Yet another shrill
melodrama from the bleakest period of Elizabeth Taylor’s screen career—the
wasteland between her triumphant performance in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) and her ascension to grande dame status in the ’80s—X, Y & Zee features Taylor and
Michael Caine as hateful spouses battling over issues including the husband’s
myriad dalliances. In other words, it’s nearly 110 minutes of Taylor screaming, threatening, and whining. Set in London, the movie tracks the relationship between unfaithful architect Robert Blakely (Caine) and his disturbed wife, Zee (Taylor). They fight
virtually from sun-up to sundown, with Zee constantly promising to kill herself and/or Robert; meanwhile, Robert alternates between joining the sparring matches
and numbing himself with booze. At a lavish party one night, Robert meets
Stella (Susannah York), an elegant and seemingly untroubled young woman, with
whom he begins an affair. However, as Robert’s feelings for Stella blossom into
love, a threatened Zee lashes out by stalking the lovers, tossing Robert’s
possessions into the street, and, finally, attempting suicide.
Then, while
recovering in the hospital, Zee requests that Stella visit her, and Stella,
quite stupidly, accepts the offer. Zee starts playing mind
games with her husband’s mistress, who inexplicably reveals to Zee her deepest
personal secret. And so it goes—to quote a line Stella delivers to Robert at
one point, “It’s all very brittle and boring and trite.” She’s talking about
Zee’s behavior, but she could just as easily be talking about X, Y & Zee itself. Caine is fine here, since he does icy nastiness better than just about anyone, though York is
merely decorative, while Taylor is an outright embarrassment. She overacts ridiculously; she’s slathered with whorish eye makeup; she wears flamboyant costumes like muumuus and ponchos, presumably to mask her expanding
waistline; and she sports silly fashion accoutrements like, at one point, a gold headband that
looks like a leftover from her days playing Cleopatra. (Available through Columbia Screen Classics via WarnerArchive.com)
X, Y & Zee: LAME
To portray Liz during this period of career decline, La Lohan is Taylor-made!
ReplyDeleteFor you trivia buffs out there, this was the first song placement for what was then supergroup Three Dog Night. Their sweet ballad "Going In Circles" is probably one of the only good things about this film.
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