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TCM Genre movies schedule...

Just watched The Fly on DVR. It's a real classic, and I love it that it centers on a strong and intelligent female lead (and a beautiful one too). Even when she does have moments of "hysteria" and screaming, Patricia Owens still comes off as strong and dignified. Vincent Price is terrific too, as usual. And the relationship between the Delambres is so charming that what ultimately happens between them is genuinely wrenching.

But what I love the most is Price's final speech. Most B-movies would demonize Andre's efforts to "play God" and suggest that he was rightfully punished for his hubris. But this movie extols him as an explorer who made the ultimate sacrifice in the pursuit of knowledge and who deserves to be admired and emulated. And it could've portrayed Andre as a cold intellectual who was already removed from humanity, like so many film geniuses, but instead it makes him warm and loving and entirely human at the same time as being prone to tunnel focus on his intellectual pursuits, and Helene never resents or shames him for his devotion to his work. Despite hitting some of the predictable fear-of-progress beats of the genre, it still comes down as remarkably science-positive.

By the way, just yesterday I saw another 1958 film online at io9 (which is posting legally-free old genre movies every Sunday), I Married a Monster from Outer Space, which despite its lurid title is another pretty smart and thoughtful monster movie driven by a strong, smart, and independent female lead -- one who actually had more success than Helene at convincing others of her wild claims. I guess 1958 was a pretty good year for women in sci-fi film. (Then again, that year also gave us Attack of the 50-Foot Woman and Queen of Outer Space, which I'd hardly call bold steps forward for feminism.)
 
I'd seen it before and thought it was OK, but this time around, I really enjoyed Phase IV. In the absence of assurances to the contrary, which I didn't catch, I'm not convinced that no ants were harmed while making this picture, but that caveat aside the ant photography is pretty spectacular, both in and of itself and especially in terms of its story-telling capacity. I'm curious as to which sequences were predominately staged and involved "ant wrangling," which were simply documentary-type recordings of natural behavior, and which might have been some other sort of creative combination. Having re-evaluated it, I now consider it to be one of the superior entries in the mutated-insect sci-fi/horror film genre.
 
By the way, it looks like I missed an item in my list for this Saturday (1/16) -- Ursula Andress's She ('65) is on at noon.
 
I wonder if TCM will schedule a David Bowie marathon as a tribute, which could be heavy on genre stuff: THE MAN WHO FELL TO EARTH, THE HUNGER, LABYRINTH, THE PRESTIGE, etc.
 
That would be appropriate. I'd certainly put that on.

By the way, it turns out that my OTR app does have Chandu episodes, I just never noticed before. I haven't had a chance to listen yet. Today is my last day to catch the Chandu movie on On Demand, so hopefully I can pull an hour and a half out of my butt sometime before midnight.
 
But what I love the most is Price's final speech. Most B-movies would demonize Andre's efforts to "play God" and suggest that he was rightfully punished for his hubris. But this movie extols him as an explorer who made the ultimate sacrifice in the pursuit of knowledge and who deserves to be admired and emulated.

Agreed.
 
February, just in time:

MON 2/1
12:15 AM: The Magician ('26): Silent film about a mad scientist seeking to create life and needing a maiden's blood to do it.

TUE 2/2
1:45 PM: Forbidden Planet ('56)

THU 2/4
5:00 AM: One Million B.C. ('40): The original with Victor Mature and Carole Landis.
6:30 AM: Topper Returns ('41): Ghost comedy sequel.

FRI 2/5
6:00 PM: Heaven Can Wait ('43)

MON 2/8
5:45 AM: It Happened Tomorrow ('44): A "newspaper predicts the future" story.
7:00 AM: A Midsummer Night's Dream ('35)

TUE 2/9
5:45 PM: Logan's Run ('75)

WED 2/10
1:30 AM: A Clockwork Orange ('71)

FRI 2/12
10:30 AM: Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde ('31): At last, the superior Fredric March version again.
5:45 PM: Marooned ('69): All-star adaptation of Martin Caidin's space disaster novel, with Gregory Peck and Gene Hackman.

WED 2/17
12:15 AM: The Ghost and Mrs. Muir ('47)
12:30 PM: I Married a Witch ('42): Sort of a proto-Bewitched with Fredric March and Veronica Lake.

SAT 2/20
8:15 AM: Bell, Book and Candle ('58): Another witch comedy with Jimmy Stewart and kim Novak.
1:45 PM: The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm ('62)

SUN 2/21
1:15 AM: Seven Days in May ('64): Near-future (at the time) political thriller about a coup attempt in Washington, DC.

WED 2/24
2:30 PM: Mighty Joe Young ('49): Harryhausen's big ape.

FRI 2/26
6:30 AM: King Solomon's Mines ('50): With Deborah Kerr and Stewart Granger.
5:30 PM: Close Encounters of the Third Kind ('77)
8:00 PM: Young Frankenstein ('74)

SAT 2/27
6:00 AM: Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde ('41): And here's the lame Spencer Tracy version that TCM insists on showing more often than the good one.

SUN 2/28
Midnight: Apollo 13 ('95): Okay, this is history rather than science fiction, but it's space, so...
 
TCM's "31 Days of Oscar" is not usually the best time for genre stuff.

Unless they wanted to honor make-up and SFX Oscars, but that's probably wishful thinking.

