Wednesday, May 31, 2023

Tommy

Tommy (Ken Russell, 1975) There have been bad rock and roll movies—really bad ones. But the genre seemed to hit its peak during the glitzy, gay disco-days of the 1970's. "The kids"—and Robert Stigwood—were making hits (and lots of money) from movies like Saturday Night Fever and Grease. But even more, the companies putting out the soundtracks filled with movie-hits were making a wind-fall. There was a subsequent crush of rock-movies with double-album soundtracks hitting theaters and stores and amidst that groundswell were such gems as the Barbra Streisand A Star is Born, Can't Stop the Music, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band—starring The Bee Gees and Peter Frampton—but ahead of the pack was this bloated and excessive refutation of all things revolutionary in rock n' roll—"Tommy."

Pete Townsend and The Who's "rock-opera" (though it doesn't follow strict form requirements) barely held together as an album, but it was a fine conceit. And where there's conceit, there is Hollywood.
An excessive film,
during an excessive time in Hollywood. This scattered and episodic movie actually has more in common with the episodic "Broadway Melody" revue films of the 30's and 40's—guest-stars are trotted out (Eric Clapton, Elton John, Tina Turner, Jack Nicholson) for one song, then they are shipped off, never to be seen again.
Ann-Margret was asked to cavort in soap suds, baked beans, and chocolate 
as Russell wanted to make a point about materialism and advertising excess.
She was nominated for an Oscar for her performance.
I don't remember much of "Tommy" except the excesses (purging does that), but I do remember the frequent use by director Russell of the distorted close-up, how the songs didn't flow into each other but kinda...stopped. Paused.
We miss you, Tina...
Then started again. Flow was something missing from Tommy, and replaced by excess. Elton John was the biggest thing in music at the time, but he's just a blip in the film, perched atop stilt-like Doc Martens. Jack Nicholson (substituting for a probably-more-appropriate Christopher Lee) is in B-movie auto-pilot and CANNOT sing. Ann-Margret was inconceivably nominated for an Oscar for her performance in the filmprobably for bravery, Tina Turner was deliriously ferocious (and fidgety) as "The Acid Queen," and the heretical "Eyesight for the Blind" sequence that took place in The Church of Marilyn Monroe. Tasteless, crass, and jaw-droppingly audacious, it is also a very neat commentary on the idolatry of celebrity—a far better one than the movie itself...or Townsend's original...was trying to be. Except for that sequence, the film is a waste of time. An extremely commercial indictment of things commercial.
I suppose it could be due a re-make.

Let's forget it (Better, still).
He's free. (We get it!)


The "Eyesight for the Blind" sequence (the song by "Sonny Boy Williamson II", performed by The Who, Eric Clapton—quite stoned—and Arthur Brown). Like the movie, it is padded to just go on soooo long and director Ken Russell (and editor Stuart Baird) do what they can to keep things semi-lively. Best thing about the movie.


Sunday, May 28, 2023

Don't Make a Scene: Marnie

The Story: So, remember, last week? That scene from To Catch a Thief? Pretty lightweight stuff, even comedic. Socialite Frances Stevens (Grace Kelly) comes across jewel thief Jon Robie (Cary Grant) and makes it her business to get at his truth and simultaneously seduce him. Lightweight, except that when you think about it, there's something seriously wrong with Francie—she meets a thief and is turned on by it, by him, and makes it her business to seduce him. Sure, he's Cary Grant, but...that's not normal!

It's pretty seriously cracked...like those women who become attracted to jail-birds, even notorious serial killers, and will go so far as to marry them. That's...just...crazy. And yet, it happens...all the time. We may not understand it, but there is some motivation that's unfathomable—reflected celebrity? a "relationship" with someone safely imprisoned? a relationship that can't be consummated?—that makes it happen. Francie is seriously weird. Jon Robie knows it and calls her out on it. But, they still end up together, anyway. Certainly, Hitchcock has dollied his camera through some weird psychological territory before, but...this stuff is twisted, even in a "lightweight romp" (as the critics at the time dismissed it) as To Catch a Thief.

