Following his glorious run
as an innovative film editor in the ’60s, hippie artiste Hal Ashby graduated to
directing with The Landlord, an
overly ambitious but thoroughly admirable comedy-drama about race relations.
Beau Bridges, effectively blending innocence and impetuousness, plays Elgar
Winthrop Julius Enders, a 29-year-old gentleman of leisure living on his
wealthy family’s estate just outside New York City. Half-heartedly deciding to
form an identity separate from his blueblood clan, Elgar buys an apartment
building in a ghetto neighborhood on the verge of gentrification, imagining
he’ll boot out the black tenants and create a groovy bachelor pad. Yet upon
discovering the tenants’ vibrant community, Elgar becomes more interested in
bonding with his new acquaintances than evicting them.
So begins a sensitive
exploration of a dilettante’s journey through white guilt—after recovering from
the shock of seeing how poor African-Americans live, Elgar gets involved with
two different black women. Elgar’s mystified by the life experiences of Lanie
(Marki Bey), a light-skinned exotic dancer ostracized for not being “black
enough,” and he’s bewitched by Franny (Diana Sands), a gorgeous hairdresser
married to hot-tempered activist Copee (Louis Gossett Jr.). Even as Elgar
juggles these romances, however, there’s underlying tension because everyone
recognizes that Elgar can escape the troubles of the inner city any time he
wants by returning to the comfort of his family’s estate.
Written by Bill Gunn
from a novel by Kristin Hunter, The
Landlord is filled with knowing moments, although the story sprawls in such
a way that the main themes become somewhat diffused. For instance, the movie
spends a great deal of time developing the character of Elgar’s mother, Joyce
(Lee Grant), and the most dynamic scene in the picture is Joyce’s drunken lunch
with one of Elgar’s tenants, no-bullshit fortune teller Marge (Pearl Bailey).
Clearly, Joyce is meant to represent the out-of-touch Establishment against
which Elgar is rebelling, but Joyce’s scenes feel tangential.
Compensating for The Landlord’s storytelling hiccups are
terrific performances and a wonderful sense of atmosphere. Working with master
cinematographer Gordon Willis, Ashby creates a loose, naturalistic quality in
every scene; Willis ensures that the movie is both aesthetically beautiful and
convincingly gritty. As for the actors, Bridges gets blown off the screen by
costars at regular intervals, but in a way, that amplifies the movie’s
message—the world beyond Elgar’s insular experience is so vibrant that he must
grow as a person if he wishes to truly belong. The complex resolution of
Elgar’s journey underlines that he still has a long way to go on the road to
maturity even as the closing credits roll. (Available as part of the MGM Limited Collection on Amazon.com)
The Landlord: GROOVY
I saw a bit of this today. Lee Grant looks great! I will try to watch its entirety on demand with comcast on TCM
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