TiVoPlex
By John Seal
September 5, 2011
Friday 9/9/11
1:00 AM Turner Classic Movies Savages (1972 USA): This week’s winner in the "it’s okay to occasionally like a Merchant-Ivory" film sweepstakes, Savages is one of the oddest and most intriguing entries in the normally hoity-toity producers’ filmography. Set on Long Island during the 1930s, the film explores what happens after a primitive tribe known as The Mud People move into an upscale neighborhood: specifically, culture clash and croquet. To add to the weirdness, the film features a cast you wouldn’t expect to see in a Merchant-Ivory feature, including Susan Blakely, Martin Kove, and Ultra Violet! Perhaps someone spiked the Merchant-Ivory punch with some strong acid during the early ‘70s?
6:30 PM Showtime Glorious 39 (2009 GB): Ready for a period thriller with a hint of flag-waving? Here’s a British film bristling with old fashioned patriotism - the kind they used to make back in dubya dubya two! Set in the immediate days before the outbreak of the war, Glorious 39 relates the story of the moneyed Keyes family, most notably Anne (Romola Garai), a young actress who stumbles into a world of appeasement, intrigue, and Hitler sympathizers. The story - a blend of elements drawn from Graham Greene and Alan Bridges - is decent enough, but the primary reason to tune in is the film’s exemplary cast, which also includes Bill Nighy, Jeremy Northam, Christopher Lee, David Tennant, and Julie Christie.
8:30 PM The Movie Channel Les Formidables (2007 ROK): A Korean crime movie...on The Movie Channel? I shit you not! Les Formidables stars Joong-Hoon Park as a policeman taken hostage by a man whose attempts to go straight and open his own restaurant have been stymied by a conviction for a crime he didn’t commit. Complicating matters is a sick child in need of a liver transplant. If you’re looking for a story of redemption with a buddy movie twist, here you go.
11:00 PM Turner Classic Movies Breakin’ (1984 USA): What more can be said about this stone cold hip-hop classic? There’s only one thing better than watching Shabba Doo and Boogaloo Shrimp gettin’ down in their parachute pants - and that’s watching them do it in widescreen, which is what will happen tonight on TCM! I was hoping Breakin’ 2: Electric Boogaloo would also be airing, but unfortunately Breakin’ is being followed at 1:00 AM by 1979’s Roller Boogie. Now don’t get me wrong - I’m a Roller Boogie fan, too - but it would have been great to have both parts of the Breakin’ diptych air back to back in their original aspect ratios.
Saturday 9/9/11
8:00 AM Turner Classic Movies Zorro Rides Again (1937 USA): Chapters 6 and 7 of this Republic serial air this morning.
9:00 AM Turner Classic Movies Tarzan and the Lost Safari (1957 GB): The first of several Tarzan features produced in Britain but shot in Africa, Tarzan and the Lost Safari marks the point where the series began to get its second wind. Filmed throughout the continent (but primarily in British colonies), the film sees Gordon Scott return as the buffest T-man this side of Weissmuller, and revolves around the Jungle Lord’s efforts to guide some plane crash survivors to safety. The film benefits from the presence of Britpic regulars such as Wilfrid Hyde-White and Betta St. John, but plot-wise is fairly hackneyed, not straying too far from the RKO formula of old. Better was about to come, as we will discover in the weeks ahead!
5:00 PM HBO 127 Hours (2010 GB): Danny Boyle’s superb, sun-baked paean to the pleasures of do-it-yourself surgery makes its television debut this evening. Josh Brolin stars as Aron Ralston, a selfish little prick who learns a lot about himself - and the various and sundry uses for a penknife - over the course of a multi-day sojourn in a narrow canyon. Barf bags are recommended for the faint of heart. Also airs at 8:00 PM and throughout the month.
Monday 9/11/11
11:00 PM Sundance In Their Sleep (2010 FRA): Annie Parillaud stars as a woman in distress in this predictable but never less than watchable French thriller. Parillaud play Sarah, a woman in mourning for her late son, who jumped to his death months earlier in a fit of ennui. When Sarah runs across Arthur (Arthur Dupont), a young man of similar age and mien to the dear departed, she takes him under her wing - not realizing that by doing so she’s placing herself in great danger. Arthur, as it transpires, is fleeing from a very angry burglar (Thierry Fremont) - and that burglar isn’t going to let anything get between him and his beat-down. Written and directed by siblings Caroline and Eric du Potet, In Their Sleep won’t cause you to lose any of your own, but it will keep your attention.
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