Turns out
David Niven’s close encounter with a streaker during the 1974 Academy Awards
broadcast wasn’t the only time when the exhibition of male anatomy caused him
grief. A few years earlier, the debonair Brit starred in The Statue, a randy UK/US coproduction in which the public display
of a phallus is pivotal to the plot. Very much a product of its historical
moment, The Statue tries for
scandalous laughs by exploring subject matter that could not be explicitly
depicted onscreen at the time, therefore creating a sort of
wink-wink/nudge-nudge relationship with the audience. And though time has
dulled any edginess the picture once possessed, luckily The Statue has other virtues, not least of which is Niven’s smooth
comic timing. So even though the movie is quite trivial—a fault not uncommon to
sex comedies—it’s palatable and relatively harmless.
At the beginning of the
picture, uptight linguistics professor Alex Bolt (Niven) receives the Nobel
Prize for his creation of Unispeak, an international language meant to bridge
divides between nations. For convoluted reasons, the American government spends
a large amount of money to commission a statue commemorating Alex’s
accomplishment, and Alex’s hot-blooded sculptress wife, Rhonda (Virna Lisi),
gets the job. But when Alex gets an eyeful of the work-in-progress, he’s
shocked: Not only is the giant statue a likeness of Alex in the nude, but the
genitals on the statue don’t resemble his own. Thus begins Alex’s fevered quest
to identify the model Rhonda used for inspiration, since he presumes that man
must be her lover. Probing household staff for the names of men who visited
Rhonda while she was working on the statue, Alex contrives to see the men naked
by attending a hippie musical, visiting a steambath, and so on. In one
especially goofy sequence, Alex slips into a photo booth and snaps shots of his
own manhood for evidence, alarming those standing near the photo booth.
It’s
tempting to say this material was beneath Niven, as well as costar Robert
Vaughn, but the mischievous spirit of the thing comes through in scenes
featuring Monty Python’s John Cleese as a friend of Niven’s character. Cleese
lampoons the repression inherent to British culture while also skewering the
anything-goes ethos of the ’70s. In its best moments, The Statue is ribald and smart; in its worst moments, the movie is
puerile and silly. Whether the good outweighs the bad is very much a matter of
taste, though it should be said the Cleese/Niven scenes are a cut above the
rest of the picture.
The Statue: FUNKY
1 comment:
Are you reviewing the cut, or the uncut version? Wink, wink.
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