Gable and Lombard, a romantic drama about the illicit love affair and subsequent
marriage of real-life Golden Age movie stars Clark Gable and Carole Lombard, is
so preposterously fictionalized that it’s a pointless endeavor. Among many
other howlers, the movie features a climactic scene in which Lombard (Jill
Clayburgh) testifies on behalf of Gable (James Brolin) at a court hearing
related to his divorce from the woman to whom he was married when he began keeping
company with Lombard. Not only did this testimony never happen, but the
filmmakers portray Lombard as such a crude loudmouth that when asked to
describe her relationship with Gable, she proclaims, “Me and that big ape over
there have been hitting the sack every night, and I’ve got a sore back to prove
it!” Yet Gable and Lombard lacks the
courage of its convictions—instead of going wholeheartedly down the road of
tabloid tawdriness, the movie is meant to be some sort of loving tribute to
once-in-a-lifetime passion. Unfortunately, Barry Sandler’s inept screenplay and
Sidney J. Furie’s unsophisticated direction makes the leading characters look
like sex-crazed buffoons instead of incandescent lovers.
This tone-deaf
portrayal is exacerbated by performances that are, to say the least, uneven.
While Clayburgh is grandiose and shrill, it’s possible to discern some of the
emotional realities she’s attempting to communicate. However, Brolin is
laughable, growling and smirking through a paper-thin impersonation of Gable’s
most obvious onscreen tics. When these dissonant performances merge during
interminable dialogue scenes—Gable and
Lombard runs a deadly 131 minutes—the result is loud, superficial
nonsense. It’s also impossible to know whom this movie was meant to please: The
picture’s narrative is far too bogus to please diehard Gable-Lombard fans, and
far too cliché-ridden to work as a standalone romance. Yes, the movie is
handsomely produced, but so what?
Even the supposed appeal of re-creating Old Hollywood is wasted, since the only
other major character drawn from history is studio chief L.B. Mayer (played
unpersuasively by Allen Garfield). As the real Lombard’s onetime secretary told
syndicated columnist Dick Kleiner at the time of the Gable and Lombard’s release: “I couldn’t associate a single scene
with anything that I’d lived through. Nothing in it is right, not even the
clothes.”
Gable and Lombard: LAME
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