Around the Blogosphere This Week...
...is taking the weekend off.
...is taking the weekend off.
One of my favorite Audie Murphy movies, SEVEN WAYS FROM SUNDOWN (1960), was released on Blu-ray last year by Kino Lorber Studio Classics.The widescreen print looks very good and also has excellent sound.
Blu-ray extras consist of a commentary track by the always-informative Toby Roan; the trailer, newly mastered in 2K; and four additional Audie Murphy trailers.
Highly recommended.
Thanks to Kino Lorber for providing a review copy of this Blu-ray collection.
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This afternoon I went to see the latest Jason Statham movie, SHELTER (2026), at my local Cinemark theater.Bill Nighy (ARTHUR CHRISTMAS, THEIR FINEST), on the other hand, has considerable screen time as the former head of M16 who has created a class of rogue agents. He's extremely creepy in the role as he attempts to take out both Mason and Jessie, while also battling wits with the new M16 chief (Naomi Ackie) who is quickly on to his bad intentions.
There are a number of good action sequences, including one featuring Mason's SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON style island defenses. The movie is well balanced between Statham displaying his talents as a one-man killing machine and quieter, more emotional moments as his relationship with Jessie deepens.
The movie was directed by Ric Roman Waugh and filmed by Martin Ahlgren. The gray-blue skies on Mason's island and the contrasting bright lights of London combine to give the film nice touches of atmosphere.Parental Advisory: This film is rated R. It is violent, but other than a couple brief scenes, as well a disturbing shot of a drowned man, it's not particularly graphic. Language isn't bad -- perhaps some of it was drowned out by gunfire! -- and there are no other common R-related issues. It's not for young children, but with a few seconds of judicious editing, this could easily have instead been rated PG-13.
Positive themes include loyalty and doing what's right in the face of innumerable obstacles.
I quite liked SHELTER and found it a perfect "popcorn movie." Recommended.
The Errol Flynn Western SAN ANTONIO (1945) was recently released on Blu-ray by the Warner Archive Collection.The movie was filmed in late 1944, then sat on the shelf for about a year after production. This was fairly common with Warner Bros. films in that time frame; there was too much product available for the market to handle.
Max Steiner's main theme recycles Flynn's DODGE CITY (1939); indeed, my husband heard the music from the next room and asked if I was watching DODGE CITY. According to IMDb there was also uncredited work on the film by Erich Wolfgang Korngold.In addition to the trailer, the Blu-ray contains the 18-minute short FRONTIER DAYS (1945) with Robert Shayne and Dorothy Malone, directed by Jack Scholl, and the cartoon TRAP HAPPY PORKY (1945).
Both this film and the Blu-ray are happily recommended.
MANPOWER (1941), starring the powerhouse trio of Edward G. Robinson, George Raft, and Marlene Dietrich, was just released on Blu-ray last week by the Warner Archive Collection.
Happy February on Turner Classic Movies!February will be a bit unusual this year, in that the first 12 days of the month will be a "normal" schedule, followed by the annual 31 Days of Oscar festival starting on February 13, 2026.
31 Days of Oscar runs through March 15th, which is also the date of this year's Academy Awards ceremony.
I'll have a look at the 31 Days of Oscar highlights posted here around the 13th, while this February preview covers February 1st through 12th. Then look for additional March highlights here around March 16th.
The February Star of the Month, from February 2nd through 6th, is Bugs Bunny. Blocks of Bugs Bunny cartoons, 45 in all, will be screened in between feature films each evening.
For those who may not have heard, TCM will be the new "home" of Looney Tunes cartoons thanks to a new six-year deal.
The Noir Alley films shown on the first two weekends of February will be TALK ABOUT A STRANGER (1952), shown January 31st and February 1st, followed by VICE SQUAD (1953) on February 7th and 8th.VICE SQUAD, starring Edward G. Robinson and Paulette Goddard, is a movie which may not be great -- but is great fun!
Here are more details on some of the fun films being shown on TCM during the first half of February. Please click on any hyperlinked title to read an extended review.
...Overnight, in the wee hours of February 2nd, TCM is showing the masterpiece THE RED SHOES (1948). When I revisited it at the 2023 TCM Classic Film Festival I Tweeted "Few things on earth are more lovely than Moira Shearer in THE RED SHOES."
...After a day of films featuring Johnny Sheffield as Bomba the Jungle Boy, the first evening of Bugs Bunny films begins on February 2nd. Nine cartoons will be shown in between films such as A NIGHT AT THE OPERA (1935) and WALK DON'T RUN (1966). The cartoons continue every evening this week.
