TiVoPlex

TiVoPlex for Tuesday, April 24 through Monday, April 30, 2007

By John Seal

April 24, 2007

Gee, your hair smells terrific

New at BOP:
Share & Save
Digg Button  
Print this column
From the obscure to the obscurest to the merely overlooked or underappreciated; they all have a home in the TiVoPlex! All times Pacific.

Tuesday 04/24/07

5:00 AM Fox Movie Channel
The 300 Spartans (1962 USA): It wouldn't warrant a mention in TiVoPlex most weeks, but with Zack Snyder's homoerotic beefcake epic 300 still in theatres after hauling in an impressive $200,000,000 to date, now is the right time for a little compare and contrast. Whereas Snyder opted for over the top sex and violence to retell the tale of the buffed up Spartan hunks, director Rudolph Mate took a more austere, historically accurate route to Thermopylae - assuming, of course, Herodotus knew of what he wrote, which is itself a questionable proposition. Star Richard Egan plays Leonidas, the king determined to head off Xerxes at the pass and save Greek democracy (which in the fifth century BCE bore next to no similarity to modern-day democracy), and though lacking Gerard Butler's testosterone-enhanced loincloth, his performance is reasonably effective. The action sequences are well-mounted, the cast laden with quality British thesps such as Ralph Richardson, David Farrar, and Laurence Naismith, and the widescreen cinematography - courtesy the great Geoffrey Unsworth - expansive and beautiful. Mate's film is basically a big budget, major studio take on the sword and sandal trope, and though a bit overlong, at least takes itself seriously - as opposed to Snyder's laugh-a-minute effort, which in a few years will be considered a camp classic on a par with Showgirls. Of course, there's value to be had from camp, and The 300 Spartans is determinedly short of that ingredient. On balance, it's by far the better film, but 300 ultimately delivers all sorts of unintentional entertainment value via its blend of florid dialogue and outrageous appeals to the crasser parts of our nature. One day the two films will make a great ‘midnight movie' double bill.

8:00 AM Turner Movie Channel
The New Interns (1964 USA): I generally disdain hospital dramas, but this one is essential viewing, if only for its remarkable cast. It's an episodic soap opera about three young interns finding their way around a big city hospital whilst contending with mental illness, overactive hormones, professional jealousies, and a surfeit of other sudsy problems. The trio of medicos are played by Michael Callan, George Segal, and George Furth, but you're not going to be tuning it to watch those stiffs - the real attraction is the cornucopia of future boob tube stars amongst the supporting cast, including Disney veteran Dean Jones, I Dream of Jeannie's Barbara Eden, Gilligan's Island's Dawn Wells, and The Girl From UNCLE's Stefanie Powers, as well as Telly Savalas, Inger Stevens, Sue Ann Langdon, Marianna Hill, Bob Crane, and TiVoPlex idol Charles Lane. The story isn't terribly engaging, but you'll have fun playing spot the star, and it all happens in widescreen, too.

6:30 PM Sundance
Waste=Food (2007 USA): How's that for an enticing title? Sundance is airing a series of original eco-documentaries this month, and though I'm a little uncertain about the focus of this one, I couldn't overlook the title's potentially unsavoury double meaning. Does Waste=Food refer to our wasteful methods of portion control, wherein we are served too much food which ultimately ends up in the wastebasket? Or does it refer to the, ahem, ‘recycling' of human waste products into something delicious and nutritious? Perhaps it's true, after all, that Soylent Green is people. I'm looking forward to finding out. I think.

Wednesday 04/25/07




Advertisement



5:00 PM Turner Classic Movies
The Big Shot (1942): Humphrey Bogart stars as armoured car hold-up specialist Duke Berne in this oft overlooked Warners crime drama, which, surprisingly, makes its TCM premiere this evening. Duke's been trying to go straight, but finding it very difficult indeed, and when crooked lawyer Martin Fleming (Stanley Ridges) offers him a quick and easy way to make a fast buck he succumbs to temptation and prepares for One Last Big Heist. After sweet young thing Lorna (Irene Manning) convinces Duke to quit the job, Fleming goes ahead with it anyway - and the police immediately suspect that Berne was involved with the crime. This was Bogart's last gangster picture, and he once again found himself filling in for poorly advised George Raft, who had already surrendered plum roles in both High Sierra and The Maltese Falcon to Bogie. No one will ever mistake Duke Berne for The Petrified Forest's Duke Mantee, but Bogart invariably delivered a good performance, and his work in The Big Shot is no exception to the rule.

Thursday 04/26/07

3:20 AM IFC
The Agronomist (2003 USA): Jonathan Demme's documentary look at the world's happiest political dissident, Haitian broadcaster and cineaste Jean Dominique, returns to the small screen today. Dominique owned and operated the feisty Radio Haiti-Inter, a Creole language station that spoke the truth to that nation's poverty-stricken peasants in their own tongue. Filmed over the course of ten turbulent years, the film follows Dominique's travels into and out of exile and details his growing disenchantment with the government of Jean-Bertrand Aristide and subsequent assassination. This marvelous film about a man of principle who refused to take the path of least resistance should be required viewing for all the talk-radio gasbags currently polluting America's airwaves. Also airs at 8:55 AM and 2:30 PM.


Continued:       1       2

     


 
 

Need to contact us? E-mail a Box Office Prophet.
Thursday, March 28, 2024
© 2024 Box Office Prophets, a division of One Of Us, Inc.