Tag Archives: Candice Bergen

Rich and Famous (George Cukor, 1981)

Went to the BFI to see RICH AND FAMOUS, on 35mm, in a print that seemed untouched but for time: not a scratch but all slightly turned to red. I saw it when it came out and it spoke to me. I showed it to students ten years later and they thought it the worst film of all time. Pauline Kael famously wrote, ‘it isn’t camp exactly, it’s more like a homosexual fantasy’ and was attacked for outing George Cukor, then over 80. This would be his last film. The film outs itself really. It IS a homosexual fantasy. Every shot of Matt Lattanzi and Hart Bochner tell you so; not to speak of the ending, where the two old friends sit by the fire, drinking champagne, content with each other and with their friendship having superseded love affairs and family; evoking a whole gay structure of feeling of its particular time. When one posits this next to the beginning, with the opening line, ‘Merry, what are you doing in the closet’? Well…. But to Dave and I it was also super camp and we screeched – as quietly as we could – at every line. Candice Bergen is very good and very funny. This, after her comic turn in STARTING OVER (Alan J. Pakula, 1989)is really what made possible her subsequent career in comedy. There are some shots in the film where her beauty is startling. Jaqueline Bisset produced. A remake of Old Acquaintance (|Vincent Sherman, 1943) with Bette Davis and Miriam Hopkins where Bette famously says, as only she could, ‘There are times in a woman’s life where the only thing that will help is a glass of champagne’. The film is better than legend has it, more interesting than I remembered, and if not quite good was certainly hugely enjoyable. Meg Ryan appears in an early role as Bergen’s daughter; and there are many famous people as background extras in the party scenes (Christopher Isherwood, Gavin Lambert, Ray Bradbury, etc.)

 

José Arroyo

Uncoupled (Darren Day, Jeffrey Richman, Netflix, 2022) yo

Binged on UNCOUPLED last night, which I found glamorous, funny and moving if not quite real. It all reminded me a bit of OLD AQUAINTANCE with Bette Davis and Miriam Hopkins; and even more so of RICH AND FAMOUS, the Cukor remake with Jacqueline Bisset and Candice Bergen; not so much in terms of plot but in terms of tone, the world they present, and the films’ attitude to that world. The tag-line is ‘newly single, forgot how to mingle’; the drama and the comedy in the series will come from Neil Patrick Harris’ re-learning how to mingle but in a changed world of PREP and dating apps, and one where his sexual currency has been considerably diminished by his age. The innovation is partly that it’s a romantic comedy about gay men that doesn’t problematise sexuality and takes relationships and dating as its starting point; and partly that it focuses on middle-aged gay men. In the first episode we see Michael (Neil Patrick Harris) and Colin (Tuc Watkins) happily coupled for nineteen years, in good jobs, their friends and family meshed. Michael throws Colin a surprised 50th birthday party and just before the party begins Michael finds Colin has moved out of their shared apartment, without telling him, and even more importantly without telling him why. Finding out why and showing how  Michael tries to start a new life for himself is what the show is about. In terms of production, we benefit from the full Darren Day treatment. It’s a glossy and expensive-looking show. Fans of the old SEX IN THE CITY  will find a similar sensibility here – urban, sophisticated, romantic, sotto-voiced camp, low-key funny about outsized emotions and exceptional situations – and with similar attitudes to sex; a bit of a problem since what seemed transgressive in relation to women in the 90s seems rather conservative if not quite untruthful in relation to gay men in 2020 (do you know any gay men who’ve had sex only with their official partner from the age of 30-50?). Structurally, the show is interesting in that the role gay men occupy in heterosexual romantic comedies—think MY BEST FRIEND’S WEDDING — the witty best friend, wise and supportive, whose messy life is a counterpoint to the heroine’s is now played, expertly, by a black woman (the wonderful Tisha Campbell); so a tag relay, whose inclusion also structurally expresses degrees of subalternity. Friends of a certain age will enjoy seeing Marcia Gay Harden in the role of a middle-aged millionairess in the throes of divorce. A very bingeable show; and I’m curious to know what friends think once they see it.

José Arroyo

Home Again – Eavesdropping at the Movies – Ep 8 – 4th October 2017

How bad is Home Again? Why did we not walk out? What kind of nepotism makes us angry? A woman’s film that is not quite a romantic comedy? We could have been funnier and meaner but it wouldn’t have been as honest.

 

José Arroyo with Michael J. Glass of Writing About Film