...There's a lineup of films about pilots on February 3rd, including Errol Flynn and Ronald Reagan in DESPERATE JOURNEY (1942)....TCM celebrates Westerns during the day on February 4th, including Randolph Scott in RIDING SHOTGUN (1954) and TALL MAN RIDING (1955). Jeremy Arnold covers the eight-film lineup for the TCM site.
...February 5th features a birthday tribute to John Carradine, including STAGECOACH (1939). That screening could also be considered a belated birthday celebration for John Ford, born February 1st.
...February 6th there's a showing of MGM's little-known telling of the Cinderella tale, THE GLASS SLIPPER (1955). Although I wish Leslie Caron's Ella had been less petulant, overall I love the movie, including Estelle Winwood as the Fairy Godmother, Elsa Lanchester the Stepmother, and Michael Wilding is Prince Charming. Charles Walters directed.
...The Saturday movies on February 7th include Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall in Howard Hawks' TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT (1944), one of the movie which captured my imagination and helped me fall in love with classic movies as a child. As I wrote in my review nearly a decade ago, "In my mind's eye I can still see myself watching the film for hte first time at my grandmother's house, completely entranced by Bogart and Bacall's sizzling chemistry."...February 8th features comedies, including TWICE BLESSED (1945), a precursor to THE PARENT TRAP (1962) starring identical twins Lyn and Lee Wilde, and, later in the day, Lubitsch's NINOTCHKA (1939).
...February 9th is my favorite day on the early February schedule. It begins with a birthday tribute to Kathryn Grayson, including a very little-known yet very special piece of MGM Americana, THE VANISHING VIRGINIAN (1942). The evening is spent celebrating director Ernst Lubitsch, including a screening of his classic TROUBLE IN PARADISE (1932), which remains fresh and funny no matter how many times one has seen it....February 10th features a favorite lesser-known Western, FORT DOBBS (1958), starring Clint Walker, Virginia Mayo, and Brian Keith.
...A day of stories about schools and students on February 11th includes Debbie Reynolds, Bobby Van, and Bob Fosse in THE AFFAIRS OF DOBIE GILLIS (1953), along with a favorite pre-Code melodrama, FINISHING SCHOOL (1934), featuring Frances Dee and Ginger Rogers....February 12th features the excellent WWII thriller YELLOW CANARY (1943), which is also being shown February 10th. Anna Neagle and Richard Greene star.
Those wishing to peek ahead at the 31 Days of Oscar schedule, which begins February 13th, will find information here.
For more on TCM in February 2026, please visit my Quick Preview of TCM in February, along with TCM's online schedule.
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Miscellaneous bits of news and fun stuff from around the Internet......For additional recent links of interest to classic film fans, please visit my January 24th column.
This month's Western RoundUp column at Classic Movie Hub is a review of John Ford's THE MAN WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALANCE (1962).

This was a simply excellent 98 minutes which I enjoyed tremendously. It deftly melds action with emotion and holds the attention throughout. My husband jokingly said it was like the plot of a Jason Statham action movie, and he's not necessarily wrong, though it's important to note that this came first!
I previously saw Lino Ventura in a supporting role in the previously mentioned SPEAKING OF MURDER, but this film left me quite interested to see more of the boxer-turned-actor.
His performance here really covers the spectrum, as we see him playfully interacting with his children, at work as the respected neighborhood restaurateur, and then forced back into his prior life where he must fight his way out of near-death situations and shoot to kill.The movie made me curious about those parts of the story we don't see, such as how he met his wife; they're on screen together only briefly, but his love for her is evident. Witness the way he kisses her when he's arrested , and his reaction when he returns to their apartment to find her crying. These emotional moments hinted at a deeper story I would have liked to explore, one of the marks of a good movie.
Ventura also also stars in WITNESS IN THE CITY (1959), part of Kino Lorber's first French noir set. I want to make interested viewers aware that Ventura's well-regarded film THE BIG RISK (1960) will be out from the Criterion Collection in just a few weeks. He also had a role in another film available from Criterion, ELEVATOR TO THE GALLOWS (1958).THE BEAST IS LOOSE, written by several collaborators, was directed by Maurice Labro and uncredited Claude Sautet. It was filmed in black and white by Pierre Petit.The Blu-ray print, from a 4K restoration, looks sharp throughout.
This movie is part of a two-disc, four-film set presented in a cardboard slipcase. The film has a commentary by Simon Abrams, along with the trailer and five additional trailers for other films available from Kino Lorber.
Highly recommended.
Thanks to Kino Lorber for providing a review copy of this Blu-ray collection.
TweetAnd so we very quickly arrived at April 27th, the final day of the 2025 TCM Classic Film Festival.