Another Turner Classic Film Festival (TCMFF) is in the books. This year’s festival was held from April 30 to May 3. The anticipation for the TCMFF is huge. Thinking about the film festival helps get me through the Chicago winters.
At this festival, I saw 11 movies. This total is the lowest of
all my festivals, dating back to 2015. There were so many movies I wanted
to see that I had to be strategic, so I passed on some films to
guarantee that I’d get into the ones I really wanted to see and the ones I knew
would be the most popular.
What did I see?
Thursday, April 30
Out of the Past (1947) I love this classic film noir
starring Robert Mitchum and Jane Greer, co-starring Kirk Douglas and Rhonda
Fleming. The movie was introduced by Eddie Muller and Dana Delany. The film we
saw at the Egyptian Theatre was a 4K restoration by Warner Bros. Discovery. Not
as famous as Double Indemnity (1944), but every bit as good. A must-see
on any screen.
Man Hunt (1941). This World War II drama stars Walter Pidgeon and Joan Bennett. Pidgeon stars as a big-game hunter whose failure at assassinating Hitler puts him on the run. He meets up with Bennett, a Cockney streetwalker who helps to hide him from his Nazi pursuers. Directed by Fritz Lang, this is the beginning of his collaboration with Bennett that included The Woman in the Window (1944), Scarlet Street (1945), and The Secret Beyond the Door (1947). The film was screened in Chinese Multiplex #6.
Friday, May 1
Letty Lynton (1932). The movie that everyone has been
dying to see for over 90 years. If you’re a classic movie fan, you’ve heard of this film. Presented in a beautiful 4K restoration by Warner
Bros. Discovery. The film stars Joan Crawford and Robert Montgomery. The other
star is the clothes designed for Crawford by the legendary M-G-M costume
designer, Adrian. The film was introduced by Eddie Muller, George Feltenstein,
and Casey LaLonde, Joan Crawford’s grandson. According to Muller and LaLonde,
this was the movie that made Joan Crawford, Joan Crawford. At the screening, we
learned that the film will be released on Blu-Ray in June. The film was
screened in the Egyptian Theatre.
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| Joan Crawford in the Letty Lynton dress |
Strangers on a Train (1951) As soon as Letty Lynton let out, I was back on line at the Egyptian Theatre. Strangers on a Train was the beginning of Alfred Hitchcock’s amazing string of classic movies. After a series of box-office disappointments like Rope (1948), Under Capricorn (1949), and Stage Fright (1950), many people thought Hitchcock had lost his touch. Strangers on a Train put that idea to rest. Hitchcock would produce a string of classics, including Rear Window (1954), The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956), Vertigo (1958), North by Northwest (1959), Psycho (1960), and The Birds (1963). The film was introduced by Alicia Malone with special guest Carol Burnett. She was an usher at the old Warner Bros. Theatre on Hollywood Blvd. while on summer break from college. Strangers was playing, and in the old days, movies ran continuously. You could walk into the theater during the middle of the movie, sit down, watch, and then when the movie got to the part where you came in, you’d leave. While Carol was working as an usher, an old couple came during the film’s finale and wanted to be seated. Carol tried to convince the couple that they should wait until the film started again because it would spoil their enjoyment. The manager overheard this “discussion,” and Carol was fired on the spot. When she became famous, and she was asked where she’d like her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, she asked for it to be right in front of the old movie theater. Years later, when Alfred Hitchcock heard about Carol’s firing, he sent her a framed copy of the movie poster. He wrote, “Dear Carol, I’m sorry. Alfred Hitchcock.”
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| Fred MacMurray and Carole Lombard |
The Princess Comes Across (1936) is a forgotten screwball comedy/mystery starring Carole Lombard and Fred MacMurray. This was the second of four films the stars made together. Alicia Malone interviewed Kate MacMurray, the daughter of Fred MacMurray and June Haver. Kate spoke lovingly of her father and his friendship with Lombard. She said he was his favorite leading lady, although I heard her say at the screening of The Egg and I at an earlier festival that Claudette Colbert was his favorite. In any event, it was a delightful movie shown in a packed Theater #4. Kate had never seen the movie on the big screen, so she stayed and watched it with us. She was sitting right behind me.
Saturday, May 2
Phantom Lady (1944) Saturday morning was relaxing. I
decided to skip all the early-morning movies and have a nice breakfast at 25
Degrees, inside the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. I wanted to get into see Phantom
Lady in Theater #4, so that was one of the reasons I passed on the earlier
films. After breakfast, I went to the Multiplex and was first in line for Phantom.
