Had anyone but Elizabeth
Taylor played the lead in this enervated melodrama, it would be completely
uninteresting. As is, the minor appeal of Ash
Wednesday stems from the way a generation of moviegoers fell in love with
Taylor as a child actress, devoured reports of her scandal-sheet lifestyle, and
watched with unending curiosity as she evolved from a breathtaking beauty to a
merely attractive woman of a certain age. Many of Taylor’s films in the late
’60s and early ’70s concern women struggling to remain sexually vital in their
middle years, none more so than Ash
Wednesday, which revolves around a woman who gets a facelift in order to
win back her unfaithful husband’s affection. Accordingly, those who decode this
film for parallels to Taylor’s offscreen personas will find it mildly
intriguing. Such was the power of old-fashioned movie stardom. Just as John
Wayne fans tolerated substandard movies in order to huff his masculine
charisma, so too did Taylor devotees endure hours of aimless Eurotrash just to
savor her complicated mixture of fragility and glamour.
The painfully
slow-moving Ash Wednesday opens with
Barbara Sawyer (Taylor) visiting a European clinic for a facelift and other
cosmetic procedures. Soon, clips from real surgery are shown, so queasy viewers
will have to look away. Later, while recuperating, Barbara becomes friends with
flamboyant photographer David (Keith Baxter) while awaiting the arrival of her
husband, Mark (Henry Fonda). Since she kept her surgery plans secret, all Mark
knows is that she’s been on holiday in Europe for several weeks. Unwilling to
accept all the obvious clues that her marriage is over, Barbara becomes so
lonely awaiting Mark—who delays his arrival several times—that she has an
affair of her own, thinking jealousy might shock Mark’s system. Ultimately, the
whole storyline is a slow burn to Barbara’s painful reunion with her husband.
Listing
the movie’s shortcomings does not require much effort. The characterizations
are thin, the pacing is absurdly dull, and the supporting performances are
perfunctory. Furthermore, while we can empathize with Barbara’s anguish, one is
hard-pressed to believe that a character played by Elizabeth Taylor at any age
has been so starved of romantic attention that she has grown to doubt her own
comeliness. (Sure, the deeper reason she gets the surgery is that her
self-identity is wrapped up in her marriage, but this isn’t a story about
someone getting therapy—it’s about a facelift.) Despite these significant
faults, Taylor invests her performance with just enough confusion and pathos to
make a few moments feel authentic. Oddly, this is not only one of her most
unvarnished performances but also one of her most vain—after all, the real love
story here isn’t between Barbara and Mark, but rather between Taylor and her
own beauty.
Ash Wednesday: FUNKY
2 comments:
What would Taylor fans in the 1970s have thought if they knew her last big-screen movie role would be as Fred Flintstone's mother-in-law....?
I remember my parents taking me to see this when It was first released, Absolute worst movie to take a 10 year old boy to.
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