Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Friday, July 18, 2025
Currently available at Watch TCM (until July 21st):
One of Sidney Poitier’s most persuasive film roles occurs in the lesser known but exceptional cold war thriller The Bedford Incident: Hidden Gem #32 and previously recommended here.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Thursday, July 17, 2025
Tomorrow on TCM:
Next, is a cinematic portrait of a powerful historical female leader, Cleopatra (1963), previously reviewed here.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Wednesday, July 16, 2025
Tomorrow on TCM:
Next is Strange Cargo which I previously listed as one of my TOP TEN Guilty Treasures.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Tuesday, July 15, 2025
Tomorrow on TCM:
My next TCM film to see is Fritz Lang’s 1952 Clash by Night which is reviewed as a DVD recommendation here.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Monday, July 14, 2025
Currently available at Watch TCM (until July 15th):
… is David Lean’s magnificent 1962 epic Lawrence of Arabia.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Friday, July 11, 2025
Tomorrow on TCM:
After her breakthrough role in Joseph von Sternberg's The Blue Angel made in Germany, Marlene Dietrich made six more films with the autocratic director in the U.S. The Scarlet Empress (1934), previously reviewed here, is arguably the duo’s most accomplished.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Thursday, July 10, 2025
Tomorrow on TCM:
TCM will have a rare showing of the cult classic Blue Velvet, previously reviewed here, on Friday, July 11th at 7 pm PDT.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Wednesday, July 9, 2025
Currently available at Watch TCM (until July 13th):
In 1966, one of the more challenging films to face off against the Production Code (mentioned in Exploring the Artefacts #3: Code Breakers) was that year’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (reviewed here) remarkably delivering all of the guttural force of its theatrical origin while creating a more intimate, and cinema appropriate, dynamic all its own.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Tuesday, July 8, 2025
Today on TCM:
Next up is the remarkably understated, albeit compelling, racial drama Intruder in the Dust released in 1949.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Monday, July 7, 2025
Today on TCM:
My next recommendation is Howard Hawks’ lightening fast comedy/romance His Girl Friday (1940), reviewed here and blasting off Monday, July 7th at 3 pm PDT.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Friday, July 4, 2025
Tomorrow on TCM:
1972's The Getaway is not nearly as meaningful or resonant as some of Sam Peckinpah's earlier films; still, as a genre piece, it punches solidly above its pay grade.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Thursday, July 3, 2025
Tomorrow on TCM:
Make way for the rapturous Stanley Donen directed musical Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954), reviewed here, Friday, July 4th at 11 am PDT.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Wednesday, July 2, 2025
Tomorrow on TCM:
My next TCM film to see is Fritz Lang’s 1952 Clash by Night which is reviewed as a DVD recommendation here.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Tuesday, July 1, 2025
Today on TCM:
Next on my list of films to watch is King Kong (1933), who's scheduled to make his grand entrance on Tuesday, July 1st at 1 pm PDT.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Monday, June 30, 2025
Today on TCM:
Top Ten Western #6 is Howard Hawks' 1948 Red River reviewed here.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Friday, June 27, 2025
Today on TCM:
A top of the line screwball comedy released the same year as Sullivan’s Travels and, even more remarkably, from the same writer (co-writer here along with Monckton Hoffe) / director is The Lady Eve (1941) reviewed here.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Thursday, June 26, 2025
Tomorrow on TCM:
A pre-code charmer sure to delight fans is Blonde Crazy (1931) with Jimmy Cagney and Joan Blondell enchanting as a couple of cons.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Wednesday, June 25, 2025
Currently available at Watch TCM (until June 29th):
From the same director who brought us Citizen Kane comes another kind of cinematic hero (of sorts). Michael O'Hara, like the deeply flawed Kane, is flawlessly played by his creator Orson Welles. Unlike Citizen Kane however, this film fell under its producer Harry Cohn's butchery with considerable footage lost and destroyed forever. Nevertheless, what survives is vastly entertaining and not to be missed. The Lady from Shanghai (1947) was previously recommended here.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Tuesday, June 24, 2025
Today on TCM:
TCM is having a rare showing of Martin Scorsese’s 1993 The Age of Innocence on Tuesday, June 24th at 5 pm PDT.
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Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Monday, June 23, 2025
Tomorrow on TCM:
“Imagine a dish like this married to a mug like Benny McBride... the naked and the dead.”
Next up is Richard Fleischer’s little powder keg of a film noir Armored Car Robbery (1950), previously recommended here and set to explode Tuesday, June 24th at 2:30 pm PDT.
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