Ivanhoe, 1952, Is Playing on TCM on October 22 (USA)

Ivanhoe, 1952, is playing on Turner Classic Movies on Monday, October 22 at 4:15 p.m. est.  Closed captioned.

Ivanhoe was one of the most successful films of the year and brought in over $10 million at the box office, about $89,823,018.87 in 2015.

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Robert Taylor and Liz Taylor in Ivanhoe.

Wonderful movie! This film is an exciting adventure-romance which never once loses its pace or feel. Robert Taylor brings depth to a potentially dull lead character. Jean Fontaine is great as his love, the Lady Rowenna. Elizabeth Taylor, though, steals the show with her stunning portrayal of Rebecca of York! This film has aged very well and shows first-hand to a young generation just why Elizabeth Taylor was such a star.

Although this film is an extremely enjoyable adventure, it also has the guts to tackle some complicated issues and resolve them in a very non-Hollywood fashion. As Ivanhoe feels his love for the beautiful Rebecca grow will he defy convention and pursue the lovely Jewish girl or remain with the safe charms of the blond, Anglo-Saxon Rowena The answer is intelligently handled and surprising. This film is one of the greatest examples of the classic adventure.  Review by David Arbury for the IMDB

Here are a few behind the scenes photos:

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Left to right: Mr. Taylor and Peter Ustinov; waiting; with unknown person.

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Left to right: with Joan Fontaine who played Rowena; with Ms. Fontaine and director Richard Thorpe.

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Left to right: with Elizabeth Taylor; with Liz and Emlyn Williams

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Left to right: with George Sanders and Liz Taylor; with Liz Taylor.

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Buried Loot, 1934, Is Playing on TCM on October 13 (USA)

“Buried Loot,” 1934, is playing on Turner Classic Movies on Saturday October 13 at 11:30 a.m.  Closed captioned.

“Buried Loot” was the first in a series of quarterly MGM short subjects called Crime Does Not Pay. The series ran until 1947.  None of the actors were credited.  After “Buried Loot” the movie-going public began to ask who the handsome young leading actor was.  The Astudio noticed the volume of letters and realized that they had a hot property on their hands.  Robert Taylor’s career took off from there with such films as Magnificent Obsession (1935) and Camille (1936).

In “Buried Loot,” a young bank clerk embezzles $200,000 then confesses to his boss.  He is sent to prison but not before burying the money to enjoy after his release.  A cellmate talks the clerk into escaping.  I won’t spoil it by telling the rest.

A DVD set of the whole Crime Does Not Pay series is available from Warner Archive and other online retailers.

Here are a few screen shots from “Buried Loot.”

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Undercurrent, 1946, Is Playing on TCM on September 28 (USA)

Undercurrent, 1946, is playing on Turner Classic Movies on Friday, September 28 at 2:15 p.m. est.  Closed captioned.

Director Vincente Minneli said of Undercurrent : He [Robert Taylor] out acted her [Katharine Hepburn] and stole the picture as the demanding and sadistic husband.  It was Kate who was miscast. (Charles Tranberg, Robert Taylor: a Biography, BearManor Media, 2011, pages 176-177.) 

abcAll of the criticisms of this movie might well be flushed down the loo. This is one powerhouse of an interesting movie.  Call it Film-Noir. Call it Mystery/Suspense. Call it Psychological Thriller. Call it what you may…I call it: absorbing drama.  It moves very deliberately…and the facts are revealed one by one, in true mystery fashion, until the fantastic, thrilling ending.

Those who say that Hepburn and Mitchum were miscast are just so wrong. Hepburn wasn’t playing Hepburn here…she wasn’t Tracy Lord here. She wasn’t a know-it-all New England uppity snob here. Not a worldly character at all. She played a different character than I’ve ever seen her do. Hepburn doesn’t rely on her stable of clichés to capture our imagination here. She does it with imagination and as few of the Hepburn cornerstone mannerisms as possible. Good result!

Und23 (10)Robert Taylor is fascinating to watch. He has so many secrets in this role. And they reside behind his facade for us to watch and enjoy. He slowly swirls into controlled mania and desperate determination. Very fine, indeed. He should have been nominated for this one.

