Man, the late ’60s and
early ’70s were the glory days for pointless movies about over-privileged men
whose preferred means of confronting existential crises involved seducing
comely young women and then yelling at those women for not understanding why
it’s so difficult to be an affluent honky. In the pretentious comedy Move, Elliot Gould plays a put-upon New
Yorker who complains about his marriage to the beautiful and funny Dolly (Paula
Prentiss), mopes that nobody wants to produce the plays that he writes, and
whines that it’s difficult to find good help for moving into a spacious new
apartment. In the era of Civil Rights and Vietnam, these constitute real
problems? Based on a novel by Joel Leiber and imaginatively directed by the
versatile Stuart Rosenberg, Move
depicts a fraught period in the life of Hiram Jaffe (Gould). Hiram makes a
living as a dog-walker (leading to hassles with a citation-happy cop) and as a
porn-novel writer. The character’s impending move to a new apartment is a
running metaphor and a source of absurdist comedy, because throughout the
picture, Hiram is besieged with phone calls from a moving-company
representative who capriciously breaks arrival-time commitments. Hiram alienates
Dolly, who finds comfort in the arms of her shrink, and then Hiram hops into
bed with a character identified only as Girl (Geneviève Waite), a dippy English
fashion model with a annoyingly breathy voice. Given the preponderance of
leering nude scenes, trippy hallucinations, and wild camera angles, Move clearly wants to provide with-it
social commentary, but there’s no coherence or sting to the filmmakers’ satire.
Worse, the protagonist comes across as a neurotic, self-pitying, sexist asshole
rather than a victim of nefarious forces. Call this one a case of style in
search of a theme.
Move:
LAME
3 comments:
I love Gould, but who cheats on Paula Prentiss?!
She looks smokin' in this too! Should have given her more camera time, too.
Loved this review. The protagonist actually sounds like a lot of people in New York City, then and still.
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