BAD BOY (1925)--- Among rollicking anecdotes
Leo McCarey told was the time he fell down an elevator shaft and shattered both
legs. Sound like fun? Humor was different then. Roughhouse came natural to a tougher
breed for whom broke limbs was the breaks, and to be expected, so no wonder slapstick
came sudden and sometimes cruel. Not that Charley Chase's were at Larry Semon
level of carnage, but he and McCarey knew well, and bonded on realization, that
life dealt jokers far more often than a pat hand, and the best comedy (like
theirs) needed to reflect this. How much should we credit McCarey with quality
of Chase comedy? Some among auteurism's membership would give it all to the
future potentate of screwball. They'd score up McCarey for Laurel and Hardy's
success as well. I'll say it was 75% Chase at point of BadBoy (the second
starring two-reeler he did), and acknowledge that for learning/improving all
the time, McCarey's percentage would increase as did progress of the series.
Maybe by teaming time of L&H, he was the guiding genius, and it was Laurel who
learned from LMc toward flourishing of a Stan/Babe partnership.
I do know McCarey credited Chase with teaching
him everything he knew, this a gracious hindsight from well after Charley had
passed on. Maybe it's enough that McCarey was a more than promising newcomer
and Chase had mature enough appreciation of talent to let the younger man find
his level so everyone could benefit. What's obvious is advantage to Bad Boy of
an added reel, Charley Chase a comedian who needed relax time to set up his
character and situation. The mama's boy and timid suitor was a good start, and
worked so long as Charley had appearance of youth. 20's audiences liked
laughing at any antithesis of go-getting that served as model for men, thehalting and frequently embarrassed Chase persona a blueprint CC would keep,
with minor variation, for the rest of a career. Bad Boy set a standard for
Chases to come, and it was high. Most of his with McCarey were at least as
good, the larger part surviving thanks to Pathe-released shorts being sold on
16mm to home collectors.
THE PEARL OF DEATH (1944)--- I'll go on a limb
and venture that The Pearl Of Death, along with The Lodger, was the scariest
movie released in 1944. Censorship was stringent upon horrors, but mysteries
could and did get away with content I'd call horrific. The monster here is
Rondo Hatton's Creeper, built up throughout as a fiend given to back-breaking his
victims. Hatton's real-life acromegaly made for a frightful, if afflicted, face
emerging from shadows to final reel confrontSherlock Holmes. I don't know any
Universal fiends at the time so engaged as this Creeper, who'd be back as the
company's horror brand wore down, but never so effectively as his first
appearance here. The Pearl Of Death goes familiar Holmesian route of the
detective's rush effort to gather related objects that will explain murders and
unmask the culprit. Pearl relates too with Uni horrors via use of
Evelyn Ankers as disguise-prone henchwoman to master-minding Miles Mander.
Holmes at Universal never struck me as B level, each and all entries handsomely
produced and solid set-decorated. Lost count years ago as to number of Pearl views, but there'll be many more thanks to Blu-Ray
boxing of the fourteen title series.
LET'S DO IT AGAIN (1953)--- Broadway composer
Ray Milland spends a feature's length wooing back wife Jane Wyman before their
divorce becomes final. Done at Columbia
where musicals weren't generally a patch on even what Warners released, all
studios save Metro having cut back spending for such. Someone by this time had
decided that Wyman should sing (and often), our endurance depending on
individual taste, or lack of, for this performer (Let's Do It Again like acontinuation of her character from Just For You). Competing with Milland for Wyman's
hand are Tom Helmore and Aldo Ray, both sans notable aptitude for music or
farcing, but game withal and offbeat assets to Let's Do It Again, itself
approaching the cliff from which old-style musicals would plunge oncerock and rollarrived to shake/rattle the genre. I watched mainly because TCM ran a
gorgeous transfer from Columbia.
Writer Richard Matheson later said he got his idea for The Incredible Shrinking Manfrom a Ray Milland-Tom Helmore hat switch gag here, one instance of a
mediocre film inspiring a classic one.
