British filmmaker John
Boorman’s early career is dominated by intense action movies, from Point Blank (1967) to Deliverance (1972), but his initial
output also includes some pictures so odd they approach surrealism. Leo the Last is the first such Boorman feature.
Based on a George Tabori play titled The
Prince, the film explores what happens when a modern-day European
aristocrat returns to his family’s mansion in London after a long absence, only
to discover that the streets surrounding the building have become a ghetto. The
broad strokes of the storyline are simple: Prince Leo (Marcello Mastroianni) is
a recluse who’s bewildered by the outside world, the craven machinations of his
household staff, and the empty affections of his ambitious fiancée, Margaret
(Billie Whitelaw). Therefore, Leo spends his days in an upstairs room, watching poor black
neighbors though binoculars. Eventually, he develops sympathy for his
neighbors’ difficult lives, so he leaves his mansion to offer assistance—an
action that, naturally, upsets sycophants who value Leo’s passive status quo.
While the story is straightforward, however, Boorman’s execution is anything
but. Seemingly intent on replicating Federico Fellini’s dreamlike visual style—the
presence in Leo the Last of Fellini
collaborator Mastroianni is probably not coincidental—Boorman fills the screen
with weird imagery. At its most overtly Fellini-esque, the movie descends into
a silly orgy scene with grotesque characters mugging for the camera. Similarly,
Boorman spotlights a bizarre health ritual involving naked people bouncing up
and down in a pool, and the director zeroes in on unattractive, undulating body parts
photographed through the distortion of underwater lenses. The excess also
manifests in offbeat subplots, with Leo’s mysterious aide, Laszlo (Vladek
Sheybal), organizing some sort of militaristic cult in the basement of Leo’s
mansion. (Radical politics permeate the film, which can be interpreted as a somewhat
trite collectivist tract.)
Yet the movie’s oddest element is actually the
protagonist’s characterization—Leo is one of those inexplicable freaks found
only in the minds of overindulgent storytellers. Although Maastroianni’s
handsome, healthy appearance suggests otherwise, Leo is portrayed as a
terrified innocent who can’t communicate with other people, so Leo spends most
of the movie looking perplexed when bad things happen, even whimpering
impotently while observing assaults, a heart attack, and a rape. It’s therefore
impossible to buy into Leo the Last
as a credible narrative. Plus, with all due respect, Boorman’s admirable
aspirations to metaphorical heft quickly descend into pretentious silliness.
Nonetheless, some find greater virtue in this peculiar film than others; among
other accolades, the movie received a Best Director prize at the 1970 Cannes
Film Festival. (Available as part
of the MGM Limited Collection on Amazon.com)
Leo the Last: FUNKY
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