
TV Schedule for ScreenPix
Friday, August 15th TV listings for ScreenPix
Take It All (1963)
A man struggles with his identity, his life choices, his interracial relationship, and his latent homosexuality.
The Group (1966)
Lakey (Candice Bergen), Dottie (Joan Hackett), Priss (Elizabeth Hartman) and other class of '33 women go their own ways.
The Miracle Worker (1962)
Teacher Anne Sullivan (Anne Bancroft) leads deaf and blind Helen Keller (Patty Duke) out of darkness.
School for Unclaimed Girls (1969)
A wayard teenager (Madeline Hinde) escapes from reform school where she is serving time for stabbing the boyfriend of her mother (Renee Asherson).
Inherit the Wind (1960)
A fundamentalist orator (Fredric March) opposes a liberal lawyer (Spencer Tracy) defending a Darwinist teacher in the 1920s South.
The Initiation of Sarah (1978)
When a coed is humiliated by a group of sorority sisters, she is urged to get even by unleashing her psychic powers.
The Fall of the House of Usher (1960)
Insane aristocrat Roderick Usher (Vincent Price), thinking his sister (Myrna Fahey) is dead, buries her alive.
The Hound of the Baskervilles (1959)
Sherlock Holmes (Peter Cushing) and Dr. Watson (Andre Morell) protect Sir Henry (Christopher Lee) from a killer-dog family curse.
The Ape (1940)
A mad doctor (Boris Karloff) poses as an ape and kills people for bodily fluids to help a disabled girl.
The Masque of the Red Death (1964)
A tyrannical 12th-century prince is intrigued by a girl and takes her to live amid the immorality of his court.
All or Nothing (2002)
A cabdriver (Timothy Spall), his wife (Lesley Manville), a cashier and other working-class Britons deal with long hours and family problems.
The Dust Factory (2004)
A mute teenager (Ryan Kelley) finds himself in a fantasy world where he can talk and communicate with his grandfather (Armin Mueller-Stahl).
The Witches (1967)
The same actress (Silvana Mangano) plays five different women in five sketches by five Italian filmmakers.
The Careless Years (1957)
A pair of high-school teenagers from different social standings have a date; when the girl resists the boy he begins to think of her as someone special and thinks they should get married immediately. Both sets of parents disapprove and urge patience.
The Big Night (1951)
A 17-year-old (John Barrymore Jr.) grabs a pistol and goes looking for the sportswriter who caned his father (Preston Foster).
The Initiation of Sarah (1978)
When a coed is humiliated by a group of sorority sisters, she is urged to get even by unleashing her psychic powers.