Hmm. Do you think they're airing the 1932 Jekyll & Hyde because that's the one Fredric March won Best Actor for?

Still the only instance of an actor winning an Oscar for playing a monster, unless you count Anthony Hopkins in THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS.
 
I just got the Blu-Ray of Forbidden Planet, and the one on TCM when I tuned by looked like a VHS by comparison lol...

TCM's "31 Days of Oscar" is not usually the best time for genre stuff.

I think if you go back in this thread you'll see me post the same thing in about 3 different years lol...

Unless they wanted to honor make-up and SFX Oscars, but that's probably wishful thinking.
Hmm. Do you think they're airing the 1932 Jekyll & Hyde because that's the one Fredric March won Best Actor for?


I think they've done SFX nights in the past, they often group categories of Oscar on the same night--all supporting actors, all best score, etc.
 
Turns out the linking device they're using this time is that each film shares at least one actor from the film before it... an interesting idea.
 
Oh, dear... I just realized I forgot to post a March schedule, but I'm going to a convention tomorrow and don't have time. If anyone else would like to do the list for the rest of the month, feel free.
 
Good lord, what a lot of work, I don't envy Christopher, I'll leave this to him. I tried to stick to his format as much as I could. I winged it on which horror to include and not. Anyway, here's the rest of March:

MON 3/14
7:15 AM: Bomba the Jungle Boy ('49)
8:30 AM: Bomba and the Jungle Girl ('52): Every Jungle Boy needs a Jungle Girl
9:45 AM: Lord of the Jungle ('55)
12:30 AM: The Jungle Book ('42): I saw this in the last year or two, pretty entertaining.

SAT 3/19
6:15 AM: The Giant Behemoth ('59)
7:45 AM: The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms ('53)

MON 3/21
10:00 PM: The Picture of Dorian Gray ('45)
12:00 AM: A Bucket of Blood ('59): Corman Horror
1:15 AM: The Mystery of the Wax Museum ('33)
2:45 AM: A Quiet Place in the Country ('69): Italian Horror with Franco Nero and Vanessa Redgrave

TUE 3/22
12:15 PM: Phantom of the Rue Morgue ('54): "A mad scientist uses an ape to murder his enemies." How could it be bad with this synopsis?

WED 3/23 - From Comics To Film: First two episodes of a number of serials.

NOTE: The way the website lists these it's possible some are out of order with episode two before one but hard to tell.

8:00 PM: Batman ('43)
9:00 PM: Batman and Robin ('49)
10:00 PM: Superman ('48)
10:45 PM: Atom Man vs Superman ('50)
11:30 PM: The Green Hornet ('40)
12:30 AM: Buck Rogers ('39)
1:30 AM: Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe ('40)
2:15 AM: The Phantom ('43)
3:15 AM: Ace Drummond ('36): (genre? don't know)
4:00 AM: Dick Tracy ('37)
5:00 AM: Dick Tracy ('45): Film

THU 3/24
2:15 AM Lemora: A Child's Tale of the Supernaturnal ('73): Atmospheric horror

FRI 3/25 - Lesser Known Animation Day
6:00 AM: The Incredible Mr. Limpet ('64): Don Knotts becomes a fish
7:45 AM: Magic Boy ('59): Japanese, "Animated adventures of a young man who studies magic to battle an evil witch."
9:15 AM: Twice Upon a Time ('83): No idea, has Lorenzo Music as lead, "A despot tries to turn the world into a non-stop nightmare."
10:45 AM: The Phantom Tollbooth ('70): Chuck Jones fantasy
12:30 AM: Gulliver's Travels ('39)
2:00 PM: Gay Purr-ee ('62): Cats in Paris with Judy Garland and Robert Goulet
3:30 PM: The Lord of the Rings ('78): Ralph Bakshi's infamous flawed epic
6:00 PM: Watership Down ('78): Rabbit downer

MON 3/28
9:45 PM: F for Fake ('73): Honorable mention because it's so out there. Bizarre expose from Orson Welles

WED 3/30
8:15 AM: A Midsummer Night's Dream ('35): Shakespeare, elevate yourselves
4:00 PM: Dead of Night ('45): Supernatural horror
6:00 PM: Shock Corridor ('63): Asylum horror

I imagine 3/23 Serial Day and 3/25 Animation Day will be of interest.
 
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Thanks for filling in!

A couple of comments:

BUCKET OF BLOOD is a fun comedy-horror flick along the lines of the original LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS. (In fact, it has pretty much the same plot.) It's also an amusing spoof of the whole "beatnik" scene.

LEMORA is also worth checking out, if you like "arty" low-budget vampire movies. It doesn't entirely hold together (and kinda falls apart at the end), but, at its best, it has a dark, dreamy, fairy-tale feel . . .complete with a plot that is more less driven by dream-logic.

And, despite the title, THE PHANTOM OF THE RUE MORGUE is basically a remake of MURDERS OF THE RUE MORGUE, with Karl Malden filling in for Bela Lugosi. (Yes, you heard me right.) And it was originally released in 3-D, so don't be surprised if random objects fly toward the camera.
 
AT 3/19
6:15 AM: The Giant Behemoth ('59)
7:45 AM: The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms ('53)

Had to be early in the morning. Gah.
 
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