And then there’s Mitchum! What can one say about Mitchum without gushing foolishly. Gee whiz…the first time you see him…he shows us a side of him we have hardly ever seen! He seems at peace, mild in character, mellow in mood…pensive…other worldly. Likable even! Never gruff or abrasive like we’ve seen him so many times before.

What is unique about this story is that we really do not know what is going to happen next. We spend most of the movie residing in Hepburn’s character’s mind. Her wondering, her confusion, her search for the truth — at all costs.

I was expecting not to like this movie. I was expecting it to be another formulaic Hepburn vehicle about high society. But this is where this movie takes a left turn into an underrated mystery.  I enjoyed the use of the theme to the Third Movement of Johannes Brahms’ Third Symphony throughout the movie. RT677It lent a delicious air of mystery, love and luscious pastoral passion to the whole affair.

And to say that Vincente Minnelli was WRONG for this movie? Gee whiz! He was perfect! Why compare him to Hitchcock? Minnelli has manufactured a mystery world all his own. Sure there are devices. All movies have devices. But they are handled so deftly…we don’t rely on them to make us aware of the story — they don’t get in our way. They heighten our interest and this very absorbing plot.

Well done. I wish it had been a longer movie…it was THAT kind of movie. I recommend this one…Review by Enrique Sanchez, Miami, FL for the IMDB.

Some behind the scenes photos:


Left to right: Katharine Hepburn, Robert Taylor, George Cukor; Ms. Hepburn & Mr. Taylor; Ms. Hepburn, Mr.  Taylor, Mr. Freund; Mr. Taylor.


Left to right: Robert Taylor with Crew Members; Mr. Taylor, Robert Mitchum, Mr. Minelli;  Ms. Hepburn, Mr. Taylor & 2 others.

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Left to right: Ms. Hepburn and others; Mr. Minelli and Mr. Taylor; Ms. Hepburn, Mr. Minelli, Mr. Taylor.


Left to right: Ms. Hepburn, Mr. Taylor, Mr. Freund; Mr. Taylor and Cinematographer Karl Freund.

Back home..and happy, Robert Taylor, back at MGM and before the cameras again after 3 years as an officer in Navy, finds huge satisfaction relaxing between scenes of his first postwar picture, Undercurrent. During such moments away from the camera, he likes the pickup of cup coffee. (original caption)

 

 

 

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A Letter from Robert Taylor To His Fans

This gallery contains 3 photos.

Motion Picture Magazine, 1949 To The Fans from Robert Taylor, Star of the Bribe Dear Fellows: Take a  tip from me.  If you want to be sure of a happy home life, get a wife who works.  I did, and … Continue reading

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When Ladies Meet, 1941, Is Playing on TCM on August 31

When Ladies Meet, 1941, is playing on Turner Classic Movies on Friday, August 31 at 2:15 p.m.est.  Closed captioned.

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Joan Crawford, Robert Taylor and Greer Garson in “When Ladies Meet,” 1941.

It is the story of a married couple, a lady author and a charming single journalist. Joan Crawford, the author, considers herself a “modern woman” freed from tiresome conventions and moral imperatives. Despite the movie’s 1941 date, the author’s relativistic attitude toward marriage and fidelity would be right at home in today’s left-wing intellectual circles. Her gradual evolution towards a different attitude is the meat of the movie. Mirroring the situation in her book is the situation of the married couple, Greer Garson and Herbert Marshall. The fourth member of the group is Robert Taylor as a journalist whose surface gaiety hides a serious moral foundation.The four actors make the movie much better than the script. Garson and Crawford strike sparks off each other in every scene they share. Herbert Marshall is suitably smooth and sleazy. But it’s Robert Taylor in a role involving physical comedy whose work is the most impressive. As it turns out, he is the person most grounded in reality–and the hidden hand behind everything.

Everything has the expected MGM gloss–extravagant costumes, beautiful sets, excellent photography. Highly recommended.  Review by me.

Here’s a couple of behind the scenes photos:

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Left to right: wardrobe shot; Robert Taylor’s birthday party with Herbert Marshall, Mr. Taylor,  Joan Crawford and L.B. Mayer.

 

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