The title of
actor/humorist Charles Grodin’s first memoir, It Would Be So Nice if You Weren’t Here, stems from the making of
this caper film. In the book, Grodin recalls that he and costar Candice Bergen
were killing downtime by chatting in a lovely room of a large English estate
where the production was shooting. Then a representative from the estate
discovered the actors and explained they’d ventured into an off-limits space:
“It would be so nice if you weren’t here,” the representative said. If only the
film had as much dry humor as Grodin’s anecdote. Instead, 11 Harrowhouse is a moderately diverting picture elevated by
charming performers but weighed down by a flat screenplay. Grodin plays Howard
Chesser, a diamond merchant drawn into a criminal enterprise involving
the theft of a valuable jewel from a high-security facility. Bergen plays
Howard’s girlfriend, who aids in the crime, and the great James Mason plays an
unlikely accomplice. (Other veteran British actors in the cast include John
Gielgud and Trevor Howard, both droll in their distinctive ways.) Adapted from
Gerald A. Browne’s novel by Grodin himself, and polished into a final script by
Jeffrey Bloom, 11 Harrowhouse aspires
to soft-spoken pithiness of a veddy British sort, which would seem to suit
Grodin’s reserved screen persona. Unfortunately, the onscreen events aren’t
quite novel enough to sustain interest, and Grodin lacks onscreen
counterpoint—he’s best when
bouncing his deadpan energy off an expressive costar, but in 11 Harrowhouse, everyone is as taciturn
as Grodin. The result is monotony, even when the story twists and turns through
clever-ish developments. Further, the script doesn’t withhold
enough information from the audience, so there aren’t many surprises; thus,
even when the execution of a complex crime is shown, the only tension derives
from the possibility of error. One misses the fun of discovering an imaginative
scheme as it unfolds. 11 Harrowhouse
isn’t a total bust, of course—how could it be, with so much talent
involved?—but it badly wants for an injection of vitality.
11 Harrowhouse: FUNKY
Saw this during its second run, but rewatching it today, Grodin's nearly non-stop narration drove me nuts. Bergen looks great though!!
ReplyDeleteI always thought that in his prime Grodin might have made a decent Philip Marlowe. The wisecracks would have sounded perfect.
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