Monday, February 23rd TV listings for Turner Classic Movies USA
White Shadows in the South Seas (1928)
A doctor (Monte Blue) tries to save an island beauty (Raquel Torres) and her tribe from corruption by a pearl trader (Robert Anderson).
All the Brothers Were Valiant (1953)
Whaling brothers (Robert Taylor, Stewart Granger) sail the 19th-century South Seas, where black pearls and a woman (Ann Blyth) bring mutiny.
Gulliver's Travels (1939)
Animators Max and Dave Fleischer's adaptation of Jonathan Swift's classic about a shipwrecked Englishman in Lilliput.
Robinson Crusoe (1954)
Daniel Defoe's British sailor (Dan O'Herlihy) is shipwrecked for 28 years with cannibals, and his man Friday (Jaime Fernández).
Hawaii (1966)
A New England missionary (Max von Sydow) and his bride (Julie Andrews) bring Christianity to 1820s Hawaii.
South Pacific (1958)
Navy nurse Nellie (Mitzi Gaynor) falls for plantation-owner Emile (Rossano Brazzi), who accepts a top-secret World War II mission.
Lassie Come Home (1943)
An English boy's (Roddy McDowall) collie finds her way back home from Scotland after his father (Donald Crisp) sells her to a duke.
Come Back, Little Sheba (1952)
A housewife (Shirley Booth) and her alcoholic husband (Burt Lancaster) rent a spare room to a pretty student (Terry Moore).
The Awful Truth (1937)
Spouses (Irene Dunne, Cary Grant) try to spoil each other's chances for romance before their divorce becomes final in 90 days.
Umberto D (1952)
A lonely old man struggles to maintain his dignity while leading a meager existence with his dog as his only companion.
Sounder (1972)
A sharecropper's (Paul Winfield) wife (Cicely Tyson) keeps the family together after he goes to prison in 1930s Louisiana.
Disraeli (1929)
The prime minister of Great Britain makes a decision to purchase the Suez Canal despite opposing pressures.
Viva Villa! (1934)
Mexican bandit Pancho Villa (Wallace Beery) and his gang join the peasant army in revolution.
Rasputin and the Empress (1932)
A prince (John Barrymore) plots to kill mad monk Rasputin (Lionel Barrymore) for the good of the czar, the czarina (Ethel Barrymore) and Russia.
