Film Review
Regarded by many as the best film comedy of all time,
Some Like It Hot is a film whose
charms never seem to fade. One of the most successful and
best-loved of the great Hollywood comedies, it remains an exuberant,
highly entertaining comic tour de force for its director Billy Wilder
and lead performers Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon.
If Fate put you in the position of having to watch just
one film comedy in your lifetime,
this is the one you should choose.
This is the film which made Jack Lemmon a star. Whilst Monroe and
Curtis were established and well-known actors, Lemmon was comparatively
unknown, although he had just had a big supporting role in Richard
Quine's
Bell Book and Candle
(1958). Wilder and Lemmon got on well personally and
professionally and would work together on a further six features, most
famously
The Appartment (1960).
Some Like It Hot benefits from
a strong supporting cast which includes such talented performers as Pat
O'Brien, Joe E. Brown, Joan Shawlee and George Raft. The latter
began his career in tough gangster roles, such as the coin-tossing
Rinaldo in
Scarface (1932), so it is
appropriate he should play the gangster boss in this film. Edward
G. Robinson, another actor famous for gangster parts, is represented
here by his son, who plays the assassin that emerges from the birthday
cake to kill Spats Colombo and his gang in the film's hectic finale.
The director and cast may be of exceptional pedigree but perhaps the
main reason for the success and longevity of
Some Like It Hot is its faultless
screenplay - written by Wilder and co-screenwriter I.A.L.
Diamond. It is just a relentless barrage of side-splitting gags
from start to finish. There are just so many jokes that it is
impossible to catch every one in a single viewing. This is a film
you can watch on five consecutive days and still find hilariously funny
by day five.
Some Like It Hot may look like
a near-perfect piece of cinema, but its production was nothing less
than a chaotic ordeal for virtually everyone concerned. The cause
of all this disruption was Marilyn Monroe, whose turbulent and
increasingly painful private life was beginning to impact on her
work. She had become so emotionally unstable and unreliable that
Billy Wilder had to arrange shooting around his leading lady's
unpredictable availability. Filming was frequently held up when
Monroe failed to turn up on time or refused to leave her dressing
room. Even when she was on set, the actress had difficulty
remembering her lines and would often explode into foul-mouthed
tantrums at the least provocation. The only member of the cast
she warmed to was Jack Lemmon; she was unpopular with virtually
everyone else on the set and did not get on well with Tony
Curtis. The latter has been quoted as saying that his love
scenes with Monroe were like being kissed by Hitler - the actor denied
he ever said this in an interview with film historian Leonard Maltin in
2001.
Despite all these upsets and difficulties, Marilyn Monroe gives a
stunning performance, combining glamour, raw sensuality and adolescent
naivety in the way that only she could. She plays her part with
charm, pathos and surprising realism, whilst handling the comedy very
adeptly. Best of all she gets to sing three show-stopping songs,
which showcase her at her best:
Running
Wild,
I'm Through With Love
and
I Just Wannna Be Loved By You,
the latter being her most famous number.
After Monroe, the biggest selling point of
Some Like It Hot is the remarkable
Curtis-Lemmon double act, which attains an almost operatic level of
hilarity in some scenes. What is particularly laudable is
the way in which both actors carry themselves as female
impersonators. It would have been so easy to reduce the
cross-dressing routine to low campery, but what Curtis and Lemmon give
us is something much funnier - two men who are trying desperately to
pass themselves off as women in a frantic attempt to save their
skins. The opportunities for high class comedy are seized by both
actors and delivered with effortless ease. Another
masterstroke was Curtis's idea to play the oil tycoon with an accent
that is an obvious (and rather cruel) imitation of Cary Grant, thereby
rendering every line he utters doubly funny.
That
Some Like It Hot was one
of Billy Wilder's biggest successes is self-evident. The film
grossed eight million dollars in its initial American release
alone. Critical reception was also favourable. It was
nominated for six Oscar nominations - including Best Actor (Lemmon) and
Best Director, but won only one award - for Best Costume Design
(Orry-Kelly). It had more success at the Golden Globes in 1960,
winning the Best Motion Picture Comedy award, and also awards for Jack
Lemmon and Marilyn Monroe as Best Actor and Actess in a Comedy or
Musical.
The film's most famous line is the final "Well, nobody's perfect" -
Osgood's quip to Joe when the latter takes off his woman's wig and
admits to being a man. This was a last minute addition to the
script which was necessitated by Marilyn Monroe not being available on
the last day of the shoot. A more perfect ending to Hollywood's
best film comedy you could not imagine.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Billy Wilder film:
The Apartment (1960)
Film Synopsis
Chicago, 1929. Joe and Jerry are two unemployed musicians who are
looking for work when they witness a gangland massacre. Realising
that what they have seen puts their lives in danger, the two men
hastily decide to leave town and contrive to get jobs with an all-girl
jazz band that is on a train bound for Florida. The downside is
that they have to pretend to be women - so Joe becomes Josephine and
Jerry becomes Daphne. Both men fall for the band's singer, Sugar
Kane, who dreams of marrying a millionaire. In Florida, Joe
impersonates a rich businessman in an attempt to win his way into
Sugar's affections. Meanwhile, Jerry, still disguised as Daphne,
also attracts an admirer, in the form of Osgood, a real
millionaire. Just as things are starting to hot up nicely for the
two musicians, the Chicago mobsters turn up, with some unfinished
business to conclude...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.