10 THINGS I LEARNED AT TCMFF 2016
Well, another year spent in the company of classic cinema
curated by the TCM Classic Film Festival has come and gone, leaving me with
several great experiences watching favorite films and ones I’d never before
seen, some already cherished memories, and the usual weary bag of bones for a
body in the aftermath. (I usually come down with something when I decompress
post-festival and get back to the working week, and this year has been no
exception.)
There have now been seven TCMFFs since its inaugural run in 2010.
I’ve been lucky enough to attend them all, and this time around I saw more
movies than I ever have before—18 features zipping from auditorium to queue and
back to auditorium like a gerbil in a tube maze. In order to make sure I got in
to see everything I wanted to see, I had to make sure I was in line as close to
an hour ahead of the posted screening time as possible, and given how tightly
the films had been packed together this year, accomplishing that proved to be
one of the biggest challenges for festival attendees, seemingly more so than
ever. I learned that there’s no time for hanging out after the lights come up.
It’s on to the next queue to get your number—there will always be someone to
talk to in line or to hold your place while you join the between-movie stampede
to the restroom.
Actually, I learned several things while attending TCMFF
this year, some of which surprised me and some of which confirmed beliefs or
festival strategies I already had, all of which contributed, mostly positively,
to my TCMFF 2016 experience. I came away thinking this might have been one of
my favorite of the seven TCMFFs I’ve attended, and maybe this quick remembrance
will give you some indication of why that seems to be true, ten things I
learned while attending this year’s TCM Classic Film Festival.
1) TO SEE THE MOST
MOVIES, MINIMIZE THE DISTANCE BETWEEN VENUES This has always been my
strategy for constructing my scheduled weekend at TCMFF, and this year I was
stricter than ever with this policy. I only left the main Chinese multiplex hub
twice this year, for the relatively quick jaunt over to the Big Chinese to see The Conversation and Buona Sera, Mrs. Campbell. If a movie I
wanted to see was scheduled at the Egyptian, like The Long Goodbye or Repeat
Performance or The Passion of Joan of
Arc, or even further away at the Cinerama Dome, like the Smell-o-Vision
presentation of Scent of Mystery, I
swallowed hard and skipped it. Most of the temptations being dangled at the
Egyptian were ones I’d seen before; I’d even already seen Joan projected with a
live score. And heading to the Dome would have meant missing the opportunity to
see two rare films I’d never seen
before, one of which, Edward L. Cahn’s early Universal western Law and Order (1932) turned out to be
one of the best, and certainly most revelatory movies I’d see all weekend. By
sticking close to the multiplex, I was able to maximize the amount of films I
could see and still ensure that most of them would be first-time experiences.
2) IF YOU LIKE 35mm,
STAY CLOSE TO THEATER FOUR The amount of 35mm being shown at TCMFF 2016 was
down to only 33% of its offerings, most of those comprised of prints of
lesser-known films that rarely make it out of the vaults. Which is why you’ll
usually see these films only in the festival’s smallest venue, theater #4, the
only auditorium in the Chinese complex that can still show 35mm. Movies like Double Harness (1933) caught early buzz
this year and were tough to get into because the theater only seats 177 people,
and they rarely get scheduled into a big venue like the Egyptian (which has
35mm projection capability) because it’s much more difficult to anticipate the
level of audience interest in them. The rarity of the films shown in this
auditorium makes them catnip to festivalgoers like me, who program their
weekend around what they haven’t seen or even heard of, so much so that TCM
programmer Millie De Chirico, who often hosts the good stuff in this
auditorium, has started talking about a Theater Four Club (#Theater4Club) for
us perennial stalwarts.
3) FESTIVALGOERS CAN
BE A WHINY LOT Double Harness
sold out quickly on Friday morning, and even though it was showing in the #4,
where I’d just been to see Ida Lupino’s directorial debut Never Fear (1949), by the time that film let out the line to go
back in for Double Harness was
already beginning its long loop around the expanse of the outdoor food court.