ME AND MY GAL (1932)--- Much humor of a men's
smoker sort as cop Spencer Tracybird-dogs sassy waitress Joan Bennett, their
battle of will/wits enlivening a Fox programmer fortunately directed by Raoul
Walsh, him being primary reason for modern interest in the pic. Watch co-stars
here, then in Father Of The Bride, and know how radically their images, and the
biz itself, would change over less than two decades. Gal's another precodewhere amusement lamps switch on and off --- on when Tracy/Bennett parry,
distinctly off where a tiresome drunk on fringes overstays his less-than
welcome. Walsh's humor was a type that would depart as movies got more genteel,
thus occasional head-scratch as to what made his funny-bone vibrate (obviously
lots of the drunk indulged here). Me and My Gal is a privileged glimpse of 1932
time passed for a dime's admission, and orchids to TCM for dredging it up.
HOW MOTION PICTURES BECAME THE MOVIES (2013)---
Sometimes, a single hour comes along where you really learn something. Such was
case for me yesterday when I online-tuned into historian David Bordwell's
presentationon How Motion Pictures Became The Movies (HERE, or HERE). His is a seventy minute
power point review of how pics developed during crucial years between 1908 and
1920, with emphasis on artistic choices and changes that emerged in feature
filmmaking during that period (Bordwell's words). I was fascinated by ways
editing got used by American producers to vault ahead of Euro rivals, and how
techniques introduced a century ago remain with us today. Bordwell proposes
Cinemascope in early incarnation as encore stage for tableau framing popular in the teens and before, with example shots from well-known How To
Marry A Millionaire, Island In The Sun (above image), etc. Bordwell is a good speaker who
explains everything clearly and in a manner easy to grasp. My attention never
drifted from the captivating story he told. The many illustration/examples
spike our involvement: no dry lecture this, as Bordwell moves deftly along his
topics and keeps interest lively. There's also promise of more such videos, for
which I'll eager-wait and certainly watch when Bordwell posts them. For meanwhile,
How Motion Pictures Became The Movies gets highest Greenbriar recommendation.
SONG OF THE GRINGO (1936)--- I've been a fan of
Tex Ritter's music, but till now hadn't watched his westerns beyond excerpt
sampling, so am here to belatedly say that Tex is The Man. Who knew his
speaking voice was as powerful an instrument as his singing? Ritter had a Texas drawl that's
poetry to these listening ears, and I go considerably for his offbeat way with
song. Producer Ed Finney led off a Ritter series with Gringo, so it's myriad
talents of Tex
spotlighted throughout.Always nice when your cowboys, even singing ones, look
and talk the part. Among Ritter's recital is Rye Whiskey, which Tex immortalized over
and again for a long career ahead. Grand National released Song Of The Gringo
during a flush year when they also briefly hooked James Cagney for a pair of
outlaw vehicles he did to spite Warner bosses. Song Of The Gringo was a TCM
one-shot, so guess I'll have to go looking for Tex at DVD hideouts.
DIZZY DISHES (1930)--- A rough and rowdy Max
Fleischer Talkertoon, featuring his canine find, Bimbo, but memorable more for
introducing a nascent Betty Boop, here with dog ears and too wide a head.
Richard Fleischer, son of Max, and his biographer, said that animator Grim
Natwick waited until Dad's death to claim creator credit for Betty, this under
heading of success having many fathers. Is there proof of who invented BB? The
beanery where Bimbo toils has a floor show like roughhewn ones in Paramount's Applause from
the previous year. Everyone talks post-dub (no regard to sync) and guttural.
Fleischer drawings had a way of getting right in your face: that plus harsh
voice makes them seem almost threatening. Max's crew worked right off Broadway
and spent nights carousing vaudeville and drink joints. They went not for
refinery and preferred humor crude. As long as that kept up, they could go
proud even in the face of Disney dominance. It was when MF began imitating WD
that decline set in.