Well, what's good for the goose... Here, Hitchcock switches sexes in his "Suspenseful Sex Mystery" Marnie. It is the male of the species—and in Sean Connery, it's very male*—that falls under the spell of a kleptomaniac, Margaret "Marnie" Edgar. Why? She's attractive—she's 'Tippi' Hedren. But, she's also a serial thief AND HE KNOWS IT! She's robbed from him, but this is not for revenge. Is it that "white knight syndrome?" where he sees a "bird with a wing down" (as Ian Fleming, James Bond's creator, called it) and is impelled to come to the rescue?

I don't know. But, it's weird. And fascinating.
 
Here's how Hitchcock described it (rather crudely) in the interview book "Hitchcock/Truffaut" (p. 227): "The fetish idea. A man wants to go to bed with a thief because she is a thief, just like other men have a yen for a Chinese or a colored woman." Truffaut asked: "Why is Marnie's hero so attracted to the girl? Is it that she depends on him because he knows her secret and can turn her over to the police, or is it simply that he finds it exciting to go to bed with a thief?"
 
Hitchcock replied: "It's both of those things. Absolutely." 

Well, not "absolutely". The picture changes it when you look at it less as a fetish idea, and more of an issue of control, the way we now recognize that most problems between the sexes occur. Connery's Mark Rutland (you thought only Bond movies had suggestive names?) recognizes the woman "Marnie" from her working at another business establishment that got robbed. When she shows up at his business, he hires "the one with the legs" and after his place is robbed, he pursues her and runs her to ground.

Look at it now. From Marnie's perspective. She's perfectly capable. Independent. Not dependent. Lives a good, if complicated, and transitory life. Does he pursue her because she's a thief? Or because he wants to take away her own control? Take away her agency? Put her under lock and key—his, rather than the police.

Connery's inherent predatory persona fits well, but the rather dreamy way he describes his plans for marriage, and the almost jocular way he treats the subject—"It's horrible, I know. But I do love you." He just doesn't love her the way she is. He wants her under his thumb. And, of course, it's couched as being "for her own good." Think it's creepy? Me, too!

Control. Hitchcock's own history of employing actresses, finding them, grooming them, changing them, and being disappointed when he lost them for roles in his movies...to pregnancy, to other work commitments, to Monaco—names like Miriam Hopkins, Ingrid Bergman, Vera Miles, Grace Kelly**—is well documented. He had signed 'Tippi' Hedren*** (real name: Natalie Kay Hedren—'Tippi' was her stage name, an alias...like "Marnie") to an exclusive contract in which he controlled all aspects of her acting life, and then tried to impose them on her personal life, as well. Diane Baker, who co-starred in Marnie was shocked at how isolated Hitchcock kept Hedren on the set. All conferences between them were private. No one was to make contact or "distract" her without the director's say-so. All for the performance. All for the movie.

All for the director. Hitchcock was a very capable one, but a very insecure man. It's what gave him great ideas and could communicate them so palpably to audiences. But, the insecurities and the neuroses were there, right on the surface. And although he was "Master of Suspense," he never really mastered his demons.
It made great art. But it didn't placate him.

Marnie was given mixed reviews at the time of its release, but one can now see it—along with Vertigo—as being one of his most personal, and self revelatory, films...whether he intentionally did so or not.
 
The Set-Up: (Taken from the film's description in "Hitchcock/Truffaut") "Marnie ('Tippi' Hedren) is a thief, Her modus operandi is to change her identity as soon as she has committed a successful robbery and then move on to another job. Though Mark Rutland (Sean Connery), the head of an important firm, recognizes her from a previous encounter, he says nothing and hires her as a secretary-bookkeeper. He is clearly attracted to the girl, but she ignores his attentions and soon disappears with the contents of the company safe."

"Mark discovers the theft, replaces the stolen money and manages to track Marnie down." 
 
At a diner, he has just finished explaining to her how he has managed to find her. Now...for the dessert course.
 
Action.
 
