I've a limited exposure to the British New Wave—that
post-war cultural movement in theater, literature, and film which propelled the lives
and concerns of working-class England to the forefront and ushered in the '60s vogue
for socially conscious kitchen-sink dramas like Look Back in Anger (1956) and Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1960)—but of the few films I have seen, most have been distinguished by their decidedly testosterone-laden, male-centric perspective. So much so
that in a great many cases, the “Angry Young Man” genre description could just as well serve as a plot synopsis.
In these films, the leading men are depicted as a rebellious, restless bunch, ofttimes violently chafing at the constraints of the British class
system. Meanwhile, the women are largely portrayed as either fun-killing domestic
drudges standing as ball-and-chain obstacles to the hero’s independence, or
sexually available conquests whose troublesome biology (they do get pregnant
at the most inconvenient times!) brands them potentially dangerous anchors to a life of lower-class
squalor.
The "Honeyglow" Girl The ideal of the modern woman |
Not to discount Look Back in Anger in its entirety, but I loathed the passive roles played by Mary Ure and Claire Bloom. Ure’s submissive
doormat reminded me of nothing more than Wilma Flintstone as the browbeaten
housewife in the teleplay, The Frogmouth.
By contrast, I very much liked Simone Signoret’s worldly older woman in Room at the Top (1959) and Rachel
Roberts’ complex widow in This Sporting
Life (1963). But for all of their depth and dimensionality, neither character (tellingly, perhaps) came to
a particularly good end. It ultimately took doe-eyed Rita Tushingham in Tony Richardson’s
marvelous A Taste of Honey (1961) to provide a welcome change-of-pace from all this masculine disagreeableness shrouded
in societal disillusionment. In my narrow experience, Tushingham’s spirited
Manchester teen remained the lone feminine voice of the Brit-based genre until one day when I happened upon
John Schlesinger’s Billy Liar (1963)
and that force of nature known as Julie Christie.
Julie Christie’s entire role in Billy Liar can’t amount to
more than ten minutes of screen time, but as the easygoing, independent-minded
Liz (a girl so unlike the other clingy, provincial, ready-to-wed women in the film as
to be another species of being), Christie emerged the only one I even remembered. The frank simplicity of her performance, coupled with her refreshingly
open, guileless glamour, proved to be something of a bellwether moment in the
British New Wave. A turning point of sorts, in the evolution of women in British
cinema. Come the mid-'60s, the reversal of England’s post-war economic decline signaled a gradual
abandonment of these sparse and spartan tales of social oppression. Instead, Northern England’s
working-class suburbs were replaced by the burgeoning mod scene of swinging London, and the by-now familiar class rebellion commentary gave way to observant social satires taking pot shots at provincialism, consumerism, and the emergent dominance of youth culture.
Julie Christie as Diana Scott |
Dirk Bogarde as Robert Gold |
Laurence Harvey as Miles Brand |
Roland Curram as Malcolm |
WHAT I LOVE ABOUT THIS FILM
Perhaps because of all the macho bullying behind so much of it, I’ve
never much warmed to the whole “Angry Young Man” genre. Angry Young Woman…now
that’s another matter. Only two films come to mind: the above-mentioned A Taste of Honey; and the
rarely-mentioned 1985 Meryl Streep drama, Plenty.
A film that, while not technically an
example of the genre, is a wonderful female-centric perspective of post-war
British disappointment.
There is no obvious Angry Young Woman in Darling, but there is something akin to rage at the center of what
is eating at the never-satisfied-for-a-moment Diana. You see it in today’s
films. Those romantic comedies where women are characterized by how much they
shop and the label of the clothes on their backs. The films where the women are
near perfect physical and intellectual specimens, yet their very "femaleness”
is a weakness that dooms them to relationships with doofus schlubs like Seth
Rogen. Those awful Sex and the City
films where the over-privileged girlfriends can’t stop complaining or bemoaning their first-world problems for a minute and just count their blessings…it’s the same thing (Indeed, Diana Scott would
fit right in with Carrie Bradshaw and her “I want it all, but I'm pretty sure I won't be fulfilled when I get it” tribeswomen).
Sexual liberation yields little more than serial dissatisfaction |
I don’t know about you, but when I see compulsive consumerism of the
sort engaged in by women in today’s films as some sort of empowering
birthright, I can’t help but feel there are some real hostilities and angers
being repressed and swallowed up in this obsession with fashion. I can’t believe
the battlefield of women’s liberation has become the local outlet store.
What I like about Darling is
how relentlessly it lampoons this culture we have fashioned for ourselves that
sells people ideas of "lifestyles" rather than encourages us to find an actual life. Like a
similar character played by Jacqueline Bisset in the 1970 film The Grasshopper, Christie’s Diana Scott
has been led to believe that “liberation” is a complete lack of ties to
anything. Even herself. As she flits from one dissatisfying situation to
another, it never dawns on her that she has been sold a prepackaged,
consumerist bill of goods as to what real freedom and happiness is. The chic
trappings of the swinging lifestyle promoted by mod London are chiefly
beneficial to the shopkeepers, stores, and businesses. For Diana, climbing the
ladder of upward mobility ultimately offers her nothing more than increasingly
sumptuous surroundings to feel desperately lonely in.
Having it All |
PERFORMANCES
I’m mad about everything in this film, but Darling is far from being the favorite film of many. Some find it
dated, others complain of the satire being too heavy-handed; even the late John
Schlesinger stated in later years “(Darling)
seemed altogether too pleased with itself” and claimed his film was guilty of
“epigrammatic dialog” that came off as self-consciously hip. Where all opinions converge and most everyone is in agreement (even Schlesinger) is on the topic of Julie Christie's star-making performance. So natural a presence that the film takes on the feel of documentary whenever
she’s onscreen. You can't take your eyes off of her.
I've always wondered if the career of popular '60s British actress Judy Geeson (To Sir, With Love, Bersek) was either plagued or assisted by her more-than-passing resemblance to Julie Christie |
An entire generation fell in love with Christie because of this film
and it’s not hard to see why. In this her Oscar-winning role, Christie exhibits
that appealingly straightforward quality that would characterize her entire
career. She displays an incredible range and finds the humanity and humor in a
character not exactly likable. It’s always interesting when a smart actor
plays a not-very-bright character. Christie doesn’t condescend in her portrayal
of the shallow Diana. She conveys the character’s intellect in terms of a keen,
almost animal awareness of knowing which way the wind is blowing and shifting
her sights accordingly. Julie Christie is just a marvel here and endlessly
resourceful in getting us to know more about a character who knows absolutely nothing
about