.
Ray Milland checked himself into Bellevue Hospital with the
medical staff’s approval so he could experience what a drunk ward was like.
Ray Milland didn’t give an acceptance speech when he won the
Academy Award for Best Actor. He acknowledged the applause and left the stage.
Billy Wilder read The Lost Weekend on a train ride
from New York to Los Angeles. He thought it would be the perfect material for
his next film.
Ray Milland was advised not to take the role, fearing it would
damage his career. Many leading men of the day turned the role down.
Jane Wyman was loaned to Paramount for her role as Helen St.
James. Wyman called it a “miracle.” Her performance received good notices, and
she went from supporting player to major movie star.
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Click HERE to watch the movie on the Internet Archive.
Discussion questions
How do you think audiences in 1945 reacted to this film?
Does the impact of this film hold up in 2025?
Was Ray Milland believable as an alcoholic?
Did he and Jane Wyman have good on-screen chemistry?
Every year, I try to plan what movies I’m going to see at
the TCM Film Festival. It’s tough keeping to the schedule you planned
out beforehand, but there are challenges. Below are the films I planned on
seeing and what I actually saw. The reality of what I ended up seeing is in
red.
Thursday April 24
7-8 p.m. Teacher’s Pet (1958) – I’ve never
seen this film, and I’m excited to see it on the big screen with an audience.
And for this night only, it doesn’t conflict with any other movie I’d like to
see. I actually kept to schedule on this one. I was determined to see this film.
I had never seen it before, and I wasn’t disappointed. Day and Gable were great,
and so was Gig Young, nominated for a Best Supporting Oscar for his
performance; it was well deserved. It was entertaining, and it looked great on the big screen.
Gig Young, Doris Day, and Clark Gable
10 p.m. – 12 a.m. If I can stay awake, I may see Hud (1963)
in the Egyptian Theatre. It’s been years since I’ve seen this film, and never in
the theater, so this could be fun. Well, I wasn’t able to stay awake. I wasn’t
too disappointed, but I would have liked to have seen it with an audience at
the Egyptian.
Friday April 25
9 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Thunderball (1965)
starring Sean Connery as James Bond. Screening in the Chinese Multiplex House,
and Luciana Paluzzi will be at the post-screening. Cinderella (1950)
is screening at the El Capitan Theatre at 10 a.m. I’m tempted to go see it
because I haven’t seen it since my older sister took me to see it when I was a
kid, and the El Capitan is a really beautiful theater. I’ll probably end up
seeing the Bond film. Odd decision between Thunderball and Cinderella,
but that’s how it goes at the TCMFF. I ended up seeing Thunderball, and I
was glad I did. It was a beautiful DCP presentation. The color was perfect; it
looked brand new. It was a James Bond film I hadn’t seen before, so it was a
real treat to see it on the big screen (you might be seeing this phrase often).
Bond bad girl Luciana Paluzzi was interviewed after the film by Eddie Muller.
Paluzzi, who is 87 years old, was a delight. She looked amazing and had wonderful
stories about the director, Terrence Young, and Sean Connery. She and Connery
remained lifelong friends after the film wrapped.
12:15 p.m. – 2:15 p.m. This is a toss-up. The Time
Machine (1960) and Babe (1995) are both scheduled at
the same time. The Time Machine is in the small Chinese
Multiplex Theatre 4. I didn’t follow my plans at all. I chose Servant’s
Entrance (1934), starring Janet Gaynor and Lew Ayres. The supporting cast
included Ned Sparks and Walter Connolly. I had never heard of this film, a
screwball comedy, but it packed out the Egyptian. The movie is a forgotten gem
that includes an amazing animated dream sequence by Disney animators, three
years before Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. I was glad I saw this film; it may be my favorite from the whole festival.
3 p.m. – 5 p.m.; 3:15 p.m. -5 p.m.; 3:30 – 5:15 p.m. Three
movies that I would like to see, but I have to choose one. In order of show
times, it’s: Bringing Up Baby (1938), The Enchanted
Cottage, and Edge of the City (1957). Which movie would
you choose? I ended up seeing The Enchanted Cottage. I had seen Bringing
Up Baby on the big screen just a few months ago, and Edge of the City
was playing in Theatre Four, which is the smallest of the multiplex theatres, and it’s a challenge to get in sometimes. So, I decided to see The Enchanted
Cottage. I hadn’t seen that movie in decades, so it felt like new to me. It was a
restored DCP presentation, and looked beautiful in glorious black and white!