MARNIE EDGAR:
Why are you taking me back to Wykwyn? 
MARK RUTLAND:
Because I don't trust you not to run away. 
MARNIE:
How can I run away? You have the receipt, the post office key, 
MARNIE: ...
my name.
MARK:
Margaret Edgar. You sure that's all the name you have? 
MARK:
You sure you haven't misplaced an old husband or two in your travels? 
MARNIE:
I told you I've never been married. - 
MARK:
Near misses? - 
MARNIE:
No! 
MARNIE:
And no lovers, no steadies, no beaus, no gentlemen callers, nothing! 
MARK:
OK. Eat up.
MARNIE: Mark, 
MARNIE:
I'd like to go freshen up.
MARK: Uh-uh. 
MARK:
You're fresh enough. 
MARK:
Come on. 
MARK:
You know, I can't believe you, Marnie. 
MARK:
There must've been a great many men interested in you. 
MARNIE:
I didn't say men weren't interested in me. I wasn't interested in them. - 
MARK:
Never?
MARNIE:
No! 
MARNIE: That is... 
MARNIE:
not until - - 
MARK:
Why me? - 
MARNIE:
Because you were different, Mark. 
MARK:
Nah, It won't wash, Marnie. 
MARNIE:
But it's true! I really liked you. 
MARK:
Yes, I think you did. 
MARK:
But don't try to make it sound like any more than that. 
MARK:
When we get home, I'll explain that we had a lover's quarrel. That you ran away. 
MARK:
That I went after you and brought you back. 
MARK:
That'll please Dad. He admires action. 
MARK:
Then I'll explain that we're gonna be married before the week is out, 
MARK:
therefore you should stay on at Wykwyn. 
MARK:
That I can't bear to have you out of my sight. 
MARK:
He also admires wholesome animal lust. 
MARK:
Then we'll be married just as soon as the law allows. We'll catch an outbound boat. 
MARK:
Where do you want to go? You ever been to the South Seas? -
MARNIE:
What are you trying to pull? 
MARK:
I'm trying to pull... a proposal. 
MARK:
Let's see, how shall I phrase it? - 
MARK:
How' bout: Will you be mine? - 
MARNIE:
You're crazy! - You're out of your mind! - 
MARK:
That's a possibility. 
MARK:
The name. Marnie. Yes, I'll just go on calling you Marnie. That's easily explained. Pet name. But the Taylor. 
MARK:
We'll just have to marry you off as Mary Taylor. It's perfectly legal. You can sign yourself Minnie Q Mouse on a marriage licence,
MARK:
you're still legally married. 
MARNIE:
But you know what I am. I'm Minnie Q Thief! I'm - I'm a thief and a liar! 
MARK:
Well, It seems to be my misfortune to have fallen in love with a...thief and a liar. 
MARNIE:
In love? 
MARNIE:
Oh, Mark, if you love me, you'll let me go. 
MARNIE:
Just let me go, Mark, please. 
MARNIE:
Mark, you don't know me. 
MARNIE:
Listen to me, Mark. I am not like other people. I know what I am! 
MARK:
I doubt that you do, Marnie. In any event, we'll just have to deal with whatever it is that you are. 
MARK:
Whatever you are, 
MARK:
I love you. 
MARK: It's horrible, I know. 
MARK:
But I do love you. 
MARNIE:
You don't love me. 
MARNIE:
I'm just something you've caught! You think I'm some kind of animal you've trapped. 
MARK:
That's right, you are. 
MARK:
And I've caught something really wild this time, haven't I? 
MARK:
I've tracked you and caught you, 
MARK:
and by God, I'm gonna keep you! 
MARK:
Oh, and, Marnie, when we get home, no cute ideas about absconding with the Wykwyn silver. 
MARK:
Just get a grip on yourself for one short week and after that you can take legal possession. 
MARNIE:
Like you? Like you take legal possession? 
MARK:
Yes, if you want to put it that way. 
MARK:
Somebody's gotta take on the responsibility for you, Marnie.
MARK:
And it narrows down to a choice of me or the police, ol' girl.

 
 
 
Marnie is available on DVD and Blu-Ray from Universal Home Video.
 
* "How do you expect me to 'act frigid' around him", Hedren was heard to ask Hitchcock. "Have you seen him?" Hitchcock replied, "Yes, my dear, it's called acting..."
 
** For Marnie, Hitchcock almost managed to get Grace Kelly to return from Monaco to play the role. She was signed, but her subjects objected, and so she was forced to turn it down. Marilyn Monroe, Eva Marie Saint, and Susan Hampshire all lobbied for it. Catherine Deneuve has said she would have done it in a heart-beat. In the end, Hitchcock chose Hedren.
 
***'Tippi' Hedren's always appeared with only one slash for each quotation mark. That was Hitchcock's idea. Talk about controlling.