
Wednesday, May 28th TV listings for Turner Classic Movies Canada HD
The Man Who Talked Too Much (1940)
A courtroom becomes the scene of heated rivalries between an attorney and his younger brother who is an assistant DA.
The Man Who Found Himself (1937)
A young surgeon (John Beal) turns bearded hitchhiker; a young woman (Joan Fontaine) turns him back.
The Man Who Could Work Miracles (1937)
A humble shop clerk is randomly selected by the gods to receive the ability to make all his wishes come true.
The Man Who Dared (1939)
A family finds they must remain mute after witnessing a murder until the grandfather breaks the silence.
The Man Who Makes the Difference (1968)
The shots and equipment of cinematographer John M. Stephens.
The Man Who Came to Dinner (1941)
A critic (Monty Woolley) breaks his hip in someone's home and stays there, in charge, until it mends.
The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934)
Anarchists kidnap a couple's (Leslie Banks, Edna Best) daughter to hide a plot to kill a diplomat in London.
The Man Who Laughs (1966)
A young man (Jean Sorel) is a pawn in the circa-1500 treachery of Lucrezia Borgia (Lisa Gastoni) and her brother, Cesare (Edmund Purdom).
The Big Clock (1948)
A crime-magazine publisher (Charles Laughton) kills his mistress, then orders his editor (Ray Milland) to lead a manhunt.
A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court (1949)
A modern-day blacksmith becomes the toast of King Arthur's court after being transported to sixth-century England.
Sorrowful Jones (1949)
A Runyonesque bookie (Bob Hope) receives a gambler's little daughter (Mary Jane Saunders) as a marker for a bet.
The Private Life of Don Juan (1934)
Legendary Spanish lover Don Juan (Douglas Fairbanks) is determined to maintain his reputation, despite his advancing years.
The Lion Has Wings (1940)
The drama of a British wing commander (Ralph Richardson) and his wife (Merle Oberon) features footage of the Nazi threat.
Affectionately Yours (1941)
A global reporter (Dennis Morgan) tries to win back his wife (Merle Oberon) and is wooed by a colleague (Rita Hayworth) in the process.
Callaway Went Thataway (1951)
An adman (Fred MacMurray) and adwoman (Dorothy McGuire) repackage an old TV Western and pay a look-alike (Howard Keel) to pose as its now-drunken star.
My Favorite Year (1982)
A rookie writer (Mark Linn-Baker) tries to keep an old swashbuckler (Peter O'Toole) sober for his boss's (Joseph Bologna) live TV comedy show in 1954.