Robert Young and Dorothy McGuire
6:30 p.m. The Lady Eve (1941) is a movie I
have to see on the big screen with an audience. It’s one of my favorite Preston
Sturges films, and it stars two legends of the screen: Barbara Stanwyck and
Henry Fonda. There wasn’t a chance I was going to miss this one. It was wonderful seeing it on the big screen for the first time with an
audience primed to enjoy it, and we did!
9 p.m. – 11:15 p.m. Now, Voyager (1942);
9:15 – 10:45 p.m. Lili (1953). Another toss-up and two
completely different movies. I may just flip a coin on this one. It might be
tough getting into Lili since it’s screening in Theatre 4.
Well, I decided on Lili. I remember seeing Lili when I was young.
They used to play it at children’s matinees. I think they thought the puppets
made it perfect for kids, but it’s a film that deals with some adult
themes. The film was shown in 35mm.
Saturday April 26
9 a.m. – 1 p.m. Ben-Hur (1959) is being
presented in a world premiere restoration in the Chinese Theatre. I can’t think
of a better theatre to see this Academy Award-winning epic. If I see this film,
that means I’m giving up a chance to see two other movies. I would like to
see Daisy Kenyon (1947) at the Egyptian Theatre in a nitrate
print. I opted to see Ben-Hur at the Chinese in a world premiere
restoration that was absolutely glorious. I can’t remember the last time I saw
a movie as clear and perfect as this one. The color was so vibrant and clear, it
was like seeing it for the first time. The chariot race on the screen at
the Chinese was thrilling. As many times as I’ve seen Ben-Hur, the
chariot race never gets old.
3:45 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. To Be or Not To Be (1942)
is screening at Theatre 4 so it could be tough getting into this one, but I’m
going to try. This Ernst Lubitsch comedy is one of the best of the era. I got
in and it was great. The audience was totally into it, and made it all the
more enjoyable.
9 p.m. – 11:15 p.m. A Guy Named Joe is a
movie I wanted to see as soon as it was announced. The film stars Spencer Tracy
and Irene Dunne, with a star-making turn by a young Van Johnson. It’s in
Theatre 4, so I’ll have to get in line early. I was determined to get into this
movie, so I skipped the group of movies that started at 6:15 p.m. I ended up
being number two in line. I shouldn’t have worried because the theatre wasn’t
filled?! I could have seen any one of the movies before it and gotten in. I was
glad I saw it on the big screen, regardless. I thought a film starring Tracy and
Dunne would have been a bigger draw, but there was a lot of competition during
that slot. Oh, by the way, I was number two in line.
Sunday April 27
Sunday can be a crap shoot with the TBA movies being
revealed. As of this moment, I don’t know what I want to see. Nothing is a
must-see for me, although there are some movies I’d like to see on the big
screen, like Splendor in the Grass (1961) at 11:45 a.m. in
Theatre 1. I may go see the silent version of Beau Geste (1926)
in the Egyptian Theatre at 7:30 p.m. I ended up seeing at 9 a.m. All This
and Heaven Too (1940) in Theatre Four (my luck getting into this theatre
was extraordinary). I did go to see Splendor in the Grass in Theatre 1.
Wood’s daughter, Natasha Gregson Wagner, with her daughter were
interviewed before the film by Alicia Malone. Natasha’s daughter had never seen
the movie before, so she was seeing it for the first time on the big screen
with an audience. She never met her grandmother. At 5:30 p.m., I went to see Moonlight
and Pretzels (1933). This pre-code musical was a hoot. A low-rent imitation
of 42nd Street (1933), was so bad it was good. The audience
ate it up, and so did I. Some memorable numbers from the movie included “Dusty
Shoes.” Check it out below!
The last movie I saw was Beau Geste (1926) starring
Ronald Colman, Neil Hamilton, Ralph Forbes, with Victor McLaglen and William
Powell. This silent film was making its world premiere restoration at the
Festival. Shown in the Egyptian theatre with a small orchestra and a foley artist who provided sound effects. It was
quite amazing to experience a silent film the way audiences would have when it
was first released.
All in all, I saw 13 movies in four days, which comes to 3.25
movies a day. In past Festivals, I’ve seen as many as 16 movies. This year, I
took out some time for lunch and dinner, something I neglected in past years.