Classic Films
Related: About this forumTCM Schedule for Thurs, Apr 16, 2026: Look-Alikes / Set in Texas ( TCM Premiere of 'Raggedy Man' and 'Slacker')
DAYTIME (listings EST)
6:00 AM Penrod's Double Trouble (1938)
A missing boy's lookalike takes his place and raises havoc.
Dir: Lewis Seiler Cast: Billy Mauch, Bobby Mauch, Dick Purcell
7:15 AM Twice Blessed (1945)
Twin sisters set a parent trap to reunite their divorced mother and father.
Dir: Harry Beaumont Cast: Preston Foster, Gail Patrick, Lee Wilde
8:45 AM Another Face (1935)
Plastic surgery turns a gangster into a movie star.
Dir: Christy Cabanne Cast: Wallace Ford, Brian Donlevy, Phyllis Brooks
10:00 AM Road to Paradise (1930)
A delinquent girl helps a criminal gang rob her look-alike.
Dir: William Beaudine Cast: Loretta Young, Jack Mulhall, George Barraud
11:30 AM The Phantom Ship (1936)
A search for a lost treasure on a haunted ship in the frozen North.
Dir: Jack King Cast: Tommy Bond, Bernice Hansen, Shirley Reed
11:40 AM The Goofy Gophers (1947)
A watchdog guarding a vegetable patch spots the Goofy Gophers stocking up on food.
Dir: Robert Clampett, Arthur Davis Cast: Mel Blanc, Stan Freberg
11:50 AM Droopy's Double Trouble (1951)
Droopy and his twin brother Drippy are butlers who give a hungry Spike more then he can handle.
Dir: Tex Avery Cast: Bill Thompson, Daws Butler
12:00 PM The Double Man (1967)
Russian officials attempt to kidnap a CIA officer and replace him with a double of their own.
Dir: Franklin J. Schaffner Cast: Yul Brynner, Britt Ekland, Clive Revill
2:00 PM Dead Ringer (1964)
A jealous twin kills her sister and takes over her identity.
Dir: Paul Henreid Cast: Bette Davis, Karl Malden, Peter Lawford
4:00 PM The Scapegoat (1959)
A man is tricked into trading places with a look-alike nobleman with murderous plans.
Dir: Robert Hamer Cast: Alec Guinness, Bette Davis, Nicole Maurey
5:45 PM The Legend of Lylah Clare (1968)
An obsessed movie director grooms an unknown to play his deceased movie-star wife.
Dir: Robert Aldrich Cast: Kim Novak, Peter Finch, Ernest Borgnine
PRIME TIME. LATE NIGHT, EARLY MORNING
8:00 PM Hud (1963)
An amoral modern rancher clashes with his rigid father.
Dir: Martin Ritt Cast: Paul Newman, Melvyn Douglas, Patricia Neal
10:00 PM Raggedy Man (1981) TCM Premiere
Nita, a divorced mother of two boys, befriends a sailor, causing judgmental tongues to wag in town.
Dir: Jack Fisk Cast: Sissy Spacek, Eric Roberts, Sam Shepard
11:45 PM Slacker (1990) TCM Premiere
Twenty-four hours with an assortment of "slackers" as they wander around Austin, Texas.
Dir: Richard Linklater Cast: Richard Linklater, Rudy Basquez, Jean Caffeine
1:30 AM Paris, Texas (1984)
An amnesiac tries to find the family he lost.
Dir: Wim Wenders Cast: Harry Dean Stanton, Nastassja Kinski, Dean Stockwell
4:00 AM The Southerner (1945)
A sharecropper fights the elements to start his own farm.
Dir: Jean Renoir Cast: Zachary Scott, Betty Field, J. Carrol Naish
CBHagman
(17,506 posts)...and I immediately thought it was yet another Hollywood version of Erich Kästner's Das doppelte Lottchen (Lisa and Lottie), which was the inspiration for both versions of The Parent Trap. However, Kästner's book didn't come out until well after World War II. So I wonder how many versions of the story exist and whether there is a source material I have overlooked.
And if that sounds ridiculous, consider that the musical Hello, Dolly! owes its existence to multiple plays from multiple cultures across at least two centuries.
Auggie
(33,209 posts)From the "More Than You Need to Know Department" of DU's Classic Films forum:
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There seems to be a good deal of legal precedent, in film at least, for divorcing parents to separate their twins and take one each. This is the premise of, most famously, The Parent Trap (1961) and its 1998 remake, as well other films based on Erich Kästners book Das doppelte Lottchen (including the 1950 German film in which Kästner himself serves as narrator).
But this frightfully symmetrical approach to child custody in film predates Kästners book, going back at least to The Inn of the Blue Moon. This lost 1918 silent film features Doris Kenyon in the dual role of twin sisters assigned one each to their divorced parents. According to the film synopsis, the sisters are reunited as adults and help bring about the reunion of their parents.
https://screensplits.substack.com/p/twice-blessed-1945
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The Inn of the Blue Moon:
When the marriage of Justus and Dorothy Druce fails, their daughter Dorothy goes with her mother to the Catskills, while her twin sister Justine settles in New York with Justus. Years later, Justine becomes engaged to Charlton Sloane, who offers to help Justus out of his financial difficulties by pawning the Druce family jewels. Justus' niece Adelaide, bitterly disappointed in her love for Charlton, convinces her uncle that the young man stole the jewels, prompting Justine to seek the services of Warde MacMahon, a young lawyer vacationing in the Catskills. When Warde's car overturns, Dorothy tends to his injuries in her childhood hideaway, "The Inn of the Blue Moon," and the two fall in love. Dorothy and Justine finally meet, and following several adventures involving their identities, Charlton's name is cleared, the daughters are married to their prospective suitors, and the long separated parents are reunited.
https://catalog.afi.com/Catalog/MovieDetails/14989
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Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) developed Twice Blessed as a starring vehicle for identical twins Lee and Lyn Wilde, following their debut screen appearances in the 1944 comedy Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble. The project aimed to capitalize on the sisters' novelty as contract players and performers, positioning the film as an introduction to broader audiences.
The screenplay was penned by Ethel Hill, adapting her original story into a lighthearted narrative focused on family reconciliation through the twins' antics. Uncredited contributions to the story came from Mort Braus and Michel Kraike, who helped shape the core premise of separated twins switching lives to reunite their divorced parents. Producer Arthur L. Field supervised the production, emphasizing its tone as an upbeat family comedy amid MGM's slate of B-pictures.
https://grokipedia.com/page/Twice_Blessed_(film)
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Hill would have 20 when The Inn of the Blue Moon was released in 1918. She could have seen the film which inspired her to change it a little for her story.
Louis Joseph Vance wrote the screenplay The Inn of the Blue Moon, by the way. Vance was an American novelist, screenwriter and film producer. He created the popular character Michael Lanyard, a criminal-turned-detective known as the Lone Wolf. He died in a fire that resulted from his falling asleep with a lighted cigarette in 1933.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Joseph_Vance
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But hey, The Inn of the Blue Moon could have been based on a long-forgotten play. So ... who knows?
CBHagman
(17,506 posts)This is the sort of thing I rely on Classic Films members to bring together. That is just brilliant. Thank you.
Auggie
(33,209 posts)Some ideas are so good they're worth repeating every generation or two, with the appropriate cultural upgrades.