Grumble, grumble, grumble, many could be overheard grumbling, already grumpy
over alleged “disorganization” of the festival. I knew, however, that such an
overwhelming crush of people to see this picture would guarantee it being
programmed into one of the festival’s Sunday “To Be Determined” slots, reserved
for the smaller movies that garner the most unexpected response measured simply
in how many people are turned away from its initial screening. Sure enough, Double Harness was scheduled for a
second screening Sunday morning, so I made sure I was there in line at 8:00
a.m. for the 9:15 a.m. screening… and I was still number 76 in line! I knew I
would get in, but as the line grew ever longer behind me, populated by people
straggling in a half hour or more later expecting easy entry, the grumbling
grew louder and the haranguing of exceedingly patient TCMFF volunteer staffers (like
Lillian pictured here, who I ran into frequently and who never had anything but
a smile on her face) began in earnest. There are few things more distasteful to
witness in this environment than the righteous and entitled fury of
festivalgoers who can’t figure out that being in line at least an hour early
for the sure sell-out of a movie which has already proved difficult to get into
is an absolute requirement. If you pay as much as you must for a pass to the
TCMFF, it might be a good idea to process such fundamental business ahead of
time so you won’t end up bullying a festival volunteer just because you
couldn’t drag your ass out of bed in time to see a movie.
4) HOW TO DO THE
TCMFF ON $6.50 Speaking of payment, unless you have a media credential like
mine, you’ve already spent as much as two or three thousand dollars on passes
and, if you’re coming in from out of town, food and accommodations before you
ever set foot on Hollywood Boulevard. But since I’m sponsored by a magazine to
write about the festival, my only expenses, provided I avoid the copious
opportunities to drop coin on overpriced swag at the TCM Boutique, are incurred
in transporting myself from Glendale to the Hollywood & Highland complex
where the festival takes place and in answering the occasional rumbling of my
prodigious belly. Well, this year I was determined to be as frugal as possible.
I popped my own popcorn and packed a variety of snacks (apples, PayDay candy
bars) and a load of homemade sandwiches (PB&J, ham and Swiss on rye) in my
bag each day. My one extraneous expense was a large Diet Coke purchased at the
Chinese multiplex snack bar. I kept hold of that cup from Friday through
Sunday, amassing something like four or five free refills, and the $6.50 I
spent on it was the only money I parted ways with all weekend long at the
festival. Viva filmy frugality!
5) GINA LOLLOBRIGIDA
IS A FINE COMIC ACTRESS I’d never seen Buona
Sera, Mrs. Campbell before, so my impressions of Gina Lollobrigida were
essentially confined to Beat the Devil
and her reputation as a va-va-va-voom Italian sexpot. Before she stepped on
stage with Ben Mankiewicz for an
interview preceding Buona Sera, TCMFF
ran a promotional film spotlighting her career not only in movies, but as an
acclaimed photographer and then, in a really unexpected third act, as a
sculptor. These were all aspects of Lollobrigida’s career of which I was
ignorant. And seeing Buona Sera, Mrs.
Campbell made me realizing that I was also ignorant of her prodigious
talents as a comic actress. She’s the glue that holds this emotionally resonant
farce together (it’s the unacknowledged inspiration for the stage hit Mamma Mia!), which can often mean
playing the sober center of a universe where the orbiting satellites get to
have all the wacky fun. But as Mrs. Campbell, suddenly besieged by the return
of three American soldiers to her Italian village, one of whom fathered her
daughter but all three of whom believe that they are the dad, she orchestrates
exasperation, panic, joy, and of course boundless sex appeal, with the ease of
a true maestra. It’s wonderful that
she had such a fulfilling life after the movies, but a performance like this
one can only make the tapering off of her movie career after this picture feel
like a missed opportunity.
