KallioWeHardlyKnewYe
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- May 30, 2003
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10
Edwards (1979)
“The sonofabitch across the way has a bigger telescope than I have.”
George is rich and famous. He’s a multiple Oscar winning composer. Nice house. Lovely partner who looks and sounds a lot like Julie Andrews. But at his 42nd birthday (ONLY 42?), he feels amiss. He’s mopey and disconnected. He obsessively peeps on his libidinous neighbors. A beautiful young woman on her way to a wedding catches his eye one day. He’s so distracted he wrecks his car … the first of many comedic mishaps and pratfalls due to horniness. He becomes obsessed with this youthful beauty, essentially stalking and spying on her. Going as far as following her and her husband to Mexico on their honeymoon. When he finally gets her, it’s not quite as he imagined as it turns out he’s a little more old fashioned than he even realized.
Dudley Moore’s George is yet another in cinema’s rich history of mopey man children. All the anxieties of a Woody Allen or Albert Brooks, but not quite the wit or intelligence. A proto Judd Apatow character with less weed. I thought of some of Brooks’ characters a lot in this case because like some of those, Moore is awful tough to root for. Who wants to be in a relationship with this man? That makes 10 tough sledding at points.
Now I don’t need to ROOT FOR a protagonist necessarily. George’s struggle is relatable even if he isn’t necessarily. It’s very human for one to allow their low self esteem to cloud their judgement and/or block the acknowledgement of the things that are good or right in their life. His “male menopause.”
There’s definitely a modern watching of this where the gut reaction is that Moore is gross and bad. He is. I’m not so sensitive that I can’t do a little suspension of disbelief and work with the movie on its terms. “It was the style at the time” and whatnot. But the ending is hard to buy. Andrews, a clearly intelligent and thoughtful woman, deserves better.
Blake Edwards is one of movie’s great directors of slightly more sophisticated and erudite comedies and this is commonly cited among his best, though the scene of a young and cornrowed Bo Derek running on a beach certainly has helped buoy its memorability across time. The physical comedy didn’t do much for me (though I do appreciate a good prolonged comedic tumble down a hill as much as the next viewer). There is an escalating series of embarrassments. The Book of Job as a sex comedy. But I do think some of the verbal jousting was quite sharp, particularly the early movie argument between Moore and Andrews about his attitude toward women. Similarly when Moore and Derek discuss her feelings about sex. The women are unambiguously the most aware and most intelligent ones. They’re the ones who know themselves. George is not. He gets some comeuppance, but not enough. Perhaps that was the style at the time as well.
Did I laugh? Yeah I laughed. But I can’t help but feel whatever once was revelatory about this movie lost its potency.
Edwards (1979)
“The sonofabitch across the way has a bigger telescope than I have.”
George is rich and famous. He’s a multiple Oscar winning composer. Nice house. Lovely partner who looks and sounds a lot like Julie Andrews. But at his 42nd birthday (ONLY 42?), he feels amiss. He’s mopey and disconnected. He obsessively peeps on his libidinous neighbors. A beautiful young woman on her way to a wedding catches his eye one day. He’s so distracted he wrecks his car … the first of many comedic mishaps and pratfalls due to horniness. He becomes obsessed with this youthful beauty, essentially stalking and spying on her. Going as far as following her and her husband to Mexico on their honeymoon. When he finally gets her, it’s not quite as he imagined as it turns out he’s a little more old fashioned than he even realized.
Dudley Moore’s George is yet another in cinema’s rich history of mopey man children. All the anxieties of a Woody Allen or Albert Brooks, but not quite the wit or intelligence. A proto Judd Apatow character with less weed. I thought of some of Brooks’ characters a lot in this case because like some of those, Moore is awful tough to root for. Who wants to be in a relationship with this man? That makes 10 tough sledding at points.
Now I don’t need to ROOT FOR a protagonist necessarily. George’s struggle is relatable even if he isn’t necessarily. It’s very human for one to allow their low self esteem to cloud their judgement and/or block the acknowledgement of the things that are good or right in their life. His “male menopause.”
There’s definitely a modern watching of this where the gut reaction is that Moore is gross and bad. He is. I’m not so sensitive that I can’t do a little suspension of disbelief and work with the movie on its terms. “It was the style at the time” and whatnot. But the ending is hard to buy. Andrews, a clearly intelligent and thoughtful woman, deserves better.
Blake Edwards is one of movie’s great directors of slightly more sophisticated and erudite comedies and this is commonly cited among his best, though the scene of a young and cornrowed Bo Derek running on a beach certainly has helped buoy its memorability across time. The physical comedy didn’t do much for me (though I do appreciate a good prolonged comedic tumble down a hill as much as the next viewer). There is an escalating series of embarrassments. The Book of Job as a sex comedy. But I do think some of the verbal jousting was quite sharp, particularly the early movie argument between Moore and Andrews about his attitude toward women. Similarly when Moore and Derek discuss her feelings about sex. The women are unambiguously the most aware and most intelligent ones. They’re the ones who know themselves. George is not. He gets some comeuppance, but not enough. Perhaps that was the style at the time as well.
Did I laugh? Yeah I laughed. But I can’t help but feel whatever once was revelatory about this movie lost its potency.