There’s a half-decent satirical notion buried
inside the tiresome comedy Once Upon a
Scoundrel, and the movie offers a large serving of star Zero Mostel’s
signature overbearing charm. For those two reasons, it’s likely that some viewers will find the picture amusing, albeit forgettable.
However, the same qualities that might be interpreted as virtues could just as
easily be perceived as shortcomings. After all, the satirical notion—an entire
community of people pretends that a living man is an unseen ghost, with the goal
of driving him nuts—gets stretched way past the point of believability. As for
Mostel, let’s just say that a little goes a long way, and Once Upon a Scoundrel has much more than a little of the actor
mugging, preening, and screaming. He’s simultaneously entertaining and
exhausting, in equal measure. He’s also absurdly miscast as a Mexican. Mostel
plays Don Carlos del Refugio, the tyrannical overlord of a poor Mexican
village. Don Carlos has the hots for local peasant girl Alicia (Priscilla
Garcia), but she’s in love with wide-eyed laborer Luis (A Martinez). Don Carlos
pulls a scheme to get Luis thrown in jail, then says he’ll only release Luis if
Alicia contents to marriage. Fed up with Don Carlos’ villainy, the locals drug
Don Carlos and perform a funeral, making Don Carlos believe he’s died and come
back as a specter. In the hands of some screen-comedy master, perhaps Ernest
Lubitsch or Billy Wilder, this premise might have led to broad-as-a-barn
hilarity. Alas, the team behind Once Upon
a Scoundrel has the clumsy approach one normally associates with bad
sitcoms, a problem compounded by the presence of a strictly workaday cast. (Snce
Mostel sucks up so much oxygen, formidable
actors would have been needed to counter the star’s manic energy.) Thus, Once Upon a Scoundrel ends up feeling
dull and flat, particularly during long stretches in which the jokes simply
don’t connect. And, wow, is the final sequence awful, seeing as how it lends a morbid
quality to an otherwise innocuous movie. Holding the disparate parts of Once Upon a Scoundrel together is a
robust score by the great Alex North, whose music is the movie’s sole
unassailable element.
Once
Upon a Scoundrel: FUNKY
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