Tuesday, December 2nd TV listings for Turner Classic Movies USA HD
The Split (1968)
A woman (Julie Harris) wants a crook (Jim Brown) to form a gang to rob the Los Angeles Coliseum during a big Rams game.
Harper (1966)
A rich woman (Lauren Bacall) hires gum-chewing Los Angeles private eye Lew Harper (Paul Newman) to look for her missing husband.
Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967)
An Army major (Marlon Brando) with a lusty wife (Elizabeth Taylor) feels homosexual in the 1940s South.
Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962)
A punchy boxer (Anthony Quinn) ends his brutal career in the company of a sad trainer (Mickey Rooney) and a bad manager (Jackie Gleason).
The Haunting (1963)
An anthropologist (Richard Johnson), an heir and two ESP-prone women (Julie Harris, Claire Bloom) explore a New England mansion.
East of Eden (1955)
Rebellious Cal (James Dean) competes with his twin, Aron, for the love of his rigid father (Raymond Massey) and for a girl in 1917 California.
The Dark Angel (1935)
A blinded veteran (Fredric March) becomes famous under a pen name and learns his sweetheart (Merle Oberon) and buddy (Herbert Marshall) are betrothed.
The Scarlet Pimpernel (1935)
London dandy Sir Percy (Leslie Howard) dons disguises to save French nobles from the Reign of Terror guillotine.
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 Private Life of Henry VIII (1933)
Laughton won an Oscar for his portrayal of the 16th-century English monarch in Alexander Korda's biographical account.
The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939)
Matronly Elizabeth I (Bette Davis) loves the dashing Earl of Essex (Errol Flynn), but politics come first.
Yellowface: Asian Whitewashing and Racism in Hollywood (2019)
A history of anti-Asian racism and yellowface in Hollywood after the 1941 Pearl Harbor attack.
Bachelor in Paradise (1961)
An advice-to-the-lovelorn writer (Bob Hope) falls for the only single girl (Lana Turner) in a town full of women.
This Could Be the Night (1957)
A prim teacher (Jean Simmons) works in a New York nightclub run by a gruff ex-bootlegger (Paul Douglas) and his suave partner (Anthony Franciosa).
