Friday, May 8th TV listings for Turner Classic Movies USA HD
Doctor X (1932)
A reporter (Lee Tracy) saves a mad doctor's (Lionel Atwill) daughter (Fay Wray) from a full-moon killer with synthetic flesh.
The Walking Dead (1936)
An executed convict returns from the grave to revenge himself against the gangsters who framed him for murder.
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931)
March won an Oscar for his portrayal of the scientist whose experiments bring out a hideous side of his personality.
Men Must Fight (1933)
The secretary of state's (Lewis Stone) wife (Diana Wynyard) and son (Phillips Holmes) oppose a 1940 war, ending with an air raid on New York.
Things to Come (1936)
William Cameron Menzies' adaptation of the H.G. Wells novel tells of humankind's efforts to rebuild the war-torn planet.
Transatlantic Tunnel (1935)
An engineer (Richard Dix) leads the building of a trans-Atlantic tunnel linking Britain and the United States.
Non-Stop New York (1937)
Gangsters and a detective (John Loder) take an airliner to follow a British chorus girl (Anna Lee) who witnessed a murder.
The Gunfighter (1950)
Upstarts challenge the fastest gun in the West, a haunted man (Gregory Peck) trying to escape his reputation.
Duel in the Sun (1946)
Good and bad sons (Joseph Cotten, Gregory Peck) of a Texas cattle baron fight each other, and the railroad, over a dark beauty (Jennifer Jones).
Shootout (1971)
An ex-gunman is torn between his obsession with revenge and his responsibility to a 6-year-old girl and a lonely widow.
Billy Two Hats (1974)
A bearded Scot (Gregory Peck) robs a bank with a young Indian (Desi Arnaz Jr.), then leaves him with an old rancher's young wife.
The Big Country (1958)
A former sea captain (Gregory Peck) goes West, woos women (Jean Simmons, Carroll Baker) and joins a fight over water rights.
How the West Was Won (1962)
The history of 19th-century Western expansion, as seen through the lives of three generations of a pioneer family.
