Monthly Archives: July 2016

  • A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum

    Richard Lester (1966)

    Richard Lester’s breakneck direction ruins this adaptation of the Broadway hit musical by Burt Shevelove and Larry Gelbart, with songs by Stephen Sondheim.  Lester had recently enjoyed critical and commercial success with The Knack and the two Beatles films, A Hard Day’s Night and Help!, where his hyperactive camera style supplied an apt cartoon tempo (and, in effect, built up the slender material).  Both the choice of Lester to direct A Funny Thing Happened and the end product assume that, since this is a farce (inspired by Plautus), it must be frenetic – and that, if it’s frenetic, it’s bound to be funny.  The incontinent camera movement and editing aren’t just redundant:  they distract attention – Lester’s as well as the audience’s – from the plot and, much worse, break up the actors’ rhythm.  No one can take a couple of steps without being spliced or speak more than two consecutive lines without breaking off into a mugging grimace to camera.

    This doesn’t stop you liking or recognising the talents of the likes of Zero Mostel, Buster Keaton, Michael Hordern and Jack Gilford but you feel frustrated for them.   Keaton (as Erronius), Hordern (Senex) and Gilford (Hysterium) give definitely American or British personalities to their toga-ed characters; Mostel’s hysterical, jowly cupidity as ‘the lyingest, cheatingest, sloppiest slave in all of Rome’ transcends nationality in a satisfyingly eccentric way.  Phil Silvers is less confidently incongruous in the antique setting:  he sometimes sounds to be sending up the vaguely exoticised American accent familiar from Hollywood biblical or classical world epics – surely the wrong note of parody here.   The most successful performance is Leon Greene’s as the massively self-admiring soldier, Miles Gloriosus.  (He had also played the role on Broadway.)  Greene’s square-jawed handsomeness is amusingly impervious to the impatient camera:  the effortful, minimal changes of facial expression achieve a virtually slow-motion effect.  His commanding baritone makes his jolly entrance song a musical highlight as well as a comic one.  Greene’s vocal power cuts through the jumpy mess of accompanying images and lets you enjoy the wit of Stephen Sondheim’s words and music.

    A Funny Thing Happened includes an odd assortment of elements of big film genres of the 1950s and 1960s:  the dancing slave girls belong to the opening credits of a James Bond movie; the lashings of desperate ‘action’ recall abortive attempts to ‘open up’ screen versions of more conventional stage musicals; the forced zaniness of a climactic chariot chase is unfunny in the style of It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World.  The film also anticipates subsequent BBC sitcom successes:  not only the obvious offshoot, Up Pompeii! (in which the cheap, static studio setting and the mostly lame acting were – as he might himself have said – ambrosia and nectar to Frankie Howerd) but also Some Mothers Do ‘Ave ‘Em.  Michael Crawford’s juvenile lead, Hero, with his daft, nervous giggle and acrobatics, seems in retrospect a try-out for Frank Spencer.

    The large cast also includes Beatrix Lehmann, Roy Kinnear, Alfie Bass, Jon Pertwee, Peter Butterworth (indistinguishable from his Carry On persona), Jack May and Janet Webb (the fat lady who always interrupted the finale of The Morecambe and Wise Show).  The ‘virgin’ babes in A Funny Thing Happened probably found secure employment in The Benny Hill Show in the twilight of their voluptuous years.  Screenplay by Melvin Frank and Michael Pertwee; musical direction and (poor) incidental music by Ken Thorne; photographed by Nicolas Roeg; sets and costumes designed by Tony Walton.  Richard Williams’s titles are a dazzling, slick recycling of Ancient Roman imagery:  this pop mosaic is wittily stylised like nothing else in the film.

    [1990s]

  • A Fish Called Wanda

    Charles Crichton (1988)

    The streak of cruelty that runs through much of John Cleese’s work is too salient in A Fish Called Wanda for this comedy to be enjoyable.  Its chief characters, with one exception, are derided and/or humiliated throughout the film, a crime caper co-produced, written by and starring Cleese, and directed by Charles Crichton, an elder statesman of the Ealing school.  This collaboration turns out not to be a marriage of equals:  Cleese’s familiar but strongly expressed misanthropy overpowers Crichton’s indecisive treatment of the material.  What’s new in Cleese’s script and performance – and what’s hardest to take in Crichton’s direction – is aberrant sentimentality.  Wanda is the name of both the eponymous angel fish and a blithely amoral young American con artist (Jamie Lee Curtis) who, along with a ‘weapons man’ and compatriot named Otto (Kevin Kline), becomes a partner in crime with two British jewel thieves – a Cockney martinet called George Thomason (Tom Georgeson, strenuously unfunny) and his cluelessly loyal sidekick, Ken (Michael Palin).  (Otto and Wanda, who are lovers, pretend to George and Ken to be brother and sister.)  After the gang has stolen and hidden some diamonds, George is shopped by Wanda and Otto, taken into custody and put on trial, to be defended by a successful barrister called Archie Leach (Cleese).  (Archibald Leach was the real name of Cary Grant – an in-joke that suggests A Fish Called Wanda may be in part an exercise in wish fulfilment for John Cleese.)   Wanda and Otto discover to their horror that George and Ken have moved the loot to a different hiding place.  Wanda reckons their best bet is for her to seduce Archie so that George will plead guilty and reveal where the diamonds are hidden.  Archie falls in love with Wanda.

