Film Review
The Great Race typifies the
kind of brash blockbuster adventure comedy that was fleetingly popular with
audiences in the mid-1960s. At the time, Hollywood producers seemed to think that all
they had to do to have a surefire hit was to burn up sackloads of cash
and get some seriously big name actors to do some very silly things
in front of a camera. The fallacy of this
strategy was exposed when
The Great
Race bombed at the box office and attracted far from favourable
reviews. Badly scripted and directed with no real flair, this
probably rates as Blake Edwards' least funny comedy.
It's not hard to see why the film was so badly received: its ramshackle plot
barely sustains its near-three hour runtime and the humour is pretty
well exhausted in the first fifteen minutes. The paucity of ideas
becomes apparent within the first hour but attains truly nightmarish proportions
when, for purely time-filling reasons, the
screenwriters shoehorn in a tacky version of
The Prisoner of Zenda just before
the ending. The film is messy, overlong and overblown, and
painfully lacking in humour. Its only saving grace is Jack
Lemmon's outrageously over-the-top pantomime villain, who, partnered
with Peter Falk in what now looks like a Dastardly and Muttley tribute
act, gives the film's its only decent laughs. Had this been
trimmed to about ninety minutes, it might just have worked. As it
is, it is almost as hard to get through as
War in Peace, and not nearly as
funny.
© James Travers 2010
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Film Synopsis
The Great Leslie is a dashing daredevil who delights in performing
stunts for an appreciative audience, circa 1900. An avid
self-publicist, he persuades the manufacturers of a new make of
automobile to stage a great race from New York to Paris. Leslie's
arch-enemy, Professor Fate, also enters the race, determined to thwart
his long-time rival. Another entrant is suffragette journalist
Maggie Dubois, who intends to win the race to strike a blow for female
emancipation. Assisted by his accomplice Max, Professor Fate soon
manages to eliminate all the other contestants, ensuring that the great
race will become a duel between him and his nemesis Leslie...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.