As talented as he was
versatile, Vincente Minnelli directed a handful of great films, plus quite a
few that were merely respectable, before his career started to lose momentum in
the late ’60s. Anyone would be proud of a legacy including Meet Me In St. Louis (1944), The
Bad and the Beautiful (1952), and Gigi
(1958). Minnelli also lived long enough to watch Liza Minnelli, his daughter
with Judy Garland, blossom into a dynamic and award-winning entertainer. The
wise move after the moderate success of his Barbra Streisand vehicle On a Clear Day you Can See Forever
(1970) might have been to retire gracefully. Unfortunately, showbiz
professionals often need to get yanked off the stage, and that’s what happened
when Minnelli made his final film, A
Matter of Time.
Convincing Liza to play the leading role presumably trumped any concerns that producers might have had about Minnelli’s old-fashioned style, since she was a hot commodity at the time, and Papa Minnelli recruited another big name, Ingrid Bergman, for the film’s main supporting role. Things didn’t go so well past that point. Minnelli was fired for going overbudget and overschedule. Then distributor American International gutted his footage to generate a 97-minute version of what Minnelli originally intended to be a three-hour epic. Ouch.
Convincing Liza to play the leading role presumably trumped any concerns that producers might have had about Minnelli’s old-fashioned style, since she was a hot commodity at the time, and Papa Minnelli recruited another big name, Ingrid Bergman, for the film’s main supporting role. Things didn’t go so well past that point. Minnelli was fired for going overbudget and overschedule. Then distributor American International gutted his footage to generate a 97-minute version of what Minnelli originally intended to be a three-hour epic. Ouch.
Watching the released cut of A Matter of Time, it doesn’t seem as if Minnelli’s ouster
represents a loss to cinema history. Telling the fairy-tale-like story of a
maid who rose to fame and fortune by learning from an eccentric old woman how
to seduce powerful men, A Matter of Time
is overproduced, tone-deaf, and unseemly. After a present-day prologue, the
film flashes back to Rome during some undetermined stage of the postwar era,
where 15-year-old Nina (Liza) arrives at the decaying hotel where her cousin
works as a maid. (Yes, Liza, who was pushing 30 when this film was released,
plays her character as a teenager.) Nina befriends the strange Contessa
Sanziani (Bergman), who wears a flamboyant cloak with leopard-skin trim and
sports ghastly black makeup rings around her eyes. Back in the day, the
Contessa played muse to great artists and thinkers, so she passes along her
philosophy of, put bluntly, using sex to help men realize their potential even
if the woman gets nothing in return. Nina thinks this lifestyle sounds
terrific, so she does the Contessa one better by trading sex for wealth and
notoriety.
All of this icky stuff plays out in stilted dialogue scenes, and the gaudy production design gives a more spirited performance than any of the
actors. Oh, and about halfway through its running time, the movie suddenly
becomes a musical, with Liza howling a few forgettable numbers. Need we even
mention the scene in which Mina forgives a would-be rapist for assaulting her because
he’s upset about writer’s block? Ultimately, the saddest and strangest thing about A Matter of Time isn’t watching a
venerable director derail his career and legacy—Minnelli never made another
movie—but the notion that he roped his Oscar-winning daughter into playing an
opportunistic whore. Not the best “Take Your Daughter to Work Day” in Hollywood
history. Having said that, nepotism worked out better for Bergman, because her
daughter Isabella Rossellini made her screen debut in A Matter of Time, playing the small role of a nun.
A Matter of Time: LAME
Mutilated might be the better word. Minnelli disowned the film after it was re edited without his OK. It's running time is a rather short 88mins.
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