Film Review
Such was the impact of Joe Orton's second major stage play
Loot, once
it had bedded down and become a much lauded West End hit in the late autumn
of 1966, that a frantic bidding war for the film rights was soon set in motion.
A figure of £100,000 was quoted in the national press as the sum Orton
was to receive for selling the play to producer Arthur Lewis, who was best
known at the time for his popular television series
The Asphalt Jungle
(1961) and
Brenner (1959-64). The actual amount paid was nearer
£25,000, but this was a colossal sum at the time, and a small fortune
for a writer who, until recently had been living on a paltry £3 a week
from National Assistance.
The film's gestation proved to be as protracted and almost as difficult as
that of the original play and it wasn't until December 1970, almost three
and half years after Orton's brutal murder by his lover Kenneth Halliwell,
that the film finally hit the cinema screens - only to be a huge commercial
flop. The critical reaction to
Loot's manically overdone screen
adaptation was very mixed (some reviewers were impressed by what they saw)
and it lost a great deal of money. The film's failure was at least
down in part to Orton's rapid tumble into obscurity after his death.
The spectacular failure of a lavish (but poorly executed) West End production
of his final play
What the Butler Saw in January 1969 provided the
final nail in the coffin of what was possibly the boldest, most innovative
British writer since the Second World War.
There had been an earlier film revamp of another Joe Orton play - Douglas
Hickox's
Entertaining Mr Sloane
(1970) - but this had had the good sense to stick, as far as it could,
to the original text, its only notable cinematic embellishment being to move
some of the scenes out of doors to give it greater visual impact. The
overriding failing of director Silvio Narizzano's film version of
Loot
is that it pretty well shreds the original play and brings in a large quantity
of new material which mostly has the effect of completely undermining Orton's
intentions and reducing the play - a dark commentary on the venality that
thrives on the phoney values of contemporary society - to what is little
more than a lazily thrown together caper movie, similar in spirit (if not
in substance) to Peter Colinson's
The
Italian Job (1969).
Ray Galton and Alan Simpson - undeniably the greatest comedy writing team
the UK has ever produced (their successes including the now legendary
Hancock's
Half Hour and
Steptoe and Son)
- but they were completely unsuited for the task of reworking Orton's subversive
comic masterpiece
Loot into a popular cinema offering. Galton
and Simpson's forte was primarily character-based situation comedy, a form
of entertainment at which they excelled (they have often been cited as the
inventors of the British TV sitcom). Orton's comedy is, by contrast,
pure farce with a deadly, keenly honed satirical edge that savagely mocks
the prim social conventions and resultant foul-smelling hypocrisies that
he utterly loathed. There is no way that these two comedy styles could
have been brought into a happy union and the resulting film bears this out.
Narizzano's vertiginously manic film looks like a knock-out contest between
two wildly different approaches to comedy, one that ends in both contestants
pummelling themselves into the ground.
The one aspect of the original play which Galton and Simpson manage to preserve
in their staggeringly uneven screenplay is Orton's core message - namely
that conventional morality is inherently harmful for both society and individuals.
Orton implies (in virtually all of his work) that it is healthier for individuals
to create their own morality rather that to mindlessly kowtow to a moral
system imposed on them from above, one deriving from those to whom we grant
authority over us - primarily the Church and the State. In
Loot,
the apparently immoral outcome (in which the lawbreakers all succeed and the
virtuous perish) is a natural consequence of the ludicrous state of affairs
that society appears willing to accept because it doesn't know any better.
Those who feel bound by the dictates of social convention end up as stooges
and scapegoats, whilst those who know for sure that they are outside the
law (a serial murderess, a pair of homosexuals and a corrupt cop) have nothing
to lose (and everything to gain) by exploiting the rotten system for their
own nefarious ends.
And it is real life that Orton draws on in warning us of the dangers of conventional
morality and the self-serving pillars of authority that serve as its bulwark.
Loot's most prominent character, the monstrously unethical Truscott
of the Yard, was closely modelled on a real-life police inspector, Harold
Challenor, who had a habit of planting evidence so he could arrest suspects,
acquiring lasting notoriety with his quip 'You're fucking nicked, my beauty.'
Truscott epitomised the bogus authority figure that Orton reviled, a man
who is capable of twisting every situation to his advantage whilst indulging
his penchant for sadism and self-aggrandisement. Played well, he is
surely the most grotesque and memorably funny character in Orton's oeuvre.
Unfortunately, Richard Attenborough portrays him in the film as nothing more
than a ridiculous pantomime buffoon, exorcising Orton's darker purpose in
just about every scene he appears in. All sense of menace, sarcasm
and humour is lost as this totally out-of-place actor lumbers hammily through
some of the most embarrassingly bad moments of his career, reducing the whole
dodgy enterprise to the level of cheap vaudeville.