THE NIGHT CRY (1926)--- Rin-Tin-Tin accused of
sheep murder --- must find real culprit! The dog series was Warner's sustenance
during a silent and initial talking era. Done cheaply, but aimed to please,
these routinely set forest fires at the boxoffice, it arguable that Rinty was a
best asset WB had. The Night Cry's a sort that never got respect and isn't
likely to, being work of craftsmen who for a most part never gained
critic/cultist stature (other than writing Darryl Zanuck, whose apprenticeshipthese were). Rinty was, truth to say, a better and more subtle actor than many
who mimed through a talk-less period. Magic he managed just with soulful eyes
might put Garbo and Gish to shame. Quiet scenes were succulent hambone to Rinty
--- he did them beautifully --- action too was his métier as RTT scraps
forcefully with rival dogs and a wicked condor that Grapevine's DVD enhanced
with screeching sound FX whenever it swooped. Human players count for little,
so John Harron and June Marlowe mostly react to the dog, who reacts (better) to
them. There was a bucket of Rin-Tin-Tins, many sadly missing now.
MIDNIGHT CLUB (1933)--- Scotland Yard's Sir Guy
Standing out to nab Clive Brook and his jewel-thieving mob, its number swelled
by horning-in Yank George Raft. Precode amenities abound: Raft strip-searches
Helen Vinson for diamonds concealed, one crook gets off scot-free, and it's
implied that ringleader Brook will make good a promised escape. What's so
irresistible as a nightclub setting circa early 30's? Paramount deco-dresses
theirs to elegant nines, and no matter absurdity of plot. Midnight Club stays a
merry pace to 64 minutes such froth can sustain. Getting established Raft flips
car keys instead of a coin, underplays to a point of being absent from the
room. Has anyone noticed what big ears he had? Raft's the Dumbo Clark
Gable waskidded for being. Lead man Brook saw humor of Midnight Club and plays
to it. He'd be better known and liked if more of these Paramounts were in
circulation. Seen on a surprisingly nice booted DVD.
Tough Battlefield For A Farewell To Arms --- Part One
Used to be that A Farewell To Arms couldn't be
seen complete. Prints were gelded and dim besides. I didn't even want to watch
what UHF channels broadcast in the 70's after the Paramount
1932 version went apparent PD. What brought this to recent attention? A TCM
view of Warners' called-by-some remake, Force Of Arms, which it isn't, but
close enough being so for WB to hedge bets (and forestall Hemingway legal
challenge) byowning the Farewell property, which they'd later barter to
Selznick for his '57 re-do. Confused yet? Might be my addled prose, or fact
that 1932's A Farewell To Arms walked through fire toward at-last recovered
completeness in first a 2004 Image DVD, then Blu-Ray splendor more recently
from Kino. That rescue was serendipity made possible by a Selznick-saved print
of the original before it was Code-cut in 1938 (DOS saved everything), just
another reason why we should revere him. What I'm about here and in Part Two is
back-track through Farewell's thicket from '32 to happy High-Def place it today
occupies.
A Farewell To Arms had been considered a classic
right from start, being one of Paramount's
(few) hits in an otherwise depleted 1932. Old man Depression couldn't stop
director Frank Borgaze's romantic steer of Gary Cooper-Helen Hayes into moviegoer
memories; they'd treasure time spent with the pair and ask for repeatengagements, accommodated so long as exchanges had stock. Forward to May 1938:
Product is industry-wide low (a bereft summer was looming) and majors look to
revival of past hits to fill scheduling. Dracula and Frankenstein come back to
unexpected crowds. Even Valentino's two Sheik silents return to satisfaction of
a talkie public's curiosity. Paramount
had clicked with recent encore of The Virginian, a Gary Cooper (very) oldie
folks still talked about; that was good for what Variety called a
"found" $170K. Could A Farewell To Arms, even better regarded, go a more
profitable distance?
What stoked potential was Helen Hayes wowing
legit-goers as Victoria Regina, the play just off a sock Broadway run and now
touring as new Farewell prints were prepped. These first had to go before PCA
authority for a '38 Seal of Approval, censor-speak for Farewell's head upon a
butcher's block. How deep was the chop? Well, enough to ruin what Borgaze and
crew had effected in 1932, and that had only come after intense wrangling with
so-called precode authority (headed then by easier-going Jason Joy). Still, A
Farewell To Arms had cache and maybe renewed relevance now that a world seemed newly
bent toward war. Variety headlined on 5/31/38 that AFTA Will Be Given Same
Bally As (A) New Film, which meant heavy exploitation, local press previews,
the works. Toward getting back coin spent,Para
set a straight 20% of receipts as toll for theatres playing their (200 new
prints) revival.
