MOVIES MAKE GOOD

Ryan Baker  //  

Oct 2 / 9:32pm

TV: Turner Classic Movies & Halloween Horror

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It was a simple enough decision to entirely cut cable television. A few months back, I took the opportunity to relinquish my DVRs and finally live without the timesuck of television's omnipresence, the inundation of advertisements, marketing messages and culture-shaping corporate memes. I realized there were too few times in my life where I'd lived free of television's influence and, in retrospect, nothing was lost in its absence - in fact, the contrary was true.

There were three points of hesitation: the first was PBS' programming, the last bastion of intelligent TV, the second was access to local news - more specifically weather reports given the often dire and dangerous situations Oklahoma's climate spawns. The third, of course, was Turner Classic Movies.

Always erudite, TCM has provided many an introduction to heretofore unseen classic films, frequently films I'd never thought to see or never even knew of; J. Lee Thompson's 1965 drama "Return from the Ashes" and Anthony Mann's "Reign of Terror/The Black Book," a 1949 noir about the French Revolution both spring to mind. TCM's Friday night "TCM Underground" programming specializes in bizarre genre fare and is a yearly prelude to the splendid October programming that surveys some of the best of classic horror.

So, whether you have cable television and the opportunity to see some of these on TCM or simply find TCM's taste to your liking and allow their choices to direct your rental or streaming decisions, here are the genre films Turner Classic Movies will be showing during the month of October in honor of Halloween.

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Aug 26 / 8:00am

Art: "The Haunting," 2011

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More artwork from Toronto's Phantom City Creative, this time a glorious tribute to Robert Wise's 1963 adaptation of Shirley Jackson's 1959 novel "The Haunting of Hill House." An incredible and terrifying novel became remains one of the crown jewels of the horror genre, an exquisite and frightening film without monsters - except, of course, Hill House itself ... or at least whatever walks there.

Best known for classics like "The Sound of Music" and "West Side Story," Robert Wise seemed to have produced and directed "The Haunting" as an ode to his former mentor, a man for whom Wise served as editor and ultimately went on to direct his first feature films for while at RKO (sequel "Curse of the Cat People" and "Mademoiselle Fifi," both in 1944, and the Karloff/Lugosi period horror film "The Body Snatcher," based on a Robert Louis Stevenson story). Lewton's largely credited with the creation of cinematic psychological horror and Wise certainly put that approach to use in "The Haunting."