Film Review
Laurel and Hardy's swansong has been pretty comprehensively maligned
over the years and yet, if you compare it with the anodyne offerings
they made for MGM and 20th Century Fox a few years previously
(
Jitterbugs,
The Big Noise),
it actually stands as one of their better late films, a return to the
anarchic fun of their great 1930s comedies (
Pack Up Your Troubles,
Block-Heads).
The fact that the film is currently only available in poor quality transfers from degraded prints does
little for its reputation, but if you can make allowance for this,
Atoll K, a.k.a.
Utopia, a.k.a.
Robinson Crusoeland isn't nearly as
bad as its reputation would suggest. Admittedly, the visual gags
are somewhat laboured and lack the finesse of earlier L&H films
(although some are inspired), and the political satire is pretty
strained, but it is a joy to see Stan and Ollie released from the
tedious bourgeois straitjacket to which Hollywood executives and
screenwriters confined them in the 1940s. And the film ends with
one of the best gags of any of their films, albeit one of a distinctly
black hue (one to get your teeth into, ahem). How many other
films do you know make fun of
bouillabaisse?
Atoll K was a French-Italian
co-production which came about as a result of the resurgence in
popularity of Laurel and Hardy in Europe after the Second World
War. However, whilst the film had a healthy budget for its
time (far in excess of what L&H had to work with in their Hal Roach
days), it was soon mired in production difficulties which caused its
shooting schedule to slip from twelve weeks to a full year.
The main problem was one of communication between the multi-national
cast, which included the French diva Suzy Delair (lacking her usual
sparkle and atrociously dubbed), and French director Léo
Joannon, who seemed to be under the misapprehension he was making an
art film. This misfire aside, Joannon was a fairly respectable filmmaker,
with several notable works to his credit -
L'Émigrante (1940),
Le Carrefour des enfants perdus (1944),
L'Homme aux clefs d'or (1956).
Hollywood blacklisted director John Berry was brought
on board discretely to assist Joannon, but this did not prevent the
film's production from getting hopelessly out of control. There
were squabbles over the plot, which led Stan Laurel to bring in Alfred
Goulding and Monty Collins to redraft the script. And to cap it
all, both of the film's two stars had serious health problems, which
caused the biggest production hold-ups. Stan Laurel was suffering
from dysentery and a prostate ulcer, which made it impossible for him
to work for more than 30 minutes at a time, whilst Oliver Hardy was
chronically overweight and coping with a life-threatening heart
condition. Stan and Ollie's poor state of health is more than
apparent in the film, particularly Stan, who is so emaciated and
lacking in his former vitality that you feel guilty laughing at
him. It was a small miracle that the film was ever completed,
when everything seemed to be against it.
Four versions of the film were released, but wherever it was shown it
attracted poor reviews and failed to make any money. This is a
shame, as
Atoll K was a
timely satire on the kind of futile territorial disputes and blinkered
capitalism that were becoming endemic half a decade on from the end of WWII, a
poignant reminder of the elusiveness of Utopia in our troubled
world. Audiences were perhaps expecting something less subtle, a
rehash of the harmless slapstick of the 1930s. To be fair, Laurel
and Hardy deserve some credit for departing from their usual routine
and trying something a little more daring. If anything the film
is probably more relevant today (and therefore more enjoyable) than it
was when it was first screened. No one could mistake
Atoll K for a comic masterpiece,
but it is an engaging piece, despite its many, all too obvious
deficiencies, and a reasonably satisfying parting shot from the
greatest comedy double act of all time.
Another nice mess just about sums
it up.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Léo Joannon film:
Drôle de noce (1952)
Film Synopsis
With Ollie acting as his financial representative, Stan visits a London
law firm to collect a substantial inheritance left to him by his
uncle. Unfortunately, almost all of the money Stan inherits is
eaten up by taxes and legal fees and so all he is left with is a
rickety old yacht and a small island in the South Pacific. Just
before they set out from Marseilles, Stan and Ollie pick up a stateless
refugee, who gladly cooks their meals, and an Italian stowaway, who
helps himself to their food. Before they reach their
destination, the boys are caught up in a violent sea storm and are
shipwrecked on a deserted atoll, which they christen Crusoeland.
Just when they begin to miss female company, an attractive French
cabaret singer named Chérie Lamour lands on the island, seeking
a refuge from the fiancé she has just fallen out with.
When uranium deposits are discovered on the island, it attracts
visitors from around the world, each nationality wanting to claim the
island as its own. Ollie declares the island an independent
republic, with himself the president and Stan 'the people'. It
isn't long before the island paradise is reduced to a squabbling melee
and in the ensuing revolution Ollie is deposed and sentenced to death
with his friends. Could this be the end for Stan and Ollie...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.