Time has diminished much
of the charm that the UK/US coproduction Nasty
Habits might have possessed during its original release, because the
satirical analogy the film draws between its storyline and the events of the
Watergate scandal now feels contrived and tenuous. After all, the picture
depicts the dirty tricks that an ambitious nun uses to win election to the
office of abbess in a Philadelphia convent, and her nefarious techniques
include an elaborate bugging system. In the late ’70s, when the details of
Nixon’s White House bugging system were still fresh, the humor of Nasty Habits could have seemed pointed and sly. Seen today, the film thrives on its own
merits, rather than as a commentary on current events, and those merits are
slight.
The picture’s main character is shrewd Sister Alexandra (Glenda Jackson), who
leads a contingent of older, conservative nuns. Her rival for the abbess
position is Sister Felicity (Susan Penhaligon), a pretty young blonde having a
sexual affair with a Jesuit priest. Alexandra tasks her underlings with gaining
incriminating evidence, so they obtain tape recordings of Felicity defying
church doctrine and fomenting sedition. Not only does Alexandra win the
election, but she also ejects Felicity from the convent. Upon resuming civilian
life, however, Felicity launches public attacks against Alexandra, eventually becoming
a folk hero for challenging a powerful institution. This turn of events
triggers the movie’s closest parallels to Nixon, because reporters demand to
hear Alexandra’s secret recordings, and her defiance to release them imperils
her status.
Polished in most technical regards and populated with fine actors, Nasty Habits goes down smoothly whenever
the focus is Alexandra’s machinations. Jackson purrs complicated dialogue with mesmerizing authority. Complementing her are Anne
Meara and Geraldine Page, who play Alexandra’s main co-conspirators. Less
effective is Sandy Dennis, who plays a bumbling nun tasked with performing
goofy undercover work. As for the bits with Penhaligon as Felicity, indifference
seems the appropriate response. She’s spunky but unmemorable, and her character
isn’t sufficiently sympathetic to energize the story. Moreover, the whole Nixon
allusion is questionable because Alexandra isn’t an unhinged paranoiac like Nixon,
but rather a smooth operator—so when Alexandra caps the movie by paraphrasing
one of Nixon’s most famous quotes, the intended satirical flourish doesn’t
quite connect. And that insufferably chirpy musical score by John Cameron? No
thanks.
Nasty Habits: FUNKY
1 comment:
Fortunately Glenda Jackson's real political career was less underhanded.... although if I'll be surprised if anyone ever managed to avoid jokes about Brut Productions' output stinking.
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