What would hopefully help too was "Queen Of The
American Stage" Helen Hayes pitching in with a boost, Para publicity chief Terry
DeLapp dispatched to Frisco where she'd preview, Variety said, a slightly
deleted print ... to see if, in her opinion, the expurgations ordered by the
Hays office were in any way objectionable. Maybe Helen's memory of the original
was cloudy,or she just decided to play ball ... either way, a trade ad ran her
endorsement: "A Farewell To Arms Is The Finest Thing I Have Ever
Done." The trade a week later pointed out humorous aspect of Victoria
Regina having its LA run in direct opposition to A Farewell To Arms a block
away. Helen Hayes was competing with herself! Film house booking is not
expected to cut into her legit performance take, assured a columnist, and how
true those words turned out to be, as Farewell's comeback went disastrously with
a brutal $1,500 in the till for its first two days. Were visiting Shriners in
front of the theatre and crowding street corners responsible? --- or was it
fact that patrons are just not interested in viewing a reissue that has
previously been thoroughly milked in the nabe subsequent runs.
Paramount forged ahead, engaging in ticklish negotiation with
the Italian government for permission to release A Farewell To Arms in that
fascist stronghold. "Satisfactory agreement" was reached in
September, the country's spokesman issuinga statement thatFascists do not believe reflections on Italy or scenes distasteful to Rome were intentional. Variety's 1938
year-end biz summary ID'ed a "Death Knell" for reissues: While the
revival of old films in some cases registered modest profits for their makers,
the "take" was trivial when compared with the customer resentment
that developed in some sections of the country. So back into storage went A
Farewell To Arms, never to be reissued by Paramount
again ... but vault-bound to stay? Not hardly. Part Two of A Farewell To Arms isHERE.
ANGELS WITH DIRTY FACES (1938)--- Simply the
summit of gangster melodramas at WB. This was what Cagney got as gift for
returning there after his Grand National misadventure. Angels would be
remembered as well, or better, than Public Enemy, Rocky's walk to the chair
a masterstroke of did he or didn't he (turn yellow). Jim and Pat O' Brien had
worked together before, never so effectively as here. JC got one look at how
Warners dressed their backlot tenement and had to admit there was no place like
(his studio) home. I've read how Dead End Kids teased/picked on Humphrey
Bogart, but that Cagney jerked knots in them, which may prove that Jim was
the tougher Warner guy. Considering their respective upbrings, there's little
doubt of JC being more streetwise, and it's known he didn't take Bogie's
bad-act too seriously.
I love Angels' street scene: it's slummy, but
somehowyou're home there. Did girls lovely and benign as Ann Sheridan live
in such places? I could do with six or a dozen suits like ones Jim wears here.
Background music at the El Toro sounds great. Wish
it were CD pressed. Don't any of the Dead End Kids have parents? I showed
Angels to a GF once and she was alarmed by aggressor way Cagney fired a
pistol. He brandished firearms similar to florid hand gesturing of precode
beginning (the wife had warned him about overdoing that after seeing Hard To Handle). In fact, Jim did every physical thing in a style unlike others, reason, he might have argued, for getting big bucks. It wasn't known then that terms for
Cagney returning to Warners included percentage share of rentals. Had others on
WB straight-wage list found out, there might have been mutiny. How valuable was he?
More so, I'd guess, than anyone who worked at the firm until Bogart broke out,
and by then, Cagney was gone of his own accord. Angels With Dirty Faces is
likeliest the one that set JC upon icon status. He got several critic awards
for Best Performance that year, even though the Academy gave theirs to Spencer
Tracy.
Directing Mike Curtiz gets full value from Angel
set-ups, each abetted by quick-time edits that move 97 minutes like half
that. This may-be my favorite 30's movie that isn't comic or horrific. The Dead
End Kids are incheck and register as distinct personalities. I'd guess this
was where moulds were firmed for decades-ahead work on East Sides,
Boweries: sites and labels to come. Humbled star George Bancroft and
up-and-coming Bogart supply sinister backdrop. Would Father Jerry have gone as
hard on Rocky had he realized the latter twice saved his life? That first
occasion on railroad tracks would have clinched a lifetime pass from me: I'd
not clamp down on Rocky from that point no matter what he did. Frankie Burke
playing Sullivan-as-kid has uncanny resemblance to Cagney. Was he coached by
his model? JC's powerful last scene is solely done with voice, plus hands
clutching at a radiator. For impact that has, you'd imagine in hindsight seeing
Cagney writhe head-to-feet, and there's the measure of his great performance.
