Friday, March 20th TV listings for FX Movie Channel
The Alligator People (1959)
A nurse (Beverly Garland) tells psychiatrists how her husband (Richard Crane) was mutated by a mad scientist (George Macready) in the bayou.
The Fly (1958)
A scientist's genes are mixed with those of a common housefly during a botched teleportation experiment.
The Curse of the Fly (1965)
A mad scientist (Brian Donlevy) tries out a molecular disintegrator on people but cannot get the hang of it.
Batman (1966)
Batman (Adam West) and Robin (Burt Ward) save Gotham City from the Catwoman, Joker (Cesar Romero), Penguin and Riddler.
Tooth Fairy (2010)
As penance for dashing a child's hopes, a rough-and-tumble hockey player (Dwayne Johnson) must serve time as a genuine tooth fairy.
Hotel Transylvania (2012)
An unforeseen complication unfolds when Dracula (Adam Sandler) invites the world's most-infamous monsters to his lavish resort to celebrate his daughter's 118th birthday.
Hotel Transylvania 2 (2015)
Concerned that his half-human grandson isn't showing his vampire side, Dracula and his friends put the boy through a "monster-in-training" boot camp just as Drac's old-school father decides to pay a visit.
Hotel Transylvania (2012)
An unforeseen complication unfolds when Dracula (Adam Sandler) invites the world's most-infamous monsters to his lavish resort to celebrate his daughter's 118th birthday.
Hotel Transylvania 2 (2015)
Concerned that his half-human grandson isn't showing his vampire side, Dracula and his friends put the boy through a "monster-in-training" boot camp just as Drac's old-school father decides to pay a visit.
The Kid Who Would Be King (2019)
Old-school magic meets the modern world when young Alex stumbles upon the mythical sword Excalibur. He soon joins forces with a band of knights and the legendary wizard Merlin when the wicked enchantress Morgana threatens the future of mankind.
An examination of the process of making movies follows a production from script to screen.
Wizards (1977)
Animator Ralph Bakshi's sci-fi vision of the future shows mankind divided by war into tyrants and elves.
How to Be Very, Very Popular (1955)
Two San Francisco strippers (Betty Grable, Sheree North) flee from a bald killer to the safety of a college fraternity.
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1938)
After Rebecca is mistakenly rejected at an audition for a radio advertising campaign, her stepfather takes her upstate.
The Lieutenant Wore Skirts (1956)
A TV writer (Tom Ewell) schemes to get his wife (Sheree North) out of the Air Force, where she's back to active duty.