Attenborough may be one of the finest dramatic actors to grace any British
film (
Brighton Rock (1948),
The Guns at Batasi (1964),
The Sand Pebbles (1968),
10 Rillington Place (1971)),
but what he does with Inspector Truscott must rate as one of the worst comedy
atrocities ever committed on a British soundstage. The kind of hammy
excesses in which he indulges are precisely what Orton strove to abolish
from all stage productions of his plays. In his mature phase, Orton
was wise enough to know that there is no surer way to kill comedy than by
trying to play it for laughs. Attenborough's comic book overacting
merely renders Truscott unforgivably silly, his best lines dying an ignominious
death before they have barely had a chance to pass his lips. One of
the things that Joe Orton had to learn the hard way during the national tour
of the first, seemingly doomed production of
Loot, was that the play
required Truscott to be played absolutely straight. Having Kenneth
Williams in the role (as Orton had originally decided), and giving him carte
blanche to send it up shamelessly was a huge error that very nearly consigned
Loot to the scrap-heap of failed theatrical projects. Only by
recasting the role and insisting that Truscott be played more soberly was
the play salvaged and allowed to triumph in the West End. Attenborough
haplessly revives the ghost of the play's first reviled incarnation, and
the outcome is all too predictable.
There is much that Joe Orton would have hated about this film if he had seen
it. The hideous representation of Truscott is one of countless offences
it commits in an all-too-obvious attempt at widening the appeal of a play
that was originally intended for a theatre audience of some sophistication.
The insensitive treatment of the embalmed corpse of Mrs McLeavy (one of the
most shocking aspects of the stage play) has none of the irreverent malice
that Orton intended (as an attack on the pointless rituals attached to death)
- indeed the author's wry message is lost entirely, swept away in a torrent
of camp cartoonish silliness. The planning and execution of the bank
robbery is shown in laborious, tedious detail, with a crude attempt to spice
it up by shooting it through psychedelic colour filters and having the two
gay protagonists steal the titular loot in their birthday suits (no doubt
Galton and Simpson thought this a suitably Ortonesque touch, having seen
What the Butler Saw). Roy Holder plays Hal not as an ordinary-looking
homosexual lad as Orton intended, but as a fashionable transvestite, thereby
kyboshing the credibility of the character's relationship with both his father
(Milo O'Shea) and straight-looking boyfriend (Hywel Bennett).
As the sexy but appallingly venal Nurse McMahon, Lee Remick is the only member
of the cast who comes within spitting distance of Orton's conception of the
role, so it's no surprise that her scenes (most retaining the dialogue of
the original play) are by far the funniest and most enjoyable. Dick
Emery's constantly complaining Mr Bateman is one of the few additions to
the original text that makes a positive contribution, adding a jolt of well-intended
humour to make up for all of the anarchic silliness that infects most of
the film as it gallops way beyond farce into the most ludicrously inept form
of slapstick. Intermittent bursts of the sprightly but ultimately irritating
theme song, with lyrics intended to clarify the plot, provide another unwelcome
distraction, assailing your ears with a cacophony that is the exact aural
equivalent of the retina-searing colour scheme that is employed in just about
every frame of the film. The designer and cinematographer were both
clearly ingesting far too much LSD whilst working on this film, for
Loot's
over-exuberant sensory overload (which kicks in immediately with the boisterous
credits sequence and never relents until the whole toe-curling ordeal is
over) makes it feel like the worst kind of drugs-induced hallucinatory experience.
You're genuinely glad when this wildly out-of-control juggernaut finally
hits the buffers, after having well and truly knocked the stuffing out of
one of the boldest and funniest British stage plays of the era.
Loot
was the play that firmly planted the 33-year-old Joe Orton on the road to
wealth and fame (sadly he would not enjoy either for long, as he died within
eight months of it finally becoming a success).
Loot was also
the West End phenomenon that played a significant part in launching the counterculture
revolution that erupted in Britain of the late 1960s, early 1970s.
The ease with which the main characters succumb to the allure of filth lucre
and are drawn into skulduggery to slake this craving, uninhibited by a moral
system that is farcically no longer fit for purpose, feels alarmingly modern
- indeed in many respects
Loot is more relevant today than when it
was first conceived. How sad then that its one and only screen outing
to date should be such a criminally poor effort - a spluttering, over-egged
comedy hybrid in which Joe Orton's distinctive voice - a well-mannered but
savage rage against convention - is scarcely heard.
© James Travers 2024
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