I've had my gripes with TCM over the years -- they show the familiar movies way too often (do we really need to see "Singin' In THe Rain" again?) and the rarities far too rarely (I've seen the 1935 musical "Sweet Music" with Rudy Vallee and Ann Dvorak exactly once in the fifteen years I've had access to TCM, and they cut off the first five minutes in that showing!). I also wish they hadn't gotten rid of the Edward Hopperesque interstitials in favor of that gloomy-hipster crap they use now.
But these are minor gripes compared to the simple fact that TCM is the only channel left that even tries to show American movies (not "films," MOVIES) of the twenties, thirties, and forties on a regular basis, and as such I hope it lives to be a hundred. I doubt it'll last the next decade in its present form -- come around and 2024 and it'll be showing zombie junk from the 80s and 90s punctuated with commmercials every five minutes -- but I'd be very happy to be wrong.
TCM is the ONLY channel that, if they told me I had to pay for it or lose it, I'd be cracking open the check book immediately.
Worf
Back in the '70s and '80s KCET Channel 28, the PBS station in L.A., used to frequently show classic silent films as well as movies such as Metropolis, usually on Saturday nights. And then they were replaced by MGM musicals, including the aforementioned Singin' in the Rain to the point where it became the Die Hard of classic movies.
^^^^ Is that supposed to be the proverbial "Gift Horse"?
Worf
Wow, you actually pay for your cable! How quaint.It ain't a gift when you pay $80 a month for it.
I'm so sad TCM is not available anymore in our cable company
Verstuurd van mijn ST18i met Tapatalk
There are low/no cost workarounds available for your unfortunate situation. Google is your friend.I'm so sad TCM is not available anymore in our cable company
There are low/no cost workarounds available for your unfortunate situation. Google is your friend.
A pirate? No no no.Arrrr matey!!!!
I grew up in the days when you could come home from school, turn on the TV set at 4 o'clock, and see on any given day "The Broadway Melody of 1936" or Al Jolson in "Mammy" or Dick Powell in "Twenty Million Sweethearts" or any of dozens of other not-common '30s pictures. "