After cresting with the
acclaimed one-two punch of Some Like It
Hot (1959) and The Apartment
(1960), Billy Wilder’s monumental film career began a slow decline, despite a
brief return to form with The Fortune
Cookie (1966). And though Fedora
was not actually Wilder’s last film—he persuaded Fortune Cookie costars Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau to reteam for
the pointless Buddy Buddy (1981)—Fedora is in many ways the nail in
Wilder’s creative coffin. Everything in the movie is an echo of something
Wilder did better earlier in his career. In fact, Fedora is so painfully old-fashioned that except for some coarse
language and a brief nude scene, the movie feels as if it was made in the
1940s.
Frequent Wilder leading man William Holden plays Berry “Dutch”
Detweiler, an independent movie producer whose career has hit the skids. Berry
travels to Greece in order to contact reclusive movie star Fedora, with whom he
had a brief affair in the 1940s. Although she’s unofficially retired from
acting after abandoning her last movie midway through production, Fedora is as
a legend from Hollywood’s Golden Age who, incredibly, still has her looks. Upon
arriving in Greece, Berry discovers that Fedora is a virtual prisoner inside
her estate on a private island, and that the people around her will use any
means necessary to repel intruders. Nonetheless, desperation coupled with
growing concern for Fedora’s welfare compels Berry to solve the mystery of her
circumstances.
Fedora hinges on a massive
plot twist that appears mid-movie, but the “twist” is obvious and predictable.
Furthermore, the disastrous second half of Fedora
comprises a lengthy series of dialogue scenes that trigger explanatory
flashbacks. Alas, neither the dialogue scenes nor the flashbacks add much in
the way of believability or dimension. Given the great heights to which Wilder
and frequent writing partner I.A.L. Diamond had soared in previous films, the clumsiness
that pervades their script for Fedora is shocking. So,
too, is Wilder’s lack of directorial taste.
Excepting a pithy running gag
involving an obsequious hotel manager, most scenes drag on at torturous length.
The casting of the Fedora role is calamitous, with leading lady Marthe Keller
stuck doing an anemic Dietrich/Garbo imitation. The score by Miklós Rózsa is
musty and oppressive. And the hard-boiled voiceover delivered by Holden serves
virtually no purpose, since most of the information contained in the voiceover
gets repeated during regular scenes. Worst of all, the basic storyline—about a
vain movie star who ruins peoples’ lives in order to fight the aging process—is
a sickly cousin to the plot of Wilder’s behind-the-scenes masterpiece Sunset Blvd. (1950). Therefore, despite sleek
production values and an enjoyably cynical performance from Holden, the
experience of watching Wilder struggle to reclaim past cinematic glory is just
sad.
Fedora:
FUNKY
3 comments:
I haven't seen Fedora since its initial release but I remember wanting to love it and not just because of Wilder but also because it was my favorite novella in Thomas Tryon's book Crowned Heads. Sadly, your description is the film I remember, but it does make a nice bookend with Sunset Boulevard.
I had seen the film decades ago, but when rewatching it last year, I was shocked to see the 1978 release date. It just felt so mid-60s...or something.
Keller isn't beautiful or talented enough to carry the role the way Faye Dunaway could have.
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