Item No. 1: Vienna-born
writer-director Billy Wilder made his name co-writing delightful screwball
comedies such as 1941’s Ball of Fire.
Item No. 2: Adapted from the 1928 Ben Hecht-Charles MacArthur stage play The Front Page, Howard Hawks’ 1940 film His Girl Friday is one of the
unassailable classics of the screwball-comedy era. Item No. 3: If anyone had
the qualifications to remake His Girl
Friday, it was Wilder.
Well, qualified or not, Wilder botched the job.
One of the key elements of His
Girl Friday (and great screwball comedies in general) was the clever use of
euphemisms to slip outré material past censors. Wilder’s remake of The Front Page dumps the subtle approach
in favor of tiresome vulgarity. Worse, Wilder’s remake ditches the best
contrivance of His Girl Friday—Hawks’
movie flipped the gender of one of the play’s leading characters, transforming
the original Hecht-MacArthur story about feuding frenemies into a crackling
love story. Sure, Wilder had at his disposal two leading men with whom he’d
achieved great results before, Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau, but dropping the
battle-of-the-sexes angle was a bad call.
As in the original play (Wilder’s
movie retains the Hecht-MacArthur setting of the late ’20s), the story concerns
gruff newspaper editor Walter Burns (Matthau), who wants his star reporter,
Hildy Johnson (Lemmon), to cover the impending execution of a political
revolutionary. Alas, Hildy has picked this day to quit the journalism business
and get married, so Walter unscrupulously manipulates events to keep Hildy working.
Meanwhile, the revolutionary escapes and seeks refuge in the courthouse
newsroom, so Hildy shifts from covering a story to hiding a fugitive.
In any
incarnation, the Hecht-MacArthur script is filled with wonderful zingers, but
Wilder and frequent collaborator I.A.L. Diamond dilute their adaptation with
pointlessly crude additions. For instance, journalists remind a hooker (Carol
Burnett, miscast and terrible) that if she hits the streets for money, doing so
will cause “a lotta wear and tear on your ass.” She replies with equal
sophistication, calling them “shitheels.” Elsewhere, Hildy excoriates Walter by
saying, “The only time you get it up is when you put the paper to bed,” and
Walter says that if Hildy takes a job writing ad copy, he’ll be a “faggot.”
One cannot impugn the film’s
technical execution, since Wilder uses limited sets effectively and
cinematographer Jordan Cronenweth gives the picture a fine polish; similarly,
the Lemmon/Matthau bickering-buddies routine was among the smoothest in the
business. But so what? All of this good effort was put in the service of a
poorly conceived and totally unnecessary retread of material that, in at least
two previous incarnations (the original stage play and the Hawks film), was
already considered classic.
The Front Page: FUNKY
I found the Hermann score overwrought and seem to recall it plays almost constantly. And I believe Schrader "disowned" the project after his original screenplay was altered considerably.
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