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TCM Schedule for Monday, November 5 -- GUEST PROGRAMMER: ROSE MCGOWAN

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Longhorn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Nov-03-07 01:15 PM
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TCM Schedule for Monday, November 5 -- GUEST PROGRAMMER: ROSE MCGOWAN
3:00am Hamlet (1948)
The melancholy Dane flirts with insanity while trying to prove his uncle murdered his father.
Cast: Laurence Olivier, Eileen Herlie, Jean Simmons. Dir: Laurence Olivier. BW-154 mins, TV-14

5:35am Short Film: From The Vaults: This Theatre And You (1949)
BW-8 mins

6:00am Whistler, The (1944)
A grieving widower hires an assassin to kill him only to have his late wife turn up alive.
Cast: Richard Dix, J. Carroll Naish, Gloria Stuart. Dir: William Castle. BW-60 mins, TV-PG

7:15am Power of the Whistler, The (1945)
A young woman seeks an amnesiac's true identity in the clues in his pockets.
Cast: Richard Dix, Janis Carter, Jeff Donnell. Dir: Lew Landers. BW-66 mins

8:30am Voice of the Whistler (1945)
A dying millionaire marries his nurse for companionship, only to experience a miracle cure.
Cast: Richard Dix, Lynn Merrick, Rhys Williams. Dir: William Castle. BW-60 mins

9:45am Mysterious Intruder, The (1946)
A detective discovers the woman he's been hired to track down is the key to an unusual inheritance.
Cast: Richard Dix, Barton MacLane, Nina Vale. Dir: William Castle. BW-62 mins

11:00am Secret of the Whistler, The (1946)
An artist plots murder when his rich wife when she catches him in an affair with one of his models.
Cast: Richard Dix, Leslie Brooks, Michael Duane. Dir: George Sherman. BW-64 mins

12:15pm Return of the Whistler, The (1948)
When a woman goes missing on the eve of her wedding, her fiancee hires a detective to track her down.
Cast: Michael Duane, Lenore Aubert, Richard Lane. Dir: D. Ross Lederman. BW-63 mins

1:30pm Blazing Guns (1943)
Ex-cons get together to clean up a lawless town in the old West.
Cast: Ken Maynard, Hoot Gibson, Kay Forrester. Dir: Robert Tansey. BW-54 mins, TV-G

2:34pm Short Film: One Reel Wonders: Mission Trail, The (1946)
C-10 mins

2:45pm Law Rides Again, The (1943)
Western lawmen use an outlaw to bring down a crooked Indian agent.
Cast: Ken Maynard, Hoot Gibson, Jack LaRue. Dir: Alan James. BW-56 mins, TV-G

4:00pm Wild Horse Stampede (1943)
Two cowboys try to protect railroad workers from rampaging Indians.
Cast: Ken Maynard, Hoot Gibson. Dir: Alan James. BW-59 mins, TV-PG

5:05pm Short Film: One Reel Wonders: Roaming Through Arizona (1944)
This "Traveltalk" explores about the history, land, people, and culture of Arizona.
Cast: James A. Fitzpatrick C-9 mins

5:15pm Arizona Whirlwind (1944)
A band of crime-busting cowboys take on diamond smugglers.
Cast: Ken Maynard, Hoot Gibson, Bob Steele. Dir: Robert Tansey. BW-59 mins, TV-G

6:30pm Death Valley Rangers (1943)
Government agents are called in to stop a series of gold shipment robberies.
Cast: Ken Maynard, Hoot Gibson, Bob Steele. Dir: Robert Tansey. BW-59 mins

7:36pm Short Film: One Reel Wonders: Panic Is On (1931)
Charley Chase's comedy skills as an actor are well displayed in this short with various vignettes including Charley walking down the street reading a paper collecting several over the shoulder readers and Charley thwarting a thief trying to take money from his wealthy girfriends father.
Cast: Charley Chase, Charlie Hall Dir: James Parrott BW-20 mins

What's On Tonight: TCM GUEST PROGRAMMER: ROSE MCGOWAN

8:00pm Night Of The Hunter, The (1955)
A bogus preacher marries an outlaw's widow in search of the man's hidden loot.
Cast: Robert Mitchum, Shelley Winters, Lillian Gish. Dir: Charles Laughton. BW-93 mins, TV-PG

9:48pm Short Film: One Reel Wonders: Kings Of The Turf (1941)

10:00pm Out of the Past (1947)
A private eye becomes the dupe of a homicidal moll.
Cast: Robert Mitchum, Jane Greer, Kirk Douglas. Dir: Jacques Tourneur. BW-97 mins, TV-PG

11:46pm Short Film: One Reel Wonders: Little Wise Quacker, The (1952)
C-7 mins

12:00am Place in the Sun, A (1951)
An ambitious young man wins an heiress's heart but has to cope with his former girlfriend's pregnancy.
Cast: Montgomery Clift, Elizabeth Taylor, Shelley Winters. Dir: George Stevens. BW-122 mins, TV-PG

2:15am That Touch of Mink (1962)
Attraction develops between a suave businessman and a young woman determined to protect her innocence.
Cast: Cary Grant, Doris Day, Gig Young. Dir: Delbert Mann. C-99 mins, TV-G