6) FOLLOW MICHAEL
SCHLESINGER WHEREVER HE GOES If you’ve been to TCMFF more than once,
chances are you’ve been to a screening presented by producer, preservationist
and film historian Michael Schlesinger. He introduced one of my first
experiences at TCMFF at 2010, the hilarious comedy Murder, He Says, as “a parody of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre made 30 years before that picture even
existed.” He was right, and I’ve made sure to see at least one movie Schlesinger
has introduced every year since, which means I’ve had the opportunity to see
projected glories like the Abbott and Costello comedy Who Done It?, a thrilling restoration of Johnny Guitar and my own holy grail, Billy Wilder’s One Two Three with very appreciative
audiences. Last year Schlesinger didn’t get to share anything, so in 2016 TCMFF
gave him two showcases—Frankenstein Meets
the Wolf Man and the ultra-rare Bulldog
Drummond Strikes Back (1934) which was indeed, as Schlesinger insisted, “The
best movie you’ve never seen!” If you make it to a TCMFF in the future, do as I
do—make sure you see whatever it is Michael Schlesinger brings to the party.
I’ve never regretted doing so, and neither will you.
7) IT IS POSSIBLE TO WATCH AN ENTIRE MOVIE WITH
YOUR MOUTH HANGING OPEN I stumbled into a midnight screening of Noel Marshall’s Roar (1981) at the end of my first long
day of movies at TCMFF 2016, but there would be no dozing off. In this
notorious movie, Marshall and his real-life family, including
Tippi Hedren and Melanie Griffith, act out a very thin story of peril among a
menagerie of untrained and unpredictable lions, tigers, and panthers, was
without doubt king of this urban festival jungle in the realm of unbridled
disbelief. I'm pretty sure I've never watched an entire film with my mouth
hanging open in shock before this one. Roar isn't exactly a Disney True-Life
Adventure snuff film (nobody dies), but the absolute knowledge that people
could have been killed, and at the very least will be seriously mauled on screen, lends it a
sort of tension that's hopefully unique in movie history. The message the film
desperately wants to send—regarding the preservation and the majesty of
wildlife, particularly African cats of all shapes and sizes—keeps getting
blurred by the insanity of the situations into which dedicated animal
preservationists Marshall and Hedren put themselves and their family. The gore
in this movie is real, the disregard for human safety is lunatic and
irresponsible, and its motivations are strangely muddled, but I've never seen
anything like it. A classic? No. But I was riveted. As noted film historian
Richard Harland Smith suggests in his excellent article in the TCMFF program,
the best comment on the well-intentioned, if bizarre hubris behind Roar would be to program it on a double bill with
Werner Herzog's Grizzly
Man.
8) DIRECTOR
EDWARD L. CAHN WOULD BE AN EXCELLENT
SUBJECT FOR FURTHER RESEARCH I’ve known and loved director Edward L. Cahn (here seen directing Judy Bamber in Dragstrip Girl) mostly for the late-career string of mediocrities he cranked out in the ‘50s
and ‘60s, long after the promise of his early career had been winked out.
Pictures like Creature with the Atom
Brain, Girls in Prison, The She-Creature, Runaway Daughters, Zombies of Mora
Tau, Voodoo Woman, Girls, Guns and Gangsters and Oklahoma Territory are all lean,
no-frills time-killers that are maybe more fun than they have any right to be.
And Cahn also directed one of my favorite ‘50s sci-fi classics, It! The Terror From Beyond Space, a
movie to which Alien owes more than
just passing acknowledgement. But I knew little of Cahn’s early career other
than that he was a top-drawer editor for Universal before landing in the
director’s chair for a series of inexpensive programmers for the studio, all
before becoming a fixture cranking out shorts for MGM from 1935 to 1949. One of
those movies, Law and Order (1932), screened
this year at TCMFF and made me think there might have been more to Cahn than
has ever met my eye before. The movie is essentially
the Gunfight at the OK Corral with the names changed (to protect the
mythological?), starring Walter Huston as notorious gunslinger-turned-marshal
Frame “Saint” Johnson, née Wyatt Earp. Cahn lends Law and Order a
somber, elegiac and entirely unexpected attitude toward death. The numerous
killings here have a gravitas absent from the average horse opera of the day,
and the film's final shootout set piece has been choreographed and edited with
a surprising degree of poetry that made me think of Sam Peckinpah more than
once. I’m now more inclined than ever to seek out the eight other pictures
he directed before migrating to MGM in the hope that Law and Order wasn’t just some sort of aberration. And even if it
was, I’ll still have Girls, Guns and
Gangsters and It! The Terror from
Beyond Space.
