An American/French
coproduction plainly designed to evoke Hitchcock’s style of intricate
mystery/suspense plotting—as well as his affinity for kinky sexual
undercurrents—The Lady in the Car with
Glasses and a Gun is as labored as its title. Adapted from Sébastien
Japrisot’s novel by a cabal of writers, The Lady in the Car spins its web methodically,
presenting one bizarre event after another until both the protagonist and the
audience have good reason to worry about going mad. This means it’s hard to
track the narrative from one scene to the next, and even harder to
parse character motivations. That the film concludes with an Agatha
Christie-style explanation sequence rightly indicates how far out of control
the plot spins before the conclusion. Yet the movie is not without its
charms, not least the presence of formidable costar Oliver Reed.
Ad-agency secretary Danielle “Dany” Lang (Samantha Eggar) works for the stern
Michael Caldwell (Reed), who asks her to visit his home for
last-minute work on an urgent proposal. Since Dany knows that Michael’s wife,
Anita (Stéphane Audran), will be home, she doesn’t expect anything out of sorts
to occur, and excepting some catty exchanges with Anita, the visit is strictly professional. That is, until Dany retires to her room for the evening, Michael’s private study—positioned next to the bed is
a nude photo of Anita. Awkward! Things get complicated once Dany drives Michael
and Anita to the airport for a getaway, accepting the use of Michael’s fancy
car for several days as payment for above-and-beyond services. Dany’s long
trip to a resort town includes strange run-ins and, at one point, an
inexplicable episode during which Dany badly injures her hand without any
memory of how the injury happened. And so it goes from there, inevitably
spiraling toward suspicion and terror and violence.
Not much of what happens in
The Lady in the Car makes sense, and
only some of it is interesting. So even though Eggar provides an alluring
presence and channels anxiety effectively, the movie overall is quite opaque,
perhaps deliberately so, and frequently pretentious. (Try not to titter when
Reed delivers this line: “That, as they say, Dany, is life.”)
Happily, the movie gets better as it goes along, and the last half-hour
provides not only plentiful scenes of Reed being anguished and/or menacing, but
also a welcome dash of Hitchcockian kinkiness. Is The Lady in the Car anything more than a
distraction, forgotten the instant it’s over? Probably not. But in its best
moments, the movie aspires to a kind of literary elegance, and there’s some merit in the attempt. Incidentally, Japrisot’s novel was remade in 2015 as a
French film, again called The Lady in the
Car with Glasses and a Gun.
The Lady in the Car with Glasses and a Gun: FUNKY
This was remade in 2015 and is every bit as nonsensical and confusing as the original.
ReplyDeleteQuite long ago , in the middle of the 1970s I think , I watched on TV a movie on which a lady drove down the mountains in a big white car and was in some sort of trouble. I could not recall the title. Having no idea who the actress could be , I thought she would be either Stephanie Powers or Rachel Welch.
ReplyDeleteFinally reading the post about "The lady in the car..." a light blinked in my head. I found the movie , rewatched it and got a bit disappointed.
Reading the post above I think I won´t bother to watch the 2015 remake.
Co-written by Richard Harris, yes. But not Richard Harris the movie star. Richard Harris the screenwriter! It's a different Richard Harris.
ReplyDelete