Thursday, November 13th TV listings for Turner Classic Movies USA
Casino Murder Case (1935)
Urbane private eye Philo Vance (Paul Lukas) questions an eccentric (Alison Skipworth) and her son, who makes heavy water as a hobby.
Ten Little Indians (1965)
Unwary houseguests meet their deaths when they are invited by an unknown host to a secluded mountain mansion.
The Lady Vanishes (1938)
A young Englishwoman (Margaret Lockwood) tries to prove that an elderly governess (Dame May Whitty) was actually on a train.
Murder, She Said (1961)
Agatha Christie's sleuth Miss Marple (Margaret Rutherford) gets a job at an estate where she thinks there's a corpse.
The Last of Sheila (1973)
A Hollywood producer (James Coburn) shares his Riviera yacht with six people who might have killed his wife.
After the Thin Man (1936)
Urbane Nick and Nora Charles (William Powell, Myrna Loy) look for a cousin's missing husband and find murder.
The Invention of Cinema: Cinema Finds Its Voice
The story of how sound was paired with images in early years of cinema; offering an in-depth look at the people behind-the-scenes and the technological innovations that culminated in Warner Brothers' ground breaking film, "The Jazz Singer" (1927).
Singin' in the Rain (1952)
A silent-film star (Gene Kelly) loves a chorus girl (Debbie Reynolds) who dubs his squeaky-voiced co-star in a 1927 Hollywood talkie.
His Glorious Night (1929)
A princess begins a secret affair with a cavalry officer.
Blackmail (1929)
A Scotland Yard inspector (John Longden) deals with a blackmailer (Donald Calthrop) who knows that the lawman's fiancee (Anny Ondra) killed an artist.
Becoming Hitchcock -- The Legacy of Blackmail (2024)
Highlighting the birth of the Hitchcock Touch at a period when talking pictures first emerged and exploring trademark themes like murder, suspense and blondes.
Hallelujah (1929)
A cotton picker (Daniel L. Haynes) turns preacher and meets a Tennessee temptress (Nina Mae McKinney) and her man (William Fountaine).
What Every Woman Knows (1934)
A Scottish barrister's (Brian Aherne) humble wife (Helen Hayes) edits him to eloquence in Parliament.
Sylvia Scarlett (1935)
Sylvia (Katharine Hepburn) cuts her hair, dresses like a boy and flees French police with her father.
