Each month, I scour the Turner Classic Movies Now Playing
guide for upcoming films that I can't miss. The highlights are posted here for
your reading and viewing pleasure! (All listed times are Eastern Standard,
check your local listings or TCM.com for actual air times in your area. Each
day's schedule begins at 6:00 a.m.; if a film airs between midnight and 6 a.m.
it is listed on the previous day's programming schedule.)
My monthly post is late this time due to technical difficulties. I’ve just moved into a new house and am currently making do without internet (how will I live?!) and cable (seriously, how will I live?!). Everything was supposed to be hooked up earlier this week, but I was subsequently told by Time Warner Cable that it couldn’t be done since the neighbor’s dogs happened to be outside when the technician arrived. So, I’m now forced to make another appointment based on the schedule of these dogs – capricious, free-living animals, who come and go as they please with no sense of obligation to their neighbors’ need for cable TV. So, I don’t know when I’ll be able to get TCM again, but here’s what I would watch if I could.
12/7, 12 AM – The Shop Around the Corner (1940)
12/14, 9:30 PM - Design for Living (1933)
12/28, 1:30 AM – That Uncertain Feeling (1941)
TGIF becomes doubly true this month with films by master director Ernst Lubitsch in primetime. There seems to be a Lubitsch revival of late and I think some of the credit goes to Nora Ephron’s film You’ve Got Mail. Whether you like that film or not, before Ephron’s remake, how many people had really even seen Lubitsch’s The Shop Around the Corner? Now, it’s a Christmas mainstay on TCM (and deservedly so!). I’ve picked this film and two other Lubitsch comedies as my recommendations for the month, but if you tune in on any Friday night, you will surely be entertained. What makes his films great? People often point to the “Lubitsch Touch” – the director’s knack for using unexpected details to delight the audience. I think that Lubitsch films also feature some of the most interesting female characters of the era; independent women who often rebel against the expected.
12/21: Waiting for
the End of the World
7 AM – The Lost Missile (1958)8:30 AM – The Satan Bug (1965)
10:30 AM – The Last Man on Earth (1964)
12 PM – The Bed Sitting Room (1969)
2 PM – Five (1951)
4 PM – Panic in Year Zero (1962)
6 PM – The World, The Flesh and The Devil (1959)
Rogue missiles, deadly viruses, nuclear war – many films have made a guess at what could eventually bring an end to civilization as we know it. Lately zombies are a popular culprit, also calendars. December 21, 2012 marks the end of the Mayan calendar; therefore, the end of world as well. If you’re able to watch movies in your underground bunker or emergency ark, today’s TCM line-up may be instructive (if you survive).
Directed by Vincente
Minelli
12/15, 4 AM – Two Weeks in Another Town (1962)12/18, 10 PM &12/24, 4:30 PM – Meet Me in St. Louis (1944)
Since I read a biography of Vincente Minelli last year (A Hundred or More Hidden Things: The Life and Films of Vincente Minelli by Mark Griffin), I’ve been motivated to see all the films by this talented and diverse director. This month I’m looking forward to revisiting an old favorite – Meet Me in St. Louis – and discovering something new – Two Weeks in Another Town. Each film shows a different aspect of Minelli’s filmography. St. Louis is a buoyant Technicolor musical showcasing his frequent leading lady, and one-time wife, Judy Garland. On the other end of the spectrum, metaphorically speaking, Two Weeks features another key Minelli collaborator, Kirk Douglas, in a drama about the darker side of Hollywood.
12/16, 8 PM – Carol for Another Christmas (1964)
Usually the thought of another twist on A Christmas Carol wouldn’t excite me; however, this film sounds
like a rarity worth checking out: a made-for-TV movie with an anti-war theme written
by Rod Serling and directed by Joseph Mankiewicz, starring Sterling Hayden, Eva
Marie Saint, Ben Gazzara, and Peter Sellers. Since it aired only once, in 1964,
chances are you haven’t seen this one either.
12/24, 12 AM – Auntie Mame (1958)
Who can sleep on Christmas Eve anyway? Live life to the
fullest! Ring in Christmas morning with Mame!(And if you’re able to watch this, it means you have survived the Mayan apocalypse - even more reason to celebrate!)
BONUS: TCM has two evenings of special programming which I also wanted to give a mention:
12/3, 8 PM - Baby Peggy
1 movie, 1 documentary, and 3 shorts starring one of cinema’s first child stars, “Baby Peggy.”
12/10, 8 PM - Academy Conversations: The Art of Production Design
This special presentation of 4 artfully-designed films is co-hosted by two Oscar-nominated production designers, Guy Hendrix Dyas and Lilly Kilvert.
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