A mega-hyped remake of the famous 1927 Al Jolson
movie, The Jazz Singer was doomed to derision before it even opened, in part because because reviewers love to diss singers who moonlight as actors. It didn’t help that the film’s producers cast the decidedly
Gentile Laurence Olivier in the role of an Orthodox Jewish patriarch, despite mixed opinions about Olivier’s performance as a Jewish Nazi hunter in The Boys from Brazil (1978); the actor received an Oscar nomination for that picture but also received a nod from the Stinkers Bad Movie Awards. Viewed with fresh eyes,
The Jazz Singer is a slickly produced mediocrity built around a nonperformance by a
nonactor, but the pulpy story chugs along in a kitschy sort of way, and the
tunes are memorable. In fact, three of Diamond’s biggest hits (“America,”
“Hello Again,” “Love on the Rocks”) emerged from the film’s soundtrack, which
enjoyed much more success than the film itself.
Modernizing the original movie’s
story while still remaining so deeply rooted in traditions that the narrative
feels hokey, The Jazz Singer follows
Yussel Rabinovitch (Diamond), a charismatic young cantor at a New York City
synagogue. Although outwardly following in the footsteps of his father, Cantor
Rabinovitch (Olivier), Yussel longs to explore the secular side of music. After
one too many arguments with his rigid father, Yussel leaves New York—and his
wife, Rivka (Catlin Adams)—to become a wandering troubadour. Lots of brooding
ensues, as does a romance between Jess Robin (the new name that Yussel adopts)
and Los Angeles shiksa Molly Bell (Lucie Arnaz). Wanderlust eventually drives a
wedge between Jess and Molly, so he hits the road once more, leading to the odd
spectacle of a bearded Diamond wearing a cowboy hat and singing “You Are My
Sunshine” in a redneck bar. Can Jess reconcile his new life with his old
identity as Yussel? Can he repair the damage to his relationship with his
father? Can he reunite with Molly? The answers to these questions are never in
doubt, since the point of the 1980 Jazz
Singer is to transpose Diamond’s crowd-pleasing persona from the radio to the screen.
In
that regard, the movie is indeed the failure its grim initial reception might
suggest; Diamond is false and stilted in nearly every scene, except when he’s
onstage, and Olivier is hilariously miscast. The picture also has more than a
few tonal catastrophes. Inexplicably, Diamond agreed to participate in a
rock-era redux of the original movie’s blackface element. Yes, Diamond
wearing an Afro and heavy makeup to pass as an African-American dude while
croaking a rock song in a black nightclub is as horrific a spectacle as you can
imagine. Similarly, when the filmmakers play “Hello Again” on the soundtrack
during a reunion scene, the effect is so on-the-nose literal as to be comical.
However, a sense of proportion is required when trying to assess The Jazz Singer. Compared to a pair of
truly disastrous movie musicals released the same year—here’s looking at you, Can’t Stop the Music and Xanadu—Diamond’s movie is positively
respectable. By any other measure, of course, The Jazz Singer doesn’t fare quite as well.
The
Jazz Singer: FUNKY
I love the blog and read it every day .... but this was the first time I had to leave a comment!
ReplyDeleteI don't think the original Jolson Jazz Singer had lost it's luster by 1980. If you'll think back, you'll remember that the 70s was obsessed with nostalgia for the 20s-30s-40s. If anything, the original Jazz Singer would've been held in higher esteem in the 80s than it would be today.
As for Olivier in Boys From Brazil -- that was a huge commercial success, and, Olivier got an Oscar nod for his role. So it could hardly have been met with critical opprobrium.
Love the blog and keep it up!
It seems like every five years or so I go back to this and try to pull out some sort of kitsch charm to no avail - and yeah, that blackface scene is a brutal head in hands type of moment.
ReplyDeleteBob, fair point about the stature of the original Jazz Singer circa 1980; you're correct that the backlash stemming from the portrayal of race didn't kick in till later. Fixed that. Don't agree about Olivier, for reasons articulated in the revised first paragraph. Much was made about Olivier's slide into bad accents and over-acting toward the end of his career.
ReplyDelete