This refreshing British romance
was adapted by the venerable Peter Shaffer from his own play (originally titled
The Private Ear and the Public Eye),
and directed by the enduring Carol Reed, of The
Third Man fame. Featuring a trio of highly capable actors ripping through
reams of sophisticated dialogue, this is a tasteful production from top to
bottom, which makes it all the more interesting that the story is so peculiar.
Michael Jayston (star of 1971’s Nicholas
and Alexandra) plays an uptight London accountant named Charles, and Mia
Farrow plays his wife, a freethinking young American named Belinda. Although
Belinda pulled Charles from his shell during their courtship, he has retreated
into stuffy traditionalism, so they’re drifting from each other. Fearful that
she’s become unfaithful, Charles hires a detective agency to follow Belinda,
and an unconventional investigator named Julian Christoforou gets the
assignment.
Played by one-named Israeli star Topol with the same vivaciousness
he brought to his famous stage and screen role in Fiddler on the Roof, Julian is a voluptuary in love with love. Most
of the story comprises one long dialogue scene between Charles and Julian,
during which Charles describes the history of his relationship with Belinda and
during which Julian explains the details of his surveillance; these incidents
are depicted through extensive flashbacks. In the story’s main twist, Charles
learns that Belinda remained faithful to him—until she noticed this peculiar
Greek fellow shadowing her day after day. Turns out Belinda and Julia have
enjoyed a platonic and wordless courtship, attending cultural events each
afternoon. Charles is infuriated by this discovery, so the remainder of the
movie explores how the triangle gets resolved.
Fanciful and stylized, Shaffer’s
story is more of a romantic fable than a realistic narrative, and the magical
style is elevated by John Barry’s haunting music, which includes the frequently
repeated song “Follow, Follow.” Shaffer’s dialogue is as resplendent as usual,
though he occasionally lapses into self-indulgent loftiness, and the character
work is sharp. Topol easily steals the movie, while Jayston invests his role with
repressed humanity, and Farrow endeavors to come across as more than just a
flighty hippie. The movie also benefits from the extensive use of evocative London
locations, and the climax is genuinely surprising.
The Public Eye: GROOVY
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