Tribstar TV

March 19, 2022

TV listings, entertainment news and streaming suggestions from your hometown newspaper, serving Terre Haute and the Wabash Valley.

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"Parallels" (March 23) When a mysterious event on the French- Swiss border scatters four friends across time, they must find a way to get back to one another to get to the bottom of the phenomenon in this adventure series from France. Jules Houplain, Guillaume Labbé, Naidra Ayadi and Gil Alma head the cast. "Movie: Lucy and Desi" Best known for her acting, "Saturday Night Live" alum Amy Poehler steps be- hind the camera to direct this documen- tary that explores the unlikely partnership and legacy of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz, a power couple who changed Hollywood forever. Interviewees include their children Lucie Arnaz Luckinbill and Desi Jr., as well as Norman Lear, Carol Burnett and Bette Midler. (ORIGINAL) "Movie: All Good Things" Andrew Jarecki's effective 2010 drama chronicles the marriage between the heir (Ryan Gosling) to a real estate fortune and a woman (Kirsten Dunst) of modest means. The relationship takes a nose dive after the husband reluctantly returns to work for his demanding father (Frank Lan- gella), who has discreetly built the family wealth off a string of strip clubs, porn par- lors and other sleazy ventures. The STREAM Scene Where all the top choices can be found in one place! "Is It Cake?" "Saturday Night Live" cast member Mikey Day is the host of this hour competition series that challenges talented bakers with creating hyper-realistic cakes that look exactly like everyday objects — at least enough to fool a panel of celebrity judges. The one who does it best wins a cash prize. (ORIGINAL) 10 • Terre Haute Tribune-Star • March 20 - 26, 2022 BEST HUMPHREY BOGART MOVIES "The Petrified Forest" (1936) Though he didn't have top billing, Bogart distinguished himself in this screen version of the Robert E. Sherwood play as fugitive gangster Duke Mantee. "The Maltese Falcon" (1941) Bogart is private detective Sam Spade, pursuing "the stuff that dreams are made of" – the jewel-encrusted title statue – while also probing his partner's murder in John Huston's great adaptation of the Dashiell Hammett novel. "High Sierra" (1941) As an ex-convict out to pull his last job, Bogart is on the wrong side of the law in director Raoul Walsh's tough melodrama. "Casablanca" (1942) Well, of course. In one of the most classic movies of all time, cafe owner Rick (Bogart) is torn between his usual modus operandi of minding his own business and helping an ex-love and her husband (Ingrid Bergman, Paul Henreid) secure the wartime transit they desperately need. Turner Classic Movies shows the film Saturday, March 26. "To Have and Have Not" (1944) Their first on-screen teaming resulted in an off-screen romance (and eventual marriage) for Bogart and Lauren Bacall, who play a fisherman and the drifter who enters his life in this Ernest Hemingway story. "The Big Sleep" (1946) Bogart played another classic detective in literature, Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe, in this complex mystery that involves the sleuth with the daughters (Bacall and Martha Vickers) of a general ... in a case that soon leads to murder. "Dark Passage" (1947) A prison escapee (Bogart, in yet another teaming with Lauren Bacall) changes his appearance while trying to prove his innocence in his wife's murder. "The Treasure of the Sierra Madre" (1948) Huston steered both himself and his actor father Walter to Oscar wins for this classic gold-seeker drama, with Bogart and Tim Holt as the others hoping to get rich quick in Mexico. "Key Largo" (1948) Reunited with director John Huston, Bogart leads an impressive cast in Maxwell Anderson's play about the hostages taken by a mobster (Edward G. Robinson) at a Florida hotel as a hurricane approaches. "The African Queen" (1951) Directed here to an Oscar victory by John Huston, Bogart is ideal as a cranky boat captain partnered with a missionary (Katharine Hepburn) on a dangerous journey. "The Caine Mutiny" (1954) Bogart is chilling as Captain Queeg, whose questionable actions aboard his Navy vessel lead to the court martial that two of his officers (Van Johnson, Robert Francis) face. "Sabrina" (1954) Bogart and William Holden play wealthy brothers vying for the daughter (Audrey Hepburn) of the family chauffeur in director and co-screenwriter Billy Wilder's original version of the romantic comedy. "The Desperate Hours" (1955) Bogart was near the end of his career when he played the leader of an escaped-convict trio holding a family hostage. "The Harder They Fall" (1956) In his last movie, Bogart remains masterful as an out-of-work sportswriter who goes for the money as the new publicist for an untalented fighter. "The Big Sleep" "The Maltese Falcon" "Casablanca" BY JAY BOBBIN

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