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TCM Schedule for Monday, March 31 -- TCM GUEST PROGRAMMER: EVANDER HOLYFIELD

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lavenderdiva Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Mar-29-08 01:02 PM
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TCM Schedule for Monday, March 31 -- TCM GUEST PROGRAMMER: EVANDER HOLYFIELD
31 Monday



6:30 AM Pacific Rendezvous (1942)
An expert at deciphering codes takes on an enemy spy ring. Cast: Lee Bowman, Jean Rogers, Mona Maris. Dir: George Sidney. BW-76 mins, TV-G

7:48 AM Short Film: Pacific Paradise (1937)
BW-10 mins,

8:07 AM Short Film: The Vanishing Duck (1958)
C-7 mins,

8:15 AM Jupiter's Darling (1955)
A beautiful Roman mounts a romantic campaign to halt Hannibal's invasion of the empire. Cast: Esther Williams, Howard Keel, Marge & Gower Champion. Dir: George Sidney. C-96 mins, TV-G, CC, Letterbox Format

10:00 AM Pepe (1960)
When is beloved horse is stolen and sold to a movie star, a young man travels to Hollywood. Cast: Cantinflas, Dan Dailey, Shirley Jones. Dir: George Sidney. C-158 mins, TV-G, Letterbox Format

12:49 PM Short Film: So You'Re Going To Be A Father (1947)
BW-11 mins,

1:00 PM The Courtship Of Eddie's Father (1963)
A young boy plays matchmaker for his widowed father. Cast: Glenn Ford, Ron Howard, Shirley Jones. Dir: Vincente Minnelli. C-119 mins, TV-G, CC, Letterbox Format, DVS

3:00 PM A Ticklish Affair (1963)
A naval commander gets mixed up with a widow and her three children. Cast: Shirley Jones, Gig Young, Red Buttons. Dir: George Sidney. C-88 mins, TV-G, CC, Letterbox Format

4:30 PM Dark Purpose (1964)
An American tourist falls in love with an Italian count who harbors a deadly secret. Cast: Shirley Jones, George Sanders, Rossano Brazzi. Dir: George Marshall, Vittorio Sala. C-97 mins, TV-PG

6:15 PM The Secret Of My Success (1965)
A young innocent becomes the prey for a series of devious, if unlucky females. Cast: James Booth, Stella Stevens, Shirley Jones. Dir: Andrew L. Stone. C-99 mins, TV-PG, Letterbox Format

What's On Tonight: TCM GUEST PROGRAMMER: EVANDER HOLYFIELD


8:00 PM True Grit (1969)
A young girl recruits an aging U.S. marshal to help avenge her father's death. Cast: John Wayne, Kim Darby, Glen Campbell. Dir: Henry Hathaway. C-128 mins, TV-14, CC, Letterbox Format

10:15 PM Cooley High (1975)
African-American teens in Chicago prepare for life after high school. Cast: Glynn E. Turman, Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs, Garrett Morris. Dir: Michael Schultz. C-107 mins, TV-MA, Letterbox Format

12:15 AM The Shootist (1976)
A dying gunfighter tries to set his affairs in order. Cast: John Wayne, Lauren Bacall, James Stewart. Dir: Don Siegel. C-99 mins, TV-14, CC, Letterbox Format

2:00 AM The Terminator (1984)
A deadly robot from the future travels back in time to kill a woman whose son will one day defeat its masters. Cast: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Michael Biehn, Linda Hamilton. Dir: James Cameron. BW-107 mins, TV-MA, CC, Letterbox Format

4:00 AM Frenzy (1972)
When a temperamental man's ex-wife falls victim to a serial killer, he becomes the number one suspect. Cast: Jon Finch, Barry Foster, Alec McCowen. Dir: Alfred Hitchcock. C-116 mins, TV-MA, CC, Letterbox Format



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lavenderdiva Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Mar-29-08 01:06 PM
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1. Background on 'Frenzy'
Frenzy

Synopsis: The "Necktie Murderer" is on the loose in London. The recently unemployed Richard Blaney becomes the prime suspect when his ex-wife turns up as one of the victims. Barbara, his current girlfriend, is convinced of his innocence and helps him hide from the police. In the meantime, Chief Inspector Oxford of the Scotland Yard must piece together the case from a paucity of clues and endure his wife's inedible "gourmet" meals at home. When Richard by chance learns the true identity of the killer, he must fight to clear his name.

After the mixed-to-poor critical and box office response to Marnie (1964), Torn Curtain (1966) and Topaz (1969), Frenzy (1972) was widely regarded as a return to form for Alfred Hitchcock. The lower budget, particularly compared to Topaz, allowed Hitchcock relative freedom from studio interference. Another undoubted factor contributing to the success of this film was the recently established MPAA ratings system, which enabled the director to push the boundaries of sex and violence much further than in older thrillers such as Psycho (1960). Beyond the inherent box-office appeal of exploitation content, this new freedom enabled Hitchcock to revitalize otherwise familiar thematic territory. The most explicit and insidiously effective scene in this regard is the rape and murder of Brenda, Richard's ex-wife. Equally memorable, however, is the scene in which the killer invites an unsuspecting woman into his apartment while the camera retreats down the stairs and out into the street, and the subsequent episode in which the killer must rummage through sacks full of potatoes to retrieve a personal item held in the rigid grip of the corpse.