CHINA GIRL (1942)--- Originally tabbed as a
bigger picture to star Tyrone Power, China Girl came off Fox assembly a less
stable "A," but well-written (Ben Hecht) and visually a beaut (that
emphasized by 20th's On-Demand DVD). China Girl is romantic fantasy of pre-war,
soldier-of-fortune George Montgomery unwilling to commit until met by
half-caste Gene Tierney (the story was Darryl Zanuck's, scripting by Hecht). Nippon opposition is alternately labeled"lice"
and "monkeys," a Chinese village populace machine-gunned for an
opener atrocity to get points straightaway across. Fox approximates oriental setting
as we'd imagine, or prefer it, China Girl at times like a bigger budget Mr. Moto.
Hotel interiors, dining area, and bar were splendidly realized in LA's BradburyBuilding, atmospheric site where D.O.A.
and scores of noirs would later play out. Characters like Montgomery's
reflect America's reluctance
to enter the conflict, so it has to get personal for him to arm up (how long
would the US have waited if
not for Pearl Harbor?). Lynn Bari, called
Queen Of Fox B's, commends herself well as agent for the Japs who switches
loyalty in GM's favor. Directing Henry Hathaway likely took this purely as
assignment, but what skill and panache with action he brings.
THE GIGOLO RACKET (1931)--- Helen Morgan put
been-there feel into torch singing that made up for lack of voice
range, so startling is comparison with Gogi Grant, who'd put over with dynamic
force the HM catalogue as vocal stand-in for AnnBlyth in 1957's bio-pic, The
Helen Morgan Story. The Gigolo Racket was a Vitaphone two-reeler said to be
Morgan's only appearance at less than feature-length. She's matronly at age
thirty --- what a hard road this woman traveled. You could wish for twenty minutes
of concertizing rather than two songs and the rest contrivance of star Helen
going along with manager John Hamilton's scheme to pair her with a gigolo for
publicity purposes. Morgan was deep in the sauce by 30's juncture, but had
presence and tragic grandeur lent by years at speakeasy perf'ing and selling
out Broadway in a legendary Showboat turn as Julie LaVerne. Helen might have
been a great character actress in films given better circumstance, this based
on wow work in Applause and the 1936 Showboat. She and stage colleague Jeanne
Eagels were somewhat alike for dynamic, though limited, screen appearing, then
premature lights out. The Gigolo Racket is another gem off Warner Archives'
newest Vitaphone shorts DVD set.
The best books interact with other media:
they'll send you in search of movies referenced within, thus doubling joy of
the read. Such a Pied Piper, newly updated from original2010 publication, is
James D'Arc's When Hollywood Came To Town: A History Of Moviemaking In Utah,
which near-resolves me to fly out there and visit glorious settings for so many
pics I'd call favorites. Visit? We might all do to retire there. It's not just MonumentValley they boast: the state is fairly
honeycombed with breathtaking sites to film, all of which D'Arc covers with a
painterly pen and illustrations for wow onlooking. Picture-makers didn't just
show up to shoot: it needed push on part of Utah residents (really entrepreneurs)
to get Hollywood off its provincial dime and go where vistas could be captured
as no place else.
What enhances most is D'Arc himself being an
accomplished film historian. He's curator of BrighamYoungUniversity's
Motion Picture Archive and lends the book a wealth of insider knowledge and
fruit of many interviews conducted with those who made movie magic
on Utah
location. And the images? I was jaw-dropped by many gone beyond rare. Having
read for years of tent cities John Ford built for his MonumentValley
crews, who'd of thought a color photo would turn up of said accommodations for
The Searchers --- yet here it is. D'Arc covers multiple regions and gives each
a chapter. I picked one to start, KaneCounty, and acquainted myself with
background and history before repairing to view of travel folder westerns shot
there, 20th Fox's Western Union and Universal-International's RedCanyon.