The theater was totally sold out, so my strategy worked. Eddie Muller
interviewed Christina Lane, the author of her 2020 biography, Phantom Lady:
Hollywood Producer Joan Harrison. It was a great introduction, but the 35mm
print was not the best, which was a bit disappointing. Fortunately, the film is
good enough that you could get past the less-than-perfect print. I’m glad I got
to see it on the big screen.
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| Ella Raines and Alan Curtis in the shadows |
There’s Always Tomorrow (1956) is a classic Douglas Sirk melodrama starring Barbara Stanwyck, Fred MacMurray, and Joan Bennett. MacMurray is a married (to Bennett) father of three children and feels like his life is dull and meaningless. When Stanwyck surprises MacMurray with a visit while she’s in town, he begins to think that life with Stanwyck, an old colleague, would be better than the life he’s currently living. How will it all end? The movie was introduced by Dana Dalany and former child actress Gigi Perreau, who starred in the film as the older daughter of MacMurray and Bennett’s characters. Perreau had some interesting stories about the making of the film, including the fact that she felt that Stanwyck was in total control of the movie and not in a bad way. She said she, “Missy,” played cards and smoked cigarettes with the crew, which was something she would never have been allowed to do as a teenager on the set. Another packed house in Theater #4.
The Devil and Miss Jones (1941) is a delightful comedy starring Jean Arthur, Robert Cummings, Spring Byington, Edmund Gwenn, and Charles Coburn. It’s a tale of labor versus management. Charles Coburn is a rich industrialist who owns a New York City department store. He’s so rich that he didn’t even know he owned it, until he was hanged in effigy by a disgruntled department store staff that includes Arthur, Cummings, and Byington. Cummings is an organizer fighting for better treatment for employees. Coburn is convinced that he can get things under control by going undercover as a department store employee. Much to his own surprise, he becomes friendly with the “agitators” and becomes their champion. I don’t remember who introduced this film, but it attracted a good crowd in Multiplex Theater #1.
Sunday, May 3
The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) is one of my
favorite movies. I’ve always wanted to see it on the big screen, and it was a
great experience. What we saw was a restored version of the film that looked
brand new. I was a special guest of author Alison Macor, who introduced the
movie. She wrote a book, The Making of The Best Years of Our Lives: The HollywoodClassic That United a Nation. Seeing it with an audience was special. When
two of the main characters got together, the audience applauded. Thanks to
Alison, I got a “golden ticket,” which meant I didn’t have to wait in line and
had a reserved seat! Not bad. There was a good crowd, although I think it
should have been packed in Multiplex Theater #1.
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| Dana Andrews and Teresa Wright |
From Song to Scene was an event in Club TCM with a trio of music supervisors, with Eddie Muller moderating. The job of the music supervisor is to work with the director to make sure the music used in a film matches the narrative. One of the three music supervisors, Maureen Crowe, graduated from high school with me. We both graduated from Holy Trinity High School, Hicksville, Long Island, New York. We last saw each other at our high school reunion in October and planned on seeing each other during the festival. However, she wasn’t on the TCM schedule at that time. It was great seeing her in action, and she and her colleagues were thrilled by the positive reaction.
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| Maureen and me |
Trouble in Paradise (1932) I have to admit that I don’t think I’ve seen this pre-Code classic from beginning to end. I’ve seen parts of it over the years, so seeing it on the big screen in a beautiful 4K digital restoration was a real treat. Director Ernst Lubitsch was a master of pre-Code comedies, and Trouble may be his best film from this period. The movie was introduced by Julia Sweeney, a true Lubitsch fan. Her introduction was funny, informative, and brief. Translation: it was perfect! I think Multiplex #1 was sold out for this showing.
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| Kay Francis, Herbert Marshall, and Miriam Hopkins |
Lady Windemere’s Fan (1925) was a silent film version of the Oscar Wilde play, directed by Ernst Lubitsch (two Lubitsch films in one day). It starred a very young Ronald Colman. The film was accompanied by the Molto Alto Motion Picture Orchestra. The film, restored by The Museum of Modern Art, was beautiful. It looked as good as it probably looked in 1925 when it first premiered. The last three festivals, I’ve ended with a silent film (last year’s silent, Beau Geste (1926), also starred Ronald Colman). The film was introduced by TCM host Jacqueline Stewart in the Egyptian Theatre.
Another great festival is in the books.
I’m already thinking of next year!







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