9) FRANCIS
FORD COPPOLA MEANS MORE TO ME THAN I REALIZED I knew I couldn’t miss being
part of the audience to see The
Conversation at the Big Chinese on Friday afternoon; given that it wasn’t a
big hit, the TCMFF audience would likely be the biggest one assembled to watch
the movie since its premiere at Cannes in 1974. However, most of us were there
not only to see the movie, but to see it in the presence of its director,
Francis Ford Coppola. I passed on seeing Coppola get his hand and footprints
memorialized in cement earlier in the day; this was the big ticket. And when
Coppola came out on stage before the film, introduced by the ubiquitous Ben
Mankiewicz, something unexpected happened: I started to get choked up and
dropped a couple of tears in the process. Here was the director of The Godfather and The Godfather Part II, two films which have meant so much to me in
my development as a movie fan and as one who appreciates them perhaps more
seriously, sitting down to talk about his movie and his process, and I was
there to see him. I’ve never been an across-the-board Coppola apologist, but
the emotion of this moment so surprised me that I came away thinking that it
was time to look again at films like Rumble
Fish and One from the Heart and Youth Without Youth and see if I might
have missed something the first time around.
10) PICK
THE RIGHT FILM WITH WHICH TO SAY GOOD-BYE Over my seven years at TCMFF I’ve
had pretty good luck ending my TCMFF experiences in style. My string of closing
films has included Metropolis, Who’s
Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (with Haskell Wexler in attendance), Dial M for Murder (in glorious 3D) and Psycho. Even lower-wattage closers, like
Robert Evans introducing Black Sunday
and a screening of Alan Ladd as The Great
Gatsby (1949), had appeal, even if they didn’t hit hard like those first
four did. This year I had intended to finish off with Vincente Minnelli’s The Band Wagon. But I started to get
weary on Sunday afternoon, and I started to miss my wife and my girls, whom I
hadn’t seen much of over the course of the festival’s three days and four
nights. So I decided to wrap things up with the glorious Technicolor of John
Ford’s She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, a
perfect movie with which to end it all, as it has about three or four endings
just in itself. And it was indeed a perfect salutary to my TCMFF 2016, leaving
me with just the right mixture of soaring emotion and appreciation for the
experience of seeing such a grand Hollywood picture in the biggest and
brightest presentation ever. My fondness for this festival is anchored in being
privileged to witness screenings like this one, and one week later the
afterglow of ending on Ford and Wayne’s thrilling, big-hearted adventure has
yet to dissipate. That afterglow is one I expect I’ll still be feeling when it
comes time to gear up for next year.
A complete list of what I saw over the course of three days
and four nights would look a little something like this:
One Potato, Two Potato (1964)
Los Tallos Amargos (1956)
Never Fear (1949)
The Conversation (1974)
Private Property (1960)
Six Hours to Live (1932)
My Sister Eileen (1955)
Roar (1981)
A House Divided (1931)
Bulldog Drummond Strikes Back (1934)
Buona Sera, Mrs. Campbell (1968)
The Endless Summer (1966)
Band of Outsiders (1964)
Gog (1954)
Double Harness (1933)
Law and Order (1932)
Horse Feathers (1932)
She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949)
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3 comments:
Dennis good ten thoughts and a good review
I think that self-knowledge is a key to enjoying a film festival. As one who has gone to a couple on my own dime, I prefer something like the San Francisco Silent Film Festival, one three day weekend, one theater, or the Far East Film Festival in Udine, Italy, where the travel and lodging were the big expense, but the festival tickets are less than first run film prices in big city USA. I spent about $200 for a festival pass that came with a reserved seat in my name. Plenty of time between films to catch a bite at the theater cafe or an inexpensive neighborhood joint. The festival has gotten a bit bigger, but most of the films were shown at one theater. Bonus: Seeing vintage CC while channel surfing Italian TV.
I've been to Telluride in its first couple years, and recall being shut out of at least one film there. I heard its worse now.
Aw, shucks, ya make a fella blush. Thanks so much!
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