Lift A Glass, and Then Another Glass
Have Yourself A Merry Little Thin Man Christmas
Ladies First Was Emphasis of Thin Man Merchandising |
It's forty-five years later and I submit Powell has the same effect on untried crowds. His humor stays somehow fresh as a daisy, more so even than Cary Grant to my estimate. Of course, the vehicle has to be right, and so then is The Thin Man, first and certainly best of that series of six. I watch it often, certainly around the holidays, as there's not a more pleasing ornament to hang. The Thin Man is a three days-of-Christmas story, the mystery unfolding on Yule eve, deepening on Xmas morn, then resolving with a dinner party the evening after. The holiday is constant backdrop, but not stressed. Nick and Nora Charles open their presents, then proceed with unwrap of killings that don't pause for Noel observance. The Thin Man is too caustic for caroling, a holiday film for those who don't like their Christmas force-fed. It never runs risk of Yule-exhaustion. Illustration in seminal book The Movies by Griffith and Mayer had Bill Powell shooting tree trims with an air pistol, which gave me childhood notice of The Thin Man as irreverent and not a Christmas story to miss.
I'd say the Thin Man series accomplished more than a generation's worth of marriage counseling. How many couples were persuaded by Powell and Loy's example to give their union one more try? The Thin Man was a best endorsement for mature wedlock offered by movies so far, and that should have got applause right along with comedy and mystery sold hardest. Ads did stress appeal for women and how "they took this romantic story for their very own." The Thin Man was a hypo for men and wives tired of it all, and specifically each other. They could do worse than go home and emulate Powell and Loy. Maybe there was positive influence in movies. Director W.S. Van Dyke wrote in 1937 (for Stage magazine) that "romance actually can exist happily among more matured married persons." Was this fruit of his own experience? (Van Dyke was wed twice, had three children) To Thin Man writers Albert Hackett and Frances Goodrich he'd say, "I don't care anything about the story; just give me five scenes between those two people (Powell and Loy)."
If Any Movie Could Sell Cocktail Glasses, The Thin Man was It. |
W.S. Van Dyke Directs a Metro Chorus Line |
James Wong Howe At Left With Camera as W.S. Van Dyke (seated) Directs |
Van Dyke's disdain for multiple takes (as later confirmed by Myrna Loy) made The Thin Man seem like life being lived rather than studied performance. I don't know a film with action so spontaneous. The Thin Man was released just ahead of strict Code enforcement. A few months later would have taken ginger out of it, sequels an attest to that. There were revivals and an early 60's reissue. Was there at any time Code-cuts made? I'd hate to think what we're seeing is in any way incomplete. One forfeit had The Thin Man come later would be its drinks consumed to almost farcical excess. Nick and Nora take alcohol for every meal, in fact drinks instead of meals. He only mentions eating once, when they phone down for suite service "with lots of onions." The Thin Man is no encouragement for problem inbibers; in fact, it argues against any sort of moderation. There is no consequence for over-use past a mild hangover Nora has, and for which Nick prescribes a cocktail as cure. The Thin Man was timed perfectly to let off steam of deeply unpopular Prohibition that finally had been lifted. People got a crucial freedom back and they liked to see their favorite stars enjoy it. Movies had never given up the drink habit, but now it could be something other than basis for crime, or as forbidden fruit among private partiers. How refreshing it must have been for first-run patronage to open with Nick Charles having multiple quaffs at a crowded hotel bar. The Thin Man as influence to both movies and private life cannot be overstated. Along with It Happened One Night, it led 1934's biggest impact.
12 Comments:
"Waiter, will you serve the nuts? I mean, will you serve the guests the nuts?"
Love it.
Thanks for the pleasant reminder to include THE THIN MAN in the Christmas rotation. You're absolutely right about William Powell. We were watching STARS AND STRIPES FOREVER and wondered if there was anyone else besides Clifton Webb who could play John Philip Sousa as written in the screenplay. The only candidate we considered was William Powell.
Your "three days of Christmas" observation reminds me to recommend another Christmas-Eve-into-Christmas morning detective story: ALIAS BOSTON BLACKIE, with Chester Morris and George E. Stone visiting a prison on Christmas Eve and being implicated when an inmate escapes. The plot is resolved on Christmas Day.
Love the shout out to William Powell and THE THIN MAN! Love him, love Loy, love the picture!
Much is always made of Dashiell Hammett's relationship with Lilian Hellman as the model for Nick and Nora, but read the book, then see the movie. I think much of the spark, the humor and the fizz we associate with the lead characters must have come from those wonderful married screenwriters Albert Hackett and Frances Goodrich. This couple routinely made romance between longstanding partners sound mature, funny and sexy in stuff like IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE, EASTER PARADE, FATHER OF THE BRIDE as well as the early Thin Man pictures. No knock on director Van Dyke to say a lot of that fun that ended up on the screen was right there in the script before an inch of film was shot!
Can't add anything else to your observations, so I'll go in a slightly different direction. The Thin Man must have had an effect on Warren Williams' Perry Mason movies. One of them -- can't remember which one -- opens with Perry dead drunk under his bed, and continues with him drinking to excess for much of the movie, only without Powell's charm.
Few could equal William Powell; none were better.
The Wolf, man.
One story I've heard about the making of this film is that there was an actor who actually dropped dead on set while shooting a scene, and Van Dyke, not wanting to interrupt his schedule, wouldn't let the body be removed until he'd set up the next shot, and then insisted that the dead man's coat be left behind. I read this story in the first of Bill Givens' FILM FLUBS books and have never seen or heard it told anywhere else, so it may be just a story, but it does fit in nicely with the mythology that Van Dyke was evidently trying to create around this film.
Most of the changes as the series continued centered on Nora. She's introduced as a hot little heiress who matches Nick drink for drink. Then, by degrees, she becomes the good-natured, maternal grownup, never a nag but keeping Nick code-compliant.
The early Perry Masons were clearly inspired by the Thin Man, but Warren William was no imitation. He played genuine SOBs and flamboyant rogues with equal flair, and his Perry Masons are much more fun that the safer entries that closed out the series. Nick Charles would quietly turn serious when actually detecting. William's Mason gleefully collected opportunities as well as clues.
More blatant is RKO's "Star of Midnight", which cast Powell opposite Ginger Rogers as a suave detective and a hot little socialite wearing down his resistance.
Wonderful write up of one of my all-time favourites. Points well made about Powell's timeless charm and the audience appeal of Nick & Nora's relationship. Whenever I periodically revisit the film, one of the first thoughts to cross my mind is invariably, "I wish my marriage was as much fun as theirs!"
If you have a drink every time Nick has a cocktail, you just might wake up in a jail in Mexico City. The Wolf, man.
The first time I saw THE THIN MAN was on the CBC in Canada after midnight on a Sunday. I was exhausted, could not keep my eyes open when it started. Why I watched it I don'y know now but within seconds I was wide awake.
It has been a favorite ever since.
Writing in the New York Times in 1963 about which movies worked on television and which didn't critic Hollis Alpert singled out William Powell: "Mr. Powell holds up marvelously. His air of humorous aplomb, his debonair humor and comic timing appeal to present-day audiences almost as much as they did in the past.''
Very glad you shared this, Lou, for it sure mirrors the audience response I witnessed in 1973.
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