Saturday, May 9th TV listings for Turner Classic Movies USA HD
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.
Holt of the Secret Service Yielded Hostage
Tarzan the Magnificent (1960)
A clever crook and a romantic triangle complicate Tarzan's efforts to bring a wanted criminal to justice.
Walky Talky Hawky (1946)
A young hawk looking for a chicken to eat finds Foghorn Leghorn teasing a grumpy dog.
Looney Tunes Mouse Wreckers
Hubie and Bertie are determined: they want to live in the house the cat Claude lives in; they drive Claude so mad that he prefers to sleep outside; now they have the whole house themselves.
Bundle of Joy (1956)
A salesgirl's (Debbie Reynolds) boss (Adolphe Menjou) thinks his son (Eddie Fisher) fathered the baby that she found on a doorstep.
Paul Robeson: Tribute to an Artist (1979)
Filmmaker Saul J. Turell profiles early 20th-century American singer Paul Robeson. Sidney Poitier narrates.
The Wind and the Lion (1975)
An Arab chieftain (Sean Connery) abducts a U.S. widow (Candice Bergen) and her children; President Theodore Roosevelt (Brian Keith) sends the Marines.
Gandhi (1982)
Richard Attenborough's Oscar-winning portrait of the man whose policy of nonviolence won India's independence.
Kanal (1957)
Polish partisans (Teresa Izewska, Tadeusz Janczar, Wisczyslaw Glinski) hide from the Nazis in the sewers of Warsaw.
Salvatore Giuliano (1962)
An outlaw goes to work for separatist politicians during the 1940s.
The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946)
Young Martha inadvertently causes the death of her cruel, authoritarian aunt. Martha lies to the cops, but fear a childhood friend saw it too.
Born to Kill (1947)
A private eye (Walter Slezak) hunts a killer (Lawrence Tierney) who marries a divorcee's (Claire Trevor) rich sister.
Dillinger (1945)
John Dillinger's (Lawrence Tierney) crime spree ends in 1934 when the lady in red (Anne Jeffreys) shows the FBI where he is.
Three Daring Daughters (1948)
Sisters resent their divorced magazine-editor mother's (Jeanette MacDonald) new husband, a concert pianist (Jose Iturbi) she met while on vacation.
The Magnificent Ambersons (1942)
Orson Welles' tale of an eccentric Indiana family clinging to tradition during a time of rapid change.