4:00am Lover Come Back (1961)
An ad exec in disguise courts his pretty female competitor.
Cast: Doris Day, Rock Hudson, Tony Randall. Dir: Delbert Mann. C-107 mins, TV-G
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Longhorn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Nov-03-07 01:32 PM
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1. The Whistler (1944)
Producer William Castle carved out a unique niche in film history as the producer-promoter of such monumental schlock-fests as The Tingler (1959), 13 Ghosts (1960), and Mr. Sardonicus (1961). People tend to forget, however, that Castle began his career as a promising director, albeit one who worked within budgets that wouldn’t cover lunch costs on most top-rung productions. Even Castle admitted that his first feature, The Chance of a Lifetime (1943) tanked badly- the reviews were pretty brutal. But his second directorial effort, The Whistler (1944), is a sharp little thriller that garnered very strong notices, and it boasts far better production values than one might expect, given that it cost a mere $75,000 to make!

The Whistler was the first of eight Columbia B-pictures that would be based on the popular radio series, The Whistler. Richard Dix (who appeared in all of the films except the last, alternating between playing victims and villains) stars as Earl Conrad, a man who believes his wife has died in an accident. Depressed beyond repair, Conrad opts to end it all by hiring a hit man to kill him (J. Carrol Naish). Things get complicated, however, when the wife turns out to be alive (she was being held by the Japanese on a Pacific island!), but Dix can’t find the hit man to call off his own murder. The “Whistler” of the title, by the way, is a never-seen narrator who introduces the stories, just as he did on the radio show.

Castle was embarrassed by the drubbing The Chance of a Lifetime received, and was flabbergasted when Harry Cohn insisted that he was going to direct another film. Cohn felt that the critics were basically being uppity when they laid into Castle’s efforts. So, just to show them who was boss, he handed Castle the script for The Whistler and told him it would be his next picture. In his entertaining autobiography, Step Right Up: I’m Gonna Scare the Pants Off America, Castle recalled that Cohn (supposedly) said, “Look at Capra, Stevens, Cukor, Mamoulian, LaCava, Hawks, Lubitsch...you don’t think they had flops?”

Castle thought the material was great this time around, and decided to pull out all the directorial stops. "I tried every effect I could dream up to create a mood of terror," he wrote. He utilized everything, including “low-key lighting, wide-angle lenses to give an eerie feeling and a hand-held camera in many of the important scenes to give a sense of reality to the horror.” Cohn, however, vetoed Castle’s plan to have a person dressed as Dix’s character run up the theater aisle, screaming bloody murder during key scenes. Castle would have to wait until later in his career to wield that type of subtlety.

Castle, who seemed to forever think outside the box and then some, pulled a strong performance from Dix by giving the actor an industrial-strength case of real-life jitters: “To achieve a mood of desperation, I insisted that Dix give up smoking and go on a diet. This made him nervous and irritable, particularly when I gave him early-morning calls and kept him waiting on the set - sometimes for an entire day before using him in a scene.”

This approach worked wonders in creating the proper mood, not that Dix was enjoying it. “(Dix) was constantly off-center, restless, fidgety, and nervous as a cat. When I finally used him in a scene, I’d make him do it over and over again until he was ready to explode. It achieved the desired effect - that of a man haunted by fear and trying to keep from being murdered.”

Let that be lesson to you kids out there- eat right and never start smoking.

Producer: Rudolph C. Flothow
Director: William Castle
Screenplay: Eric Taylor (based on a story by Donald Wilson, suggested by the radio program The Whistler)
Cinematography: James S. Brown, Jr.
Editor: Jerome Thoms
Music: Wilbur Hatch
Art Design: George Van Marter
Special Effects: Chuck Gaspar, Linc Kibbee
Set Design: Sidney Clifford
Cast: Richard Dix (Earl Conrad), J. Carrol Naish (The Killer), Gloria Stuart (Alice Walker), Alan Dinehart (Gorman), Joan Woodbury (Toni Vigran), Cy Kendall (Bartender), Trevor Bardette (The Thief), Don Costello (Lefty Vigran), Clancy Cooper (Briggs), Byron Foulger (Flophouse Clerk), Robert Emmett Keane (Charles McNear), George Lloyd (Bill Tomley), Charles Coleman (Jennings), Robert E. Homans (Dock Watchman), Otto Forrest (The Whistler).
B&W-59m.

by Paul Tatara
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Sparkly Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-05-07 12:28 PM
Response to Reply #1
4. I wasn't at all familiar with these
but I just watched "The Secret of the Whistler" and it wasn't bad. (Great clothes!)
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Longhorn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-05-07 12:52 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. I listen to The Whistler on the radio.
It's one of my favorite shows so I'm looking forward to seeing what they did with the movies. I'm recording them all today and will watch later. I'm glad to hear the one you watched was okay. :)
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lavenderdiva Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Nov-04-07 10:04 PM
Response to Original message
2. got to love 'A Place In the Sun'
Montgomery Clift is super and kinda creepy in this role. Shelley Winters is at her best in this film, IMO. She really shines.
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Matilda Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Nov-04-07 10:17 PM
Response to Original message
3. A shame that "Hamlet" is on so early, and most people would miss it.
Although it's played in a style that is now out of fashion, it still ranks, IMO, as one of the great
films of all time. Every last little role is perfectly cast, the direction and overall production
are superb, and Olivier gives a masterclass in the art of performance, backed by a brilliant cast.
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