    Wanda turns Archie’s life upside down.  His dizzying infatuation with her is a big improvement on the stultifying routine of his loveless marriage to the nagging Wendy (Maria Aitken).  Stripped of his wig, gown and wing collar, Archie becomes a new man.  Each time Jamie Lee Curtis goes into a clinch with Cleese, the cinematographer Alan Hume gives her beatific lighting and there’s sensitive Cavatina-ish guitar music on the soundtrack.  John Cleese is trying to be sincere and to appear gratefully entranced but though you’re very aware of the effort, you’re not convinced by it.  If the whole film were shaped as the development and attainment of the barrister’s fantasy, these romantic moments might play differently.  As it is, Crichton and Cleese deploy (their idea of) ‘typical’ American freedom of linguistic and sexual expression – chiefly ‘fucking’, the word and the practice – as a stick with which to beat ‘typical’ English social correctness and emotional inhibition.  They do this rather humourlessly but are not so committed to the approach as to lose sarcastic face:  Archie’s and Wanda’s lovemaking is invariably interrupted by the obsessively jealous, Anglophobic (and audience-pleasing) Otto.  Jamie Lee Curtis looks lovely and acts competently but she understandably fails to be as charming as Cleese’s conception of the woman she’s playing.  Wanda’s insouciance is a little jarring because it’s the insouciance of a smart and knowing character (and actress).  The potentially subversive leading lady is made cute.

    The film’s unkind treatment of Ken, the owner of the aquarium that contains the other Wanda, sits uneasily with its wet love story.  Ken is meant to represent the English love of animals.  Charged by George with getting rid of the elderly Mrs Coady (Patrica Hayes), the chief witness to the jewel robbery, Ken succeeds only in accidentally killing her three Yorkshire terriers in increasingly elaborate ways:  the last of these deaths is enough to give Mrs Coady a fatal heart attack.  Patricia Hayes delivers her lines in a superior yap – an amusing illustration of the idea that people become like their pets.  Ken’s feelings for animals aren’t, however, built up strongly enough to turn the demise of the dogs into comic irony – it comes across as merely heartless.  So does a sequence in which Otto ties Ken up, sticks fruit and veg in his mouth and up his nostrils and then tortures him by eating his fish.  Michael Palin is, as always, a likeable presence but he’s not a great comic actor – and he would need to be to make much of Ken, who bungles and stammers and that’s about it.  Kevin Kline uses his physical and vocal agility to romanticise Otto’s paranoia.  He realises the script’s best character with panache and makes his manic thickness charismatic.  Yet I didn’t find Kline funny.  As in Sophie’s Choice, you’re left in doubt how accomplished and versatile he is – but his exceptional zest for performance and an aggressive show-off quality are two sides of the same coin.  Unlike some bravura actors who sink without trace when they try to be restrained, Kline has been effective when he tones things down (in the early romantic scenes in Sophie’s Choice, in The Big Chill, especially in his underrated Donald Woods in Cry Freedom).  Winning an Oscar for A Fish Called Wanda is unlikely to be conducive to his developing the more delicate side of his talents.

    It’s puzzling that this film has proved to be such a major critical and commercial success.  It’s inferior to the Monty Python movies that I’ve seen and much inferior to Fawlty Towers.  It lacks the extravagance and unpredictability of the former; it doesn’t get near the latter’s tight, elegant farce structure or the quality of its characters.  (The people in Fawlty Towers may have started life as caricatures but they were so vividly portrayed that they turned into something richer.)  Of course A Fish Called Wanda isn’t specifically trying to emulate these other comedies but what does it offer instead?  Charles Crichton tells the story clearly but conventionally.  The plotting is efficient but not inspired.  Of the performances, only Kline’s is remarkable.  The film was already a hit in America when it opened in Britain – a rare enough event, for a home-grown movie, to compel critical success over here.  A Fish Called Wanda would have done well at the British box office in any case.  But why did it tickle the fancy of American critics and audiences?  Perhaps its lame adoration of the heroine not only explodes the British sense of superiority that infuriates Otto throughout the film but also tapped into an American sensitivity to this spurious phenomenon.  One thing’s for sure:  A Fish Called Wanda won’t damage Americans’ properly overwhelming sense of superiority about which country makes better cinema.

    [1990s]

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