Page 10 of 18

Posted: Fri Sep 17, 2010 11:30 am
by FilmFan720
TCM is advertising it as a network premiere, at least on their Facebook page.

Posted: Fri Sep 17, 2010 7:46 am
by Big Magilla
I'm pretty sure TCM has shown The Moon Is Blue several times in the last few years. I think the last time was around the Warner Archive release last year.

It's not a very good movie. It's rather stagebound and too talky, but should be seen by Oscar compleatists once. The controversy over the film was much ado about nothing.

Posted: Fri Sep 17, 2010 1:16 am
by Damien
Tonight (Friday) at 8pm eastern time, TCM is showing 1953 Best Actress nominee Maggie McNamara in The Moon Is Blue. This once-scandalous film hasn't been broadcast in decades.

Posted: Thu Aug 05, 2010 9:49 pm
by Reza
dws1982 wrote:Tomorrow morning at 8:15 AM, TCM airs Rossellini's Stromboli. Set your DVR to go a few minutes over. Last time it aired in a 1:45 timeslot, and cut off in the final sequence.

And then at 6:00 PM tomorrow, they air Europa '51.
Ingrid Bergman is luminous in both.

Posted: Thu Aug 05, 2010 7:21 pm
by dws1982
Tomorrow morning at 8:15 AM, TCM airs Rossellini's Stromboli. Set your DVR to go a few minutes over. Last time it aired in a 1:45 timeslot, and cut off in the final sequence.

And then at 6:00 PM tomorrow, they air Europa '51.

Posted: Sun Aug 01, 2010 12:52 pm
by Big Magilla
Tomorrow morning (8/2) TCM is running two Julie Christie classics not on DVD.

Christie is good in Young Cassidy, released the same year as Darling and Doctor Zhivago, but she is not the standout in a cast that also includes Rod Taylor, Maggie Smith, Flora Robson, Michael Redgrave and Edith Evans.

Begun by John Ford who had to drop out because of illness, the film was taken over by Jack Cardiff after Ford completed only two scenes: a barroom brawl scene and Robson's death scene, surpassed only by Maureen O'Hara's death scene in The Long Gray Line in the Ford canon of memorable deaths. Maggie Smith's 11th hour scene tops almost everything she's subsequently done in her entire career including her entire performance in the same year's Othello for which she was inexplicably nominated for an Oscar instead.

The Go-Between which has long been on DVD in the U.K., but not the U.S., features one of Christie's best performances as well of one Alan Bates' though it is the supporting performances of Dominic Guard, Edward Fox and especially Margaret Leighton that stand out. Nonetheless I prefer her in this to the same year's better known McCabe & Mrs. Miller.

Posted: Tue Jul 20, 2010 1:33 am
by Big Magilla
I would say that the bare bones of the plot are the same - woman kills man who turns out be her lover and she's put on trial for murder - but it has a completely different ending.

It doesn't have the production values of the Wyler classic, but Vincent Sherman was a good director of actors and he gets top notch performances from all four stars - Sheridan, Zachary Scott, Lew Ayres and especially Eve Arden whose character is the one that surprises us in the end.

Posted: Tue Jul 20, 2010 12:34 am
by Mister Tee
dws1982 wrote:Very early Wednesday morning, TCM shows Vincent Sherman's and Ann Sheridan's less-known 1947 collaboration, The Unfaithful. I've never seen it, but it's reportedly a loose adaptation of The Letter, although the screen credits don't mention it.
It's actually pretty observably the same plot -- I'd read that it was before seeing the film, but my wife, without my having informed her, noted it before the film was half over.

Posted: Mon Jul 19, 2010 9:57 pm
by dws1982
Very early Wednesday morning, TCM shows Vincent Sherman's and Ann Sheridan's less-known 1947 collaboration, The Unfaithful. I've never seen it, but it's reportedly a loose adaptation of The Letter, although the screen credits don't mention it.



Edited By dws1982 on 1279594788

Posted: Thu Jul 08, 2010 1:37 am
by Damien
dws1982 wrote:Tomorrow morning at 8:00 AM Nora Prentiss airs. This is one of the greats, and it's not available on DVD. (Warner Archive doesn't count. That DVD looks terrible. You can probably get a better-looking version off of TCM.)

After it at 10:00 AM is The Locket. This one doesn't show up very often at all. If I remember right, Damien's a big fan.
Zach is, too.

Posted: Wed Jul 07, 2010 10:09 pm
by dws1982
Tomorrow morning at 8:00 AM Nora Prentiss airs. This is one of the greats, and it's not available on DVD. (Warner Archive doesn't count. That DVD looks terrible. You can probably get a better-looking version off of TCM.)

After it at 10:00 AM is The Locket. This one doesn't show up very often at all. If I remember right, Damien's a big fan.

Posted: Mon Jul 05, 2010 5:01 pm
by Damien
Big Magilla wrote:
Mister Tee wrote:
Big Magilla wrote:The Oscar nominated song sucks, too.
That's my definite recollection from that long-ago Oscar night.

Not that I remotely doubt your opinion, but when I hear something excoriated in such harsh terms, part of me is intrigued about seeing it.
Proceed at your own risk! :)
I hated the novel, too. It was the first Norman Mailer I read and I've never again picked up another of his books.

Posted: Mon Jul 05, 2010 3:40 pm
by Big Magilla
Mister Tee wrote:
Big Magilla wrote:The Oscar nominated song sucks, too.
That's my definite recollection from that long-ago Oscar night.

Not that I remotely doubt your opinion, but when I hear something excoriated in such harsh terms, part of me is intrigued about seeing it.
Proceed at your own risk! :)

Posted: Mon Jul 05, 2010 3:21 pm
by Mister Tee
Big Magilla wrote:The Oscar nominated song sucks, too.
That's my definite recollection from that long-ago Oscar night.

Not that I remotely doubt your opinion, but when I hear something excoriated in such harsh terms, part of me is intrigued about seeing it.

Posted: Mon Jul 05, 2010 2:56 pm
by Reza
I recall watching this 20 years ago on some very late night channel just because of the Oscar nod. Yes pretty lousy film.....though good cast.