Frenzy opens with an aerial shot of the Thames River and the Tower Bridge, its touristic, picture-postcard look emphasized by the seal of the City of London superimposed on the right side of the screen. Such tourism, however, is far from innocent; a crowd of bystanders is soon attracted to a woman's nude corpse washed up on the riverbank. Later in the film, one character even states: "Well, we haven't had a good, juicy series of sex murders since Christie and they're so good for the tourist trade." Clearly, Hitchcock is suggesting a parallel between the public's fascination with the lurid details of a crime and the basic voyeurism of film spectatorship, a recurring theme in his work articulated most clearly in Rear Window (1954). This time the director adds a further element of grisly humor by comparing the twisted appetites of the killer with food and eating: in addition to the aforementioned scene with the corpse hidden amongst potatoes, we see the killer work in a produce market and, after a killing, he picks his teeth as if finishing a satisfying meal.

The lead role of Richard Blaney, as performed by Jon Finch (b. 1941), is unusual to the extent which the character is made deliberately unsympathetic, especially compared to the unctuous killer. Finch's first film roles were the Hammer horror vehicles The Vampire Lovers (1970) and The Horror of Frankenstein (1970). Roman Polanski subsequently chose him for the lead role of his controversial adaptation of Macbeth (1971). Polanski's film and Frenzy proved to be the two most significant film roles of his career. During the late Seventies and early Eighties he appeared in a few BBC Shakespeare productions; his most recent film appearance was in Ridley Scott's epic on the Crusades, Kingdom of Heaven (2005). According to Hitchcock biographer Patrick McGilligan, Finch angered the director during the production of Frenzy by publicly criticizing the anachronistic dialogue and nearly got himself fired from the film. However, Hitchcock's London in this film is not the swinging, pot-smoking city of Blow-Up (1966); it is in a certain sense a London of the imagination, as the postcard-type image opening the film indicates. One example of this is a 1971 interview in the Evening Standard, in which the director complained that most contemporary pubs were too "psychedelic," whereas he was seeking a traditional-looking pub with dark wooden interiors.

Michael Caine was originally considered for the juicy role of Bob Rusk, and one can easily imagine how his affable screen persona might have fit within Hitchcock's vision. Barry Foster (1931-2002) nonetheless makes his own mark as the outwardly friendly psychopath. An established stage actor--like much of the film's cast--he appeared in many films throughout the 1960s, but it was likely his performance in the little-seen British thriller Twisted Nerve (1968) that attracted Hitchcock's attention. In later years, he appeared in the Merchant-Ivory films Heat and Dust (1983) and Maurice (1987).

Anna Massey (b. 1937) is probably best known today for her role in Michael Powell's Peeping Tom (1960). She also appeared in Otto Preminger's brilliant, underrated drama Bunny Lake Is Missing (1965) and a variety of "heritage" films and TV miniseries, among them two A. S. Byatt adaptations: Angels and Insects (1995) and Possession (2002). Massey's most recent feature film is the disturbing psychological thriller The Machinist (2004) starring Christian Bale.

Vivien Merchant (1929-1982), who gleefully steals scenes as Mrs. Oxford, did not appear in many films, but they included such noteworthy productions as Alfie (1966) and Accident (1967). For many years she was married to the great playwright Harold Pinter and appeared in his plays. She won the Tony for Best Actress for her work in The Homecoming (1967) and reprised the role in Peter Hall's 1973 film version.

The screenwriter Anthony Shaffer (1926-2001) is most commonly associated with the phenomenally popular stage play Sleuth, adapted by Joseph L. Mankiewicz in 1972, and the truly original occult thriller The Wicker Man (1973). Unfortunately, Shaffer's obvious talents were not always fully utilized, as films such as The Sting II (1983) and a spate of Agatha Christie adaptations--among them Death on the Nile (1978), Evil Under the Sun (1982) and Appointment with Death (1988)--would seem to indicate. His work with Hitchcock was unusually rapid and harmonious, suggesting the ease with which he joined in on Hitchcock's macabre game.

Producer and Director: Alfred Hitchcock
Script: Anthony Shaffer, based on the novel Goodbye Piccadilly, Farewell Leicester Square by Arthur La Bern
Photography: Gil Taylor
Editor: John Jympson
Music: Ron Goodwin
Production Design: Syd Cain
Principal cast: Jon Finch (Richard Blaney); Barry Foster (Bob Rusk); Barbara Leigh-Hunt (Brenda Blaney); Anna Massey (Barbara Milligan); Alec McCowen (Chief Inspector Oxford); Vivien Merchant (Mrs. Oxford); Elsie Randolph (Gladys); Billie Whitelaw (Hetty Porter); Clive Swift (Johnny Porter); George Tovey (Mr. Salt).
C-120m. Letterboxed.

by James Steffen
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