After conquering
television in the 1950s, Jackie Gleason notched impressive achievements as a
film actor in the 1960s, balancing credible dramatic work with loud comedic
turns of the sort that made him famous. Then came flops including How Do I Love Thee?, Gleason’s last film
for seven years and his final romantic leading role in a feature. Turgid and
unfunny, How Do I Love Thee? is part character
study and part romantic farce. Gleason plays Stanley Waltz, the aging
proprietor of a small moving-and-storage company. Vexing Stanley are his wife,
Elsie (Maureen O’Hara), a Bible-thumper constantly telling Stanley to embrace
God, and Stanley’s son, Tom (Rick Lenz), a philosophy professor caught in a
power struggle with uptight superiors. At the beginning of the picture, Stanley
suffers a seizure while visiting a religious shrine in Lourdes, France, with
the devout Elsie, so Tom rushes overseas to visit his ailing father—who refuses
to see him. Through flashbacks, we learn that in a past moment of weakness,
Stanley pledged to embrace God and never speak to Tom again. (Long story.)
The central
question is whether a man can truly change. Alas, the filmmakers
want the benefit of presenting a heavy topic without the hard work of
properly exploring that topic, so they wriggle free of serious implications by
way of silly plot contrivances.
Playing to the cheap seats, Gleason does
everything from physical comedy to poetry recitals to sappy speeches. It’s
exhausting to watch. And when he plays comedic bedroom scenes with the equally
uninhibited Shelley Winters, brace yourself for enough screaming to make anyone’s
ears bleed. How Do I Love Thee? is one
of those awkwardly “with-it” late ’60s/early-’70s pictures, in which older Hollywood
professionals try to infuse hokey storytelling with youth-culture attitudes. Unfortunately,
every time something contemporary edges into the mix, the filmmakers quickly
retreat to more conservative tropes (for instance, an endless car-chase scene). Therefore How
Do I Love Thee? is mildly interesting as a snapshot of culture in transition. As a cinematic experience, it’s
confusing and tiresome. As a showpiece for its legendary star, however, it’s labored
and overbearing, which feels just about right—love him or hate him, Gleason
worked hard for his laughs. Here, the strain shows.
How Do I Love Thee?: FUNKY
Yeah, I find these "old" Hollywood vs "new" Hollywood films fascinating.
ReplyDeleteAnother painful example is 'How Sweet It Is' (1968), with James Garner and Debby Reynolds. It has all the trappings of it's era, but it's SO square, it's almost subversive. See also 'With 6 You Get Eggroll' (also'68). Amazing!
Or Gleason and Bob Hope in "How to Commit Marriage."
ReplyDeleteGreat one, Rick.
ReplyDeleteMost of Hope's '60's films are..hopeless (and clueless). Swaggering around like Mr.Cool, but with his pants up under his armpits.