
Tuesday, July 1st TV listings for Turner Classic Movies USA
Marie Antoinette (1938)
The 18th-century Austrian princess (Norma Shearer) has an affair with a Swedish count (Tyrone Power) and becomes queen of France.
Arsenic and Old Lace (1944)
A theater critic (Cary Grant) learns his two elderly aunts serve poisoned elderberry wine to lonely gentlemen callers.
The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946)
A drifter (John Garfield) stops at a Greek diner and helps the owner's (Cecil Kellaway) lusty wife (Lana Turner) become a widow.
Forbidden Planet (1956)
An astronaut (Leslie Nielsen) and crew land on Altair-4 in 2200 and find a mad doctor (Walter Pidgeon), his daughter (Anne Francis) and Robby the robot.
King Kong (1933)
Shipped from mysterious Skull Island for display in the United States, a gigantic ape escapes from his bonds and carries a beautiful blonde (Fay Wray) to the top of the Empire State Building.
Strange Brew (1983)
The Canadian McKenzie brothers (Dave Thomas, Rick Moranis) cork a beer-factory brewmeister (Max von Sydow) who's out to rule the world.
Strangers on a Train (1951)
A psychopath (Robert Walker) and a tennis player (Farley Granger) meet in a club car and plot that each will murder someone for the other.
Side Street (1950)
A New York man (Farley Granger) with a pregnant wife (Cathy O'Donnell) steals cash dropped as blackmail money for murder.
The Naked Street (1955)
A reporter follows the story of a gangster (Anthony Quinn), his sister (Anne Bancroft) and her small-time hoodlum husband (Farley Granger).
They Live by Night (1948)
Fugitive lovers Keechie (Cathy O'Donnell) and Bowie (Farley Granger) are doomed by fate from the start.
Small Town Girl (1953)
A judge's daughter (Jane Powell) keeps an eye on a playboy (Farley Granger) who gets 30 days in jail for speeding.
Hollywood Without Makeup (1965)
A compilation of home movies that captures some of Hollywood's celebrities in candid, off-screen moments.
Mr. Chump (1938)
Two bank officers wind up in jail using the stock-picking system of a trumpeter (Johnnie Davis) who never works.
Prosperity (1932)
A banking matriarch must come to the rescue after her son, now head of the institution, fritters away its emergency bonds in a get-rich-quick scheme.