A movie reteaming actors Gene Wilder and Zero
Mostel, the stars of Mel Brooks’ The
Producers (1967), was not inevitable. Lest we forget, The Producers did poorly during in its original release, although
it achieved legendary status later. Nonetheless, it’s disappointing to report
that the second Wilder-Mostel picture lacks the madcap magic of their first
collaborative venture. Based on the absurdist play by Eugène Ionesco, Rhinoceros was produced for the American
Film Theatre, a short-lived program of stage adaptations exhibited on a
subscription basis. The problem with this particular adaptation, alas, is that
it can’t decide if it’s a broad farce or a cerebral satire. Ionesco’s original
play was set in France and filled with dialogue and images that critics
interpreted as lampoons of fascism. Transplanted to modern-day America, the
film version loses all of its political bite, transforming into an oh-so-’70s
treatise on the dangers of joining the Establishment. And yet if the only thing
that the picture did was deliver a clear theme by way of a few laughs, it might
have been worthwhile. Instead, the piece retains Ionesco’s central comic
premise of a world in which people are becoming rhinoceroses. (Again, the key
word is “absurdist.”) Given license to depict rampaging animals, screenwriter
Julian Barry and director Tom O’Horgan fill much of the picture with loud
scenes of chaos and destruction, interspersed with mannered comedy bits like
the scene in which Mostel and Wilder pratfall their way through a grooming
regimen. It’s all very artificial and pretentious and tiresome, qualities that
are exacerbated by Mostel’s intolerably obnoxious performance. Mugging and
screaming like he’s playing to an amphitheater, the actor succumbs to all of
his worst tendencies here. Wilder, meanwhile, plays to his strengths, shifting
between hysteria and sweetness, though the material fails him at every turn.
(Offbeat ’70s screen vixen Karen Black appears in a supporting role, though she
seems adrift thanks the inanity of the narrative.) Rhinoceros is praiseworthy on some levels, simply for the
commitment with which the cast and filmmakers attack the text, but the way this
American version omits the play’s original purpose renders the whole exercise
futile. Plus, the fact that O’Horgan never actually shows a rhinoceros runs
counter to the stupidly literal nature of the overall enterprise—why chintz on
the one thing that could never appear in stage versions?
Rhinoceros:
LAME
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