Tempting as it is to call The Telephone Book highbrow smut, what
with the film’s arty black-and-white cinematography and its peculiar collection
of kinky characters, the film has many stretches that are indefensibly sleazy. For instance, an animated sequence features giant tongues
probing between women’s legs. Rather than providing a frank look at human sexuality, The Telephone Book is a wannabe sex comedy that peripherally includes both artistry and a small measure of
sensitivity. As such, The Telephone Book
occupies a strange space between exploitation and legitimacy. Most serious
movie fans will find the picture way too lurid and tacky, and chances are The Telephone Book lacks sufficient
oomph to satisfy the heavy-breathing audience. As such, this film is best classified as an odd byproduct of the porn-chic period,
during which “real” filmmakers engaged carnal themes in graphic (or semi-graphic)
detail. The picture’s X-rating is appropriate because of wall-to-wall sexual
content, although the rating suggests the film crosses lines that
it actually does not.
The premise blends elements of feminist
self-actualization with traces of Penthouse
Letters male fantasy. Alice (Sarah Kennedy) receives an obscene phone call
so arousing that she falls in love with the voice on the other end of the
phone, then demands his name so she can find him. He gives her the
dubious-sounding appellation “John Smith.” Alice tracks down every John Smith
in the Manhattan phone book, leading to encounters with various men. A fellow
calling himself “Har Poon” (Barry Morse) invites Alice to join in a group-grope
audition for a porno movie. An unnamed psychoanalyst (Roger C. Carmel) flashes
Alice on the subway, then pays her to describe her sexual history. (In a
somewhat clever bit, he rubs the money changer on his belt while she talks,
spewing dimes all over the floor of a diner.) Eventually, Alice meets the John
Smith who called her, and he wears a pig mask while providing, in exhaustive
detail, the origin story that led him to find gratification only through aural
contact. Interspersed with these encounters are “interviews” with obscene phone
callers who explain their habits.
As a viewing experience, The Telephone Book is disorienting. The visual style of
the movie, excepting the animated sequence, is sophisticated, almost to a
fault—rather than shooting conventional coverage, writer-director Nelson Lyon films the picture like a
series of elegant still photos, all delicate light and meticulous composition.
Leading lady Kennedy is so bubbly and warm she seems like Goldie Hawn, which
has the effect of making the picture feel less overtly dirty. And several
proper actors deliver interesting work in supporting roles, notably Carmel,
William Hickey, and Dolph Sweet. (Jill Clayburgh, pre-fame, shows up in a
couple of scenes as Alice’s best friend.) Still, how is one to reconcile the
arty flourishes with the stag-reel stuff? And what is one to make of the fact
that scenes featuring Smith in his pig mask have an almost Kubrickian level of
creepiness, given the way moody black-and-white shadows accentuate the
monstrous contours of the mask? Although there’s a lot to unpack in The Telephone Book, it’s open to
question whether deep-thinking the picture is worth the bother.
The Telephone Book: FREAKY
2 comments:
Sarah Kennedy was one of several blondes who replaced Goldie Hawn on LAUGH-IN.
I find it surreal that Nelson Lyon and Terry Southern were both on the SNL writing staff in 1981.
Post a Comment