Both are fortunately accessible on HD, Western Union from Vudu and RedCanyon
off Retroplex, quality a best it couldbe. What better way to make D'Arc's Utah
Hollywood come to my town?
According to the book, KaneCounty seat Kanab and surrounding ground
were primarily site for Western Union and RedCanyon, most striking points being the
red-tinted Vermilion Cliffs and JohnsonCanyon, which later became ZionNational
Park. Said setting had been used for several
budget westerns that were first to utilize Kane-Kanab, but further development,
plus traversable roads, were needed in order to lure big-budget filmmakers. A
first of these was director Fritz Lang's crew for Western
Union, which added punch of Technicolor to show places not
captured as such on film before. Same old rocks and trees back home wouldn't do
for high-ticket picture folk who wanted their westerns to capture sights
unique. Western Union has just that and a good
Zane Grey story besides. Knowing where and under what conditions it was filmed
makes the watching that much more of a pleasure, and author D'Arc supplies much
in the way of behind-scenes lore.
RedCanyon is
among horse stories popular in the 40's, having clicked since silents when Rex
wonder-steeded for Hal Roach. Now with 40's addition of Technicolor, equine
subjects enjoyed second coming, and all the majors drank from a winning trough.
RedCanyon was Universal's and a vehicle for
ingénue Ann Blyth and promising newcomer Howard Duff, a radio vet whose face,
if not voice, was fresh. Coming to Kane-Kanab did wonders for backdrop: this
was among loveliest-shot westerns the decade offered. Crimson cliffs for which
Vermilion was noted had values not altogether of this earth. Bob Lippert, given
more budget for his Rocketship X-M, might have been well advised to shoot
his Mars-scape here, so red planet evocative is Vermilion. I'll be pulling more
to watch as peruse continues through When Hollywood Came To Town ---
many more notable films were shot in Utah than I'd realized --- and what reading
satisfaction it is to have such splendid coverage of them all between two
covers.
British invaders were many and varied from the
late 50's through the sixties. Horror/sci-fi, rock shows, and James Bond
actually outnumbered US pics I saw at the Liberty
during latter-half 1965. Of musicals, A Hard Day's Night and Help! were
obviously most popular from over there, but there was also Ferry Cross The
Mersey and Having A Wild Weekend, both having had choppier crossing, and least
exposure since. Ferryshowcased Gerry and The Pacemakers, Liverpool
boys handled too by Beatles brain-trust Brian Epstein. The Liberty 7/65 doubled Ferry Cross The Mersey
with similarly Brit-lensed Tomb Of Ligeia, the latter being what I wanted more to
see. Strenuous argument ensued that afternoon with a neighbor boy over which of
the combo would be longer remembered. I ventured Ligeia, but in view of Drew's
age and size advantage, did not belabor the point. Forty-eight years and Ferry
Cross The Mersey's virtual disappearance would seem to have corroborated me,
but would Drew still recall the debate?
Having A Wild Weekend has lately returned,
thanks to Warner Archive DVD release. Here was The Dave Clark Five's bid for
ticket-selling beyond US-performing at concerts and on TV (they practically
lived on Ed Sullivan's show). A Hard Day'sNight had hit for the Beatles --- could Warners
do as much with Having A Wild Weekend? The DC5 were called a nearest rival to Liverpool's foursome, having been frequent on Top-40
charts. They matched outfits after Beatle fashion and did a July Shindig for
ABC just ahead of Weekend's open. Plan was for the boys to live-tour and
theatre-appear to thump WB's release of 400 prints, saturation play to
hopefully begin and wrap before schools got going for the Fall. Having A Wild
Weekend was UK-titled Catch Us If You Can, but stateside marketing needed a
livelier label; both were hit-bound tunes in any case from Epic's soundtrack,
set for tandem release with the film.
Warner's campaign was keyed to abandon and
fun-for-all that was A Hard Day's Night, their trailer looking like virtual
replay of UA's success, but this Weekend was not altogethercelebratory.
Creatively in charge Dave Clark tendered instead a bleak-at-times dig at
commercial interests soiling music expression and youth's integrity (one ad
exec has what seems a Peeping Tom obsession with Barbara Ferris' ingénue); add
to that an ending the charitable might call bittersweet. Clearly this Weekend
would have a Monday hangover. Could bookings outpace disappointed
word-of-mouth? Songs, good ones, were there, but only on the soundtrack: we
don't see the boys perform. Here too was Dave to more-or-less exclusion of his
mates, sensible maybe for his coming closest to lead man looks, jokingly called
"saturnine" in HAWW. London
was DC5's base, theirs an upbeat tempo rocking past the Beatles' slowing one.
Opener gag has the Five cribbing in an abandoned
church with pipe organ wake-up; I expected earlier Children Of The Damned residents
to serve notice of eviction. HAWW is at times dingy and kitchen sink-ish, that
pleasing by modern measure, but didn't '65 Yanks prefer pristine and swinging London? Dave and a
runaway ad-model girlfriend taste austerity still in '65 effect, driving their
Jaguar past a disabled WWII tank without comment. There's also unsettling
encounter with crypto-hippies who ask for"weed" and
"horse," their manner and number sufficient to imply ritual kill or
cannibal impulse, admittedly less clear a threat in pre-Manson 1965. As
eventual hitch-hikers, Dave and companion are given transport by an edgy couple
with possible designs on both (Were they kinks?, asks one of the Five later). Wonder
what domestic teens made of this. Disaffected "Guy," well past
estrangement from his wife, displays a stash of vintage projectors and hung
one-sheets (including Bogart in The Big Shot) that previews perhaps how many
of us collectors would end up. The group then convenes to a party where
revelers dress as past film stars Jean Harlow, The Marx Bros., Karloff's
Frankenstein. A blackface celebrant stirs neither comment nor censure, possibly
a last time we'd see such an image on screen without arousing one or the other.
Variety gave Weekend a round kick, bad recording
and slurred speech basis for their pan (it was hard enough understanding these
Brits without their technicians mucking things up!). Concert incidents got DC5
unwelcome trade press, which referred to their fan base as "the
lollipop market." A July 5 Phoenix
gig became Variety's idea of a "melee" thanks to a panicked local DJ
who grabbed Dave Clark's mike and demanded the show be stopped "to protect
the kids." DC5 manager Rick Picone put it all down as S.O.P. "when we
play the provinces," noting no doubt a13,000 seat coliseum with only
3,000 filled, tickets sold at $4.50 tops. A Paterson, NJ dust-up on August 21
was more serious, DC5 local theatre-appearing to boost Having A Wild
Weekend when Picone and one other entourage member got into a rumble with cops.
According to the latter, Picone and private guard assist were hitting kids when
they got too close to the band. Defense argued that police were trying to block
fan access to the Five, and "worked over" Picone's man. DC5 hopped a
next Transatlantic in the wake of what Variety called an "imbroglio."
The Liberty
got Having A Wild Weekend for two days, September 30-October 1, 1965. Our Starlight
Drive-In had played Ferry Cross The Mersey over a brisk autumn weekend just
passed. Col.
Forehand amended his newspaper ad to read Having A Wonderful Weekend: would the
original title have invitedcontroversy? I didn't bother going because Help!
was on the way for a following Liberty
week, and we figured the Beatles for a safer entertainment bet. Warners may
have blamed Help! for routing their own British invasion, the Mop-Top's second
UA feature scooping US
gravy within weeks of Having A Wild Weekend. Domestic rentals for Weekend
stalled at $511K, but still there was $100K in profit thanks to the pic's
low negative cost: $282,000. Warners owned their import, but didn't include
Weekend among non-theatrical rents in WB Film Gallery catalogues I checked. Was
The Dave Clark Five, having disbanded in 1970, too "out" to attract a
campus picturegoing "in" crowd? Having A Wild Weekend did turn up by
the mid-seventies in a WB syndicated-for-TV package with 27 bunkmates the likes
of My Blood Runs Cold and Two On A Guillotine. Warner Archives' DVD is a nicely
rendered 1.85 and highly recommended to both DC5 fans and curiosity seekers
after 60's Brit pix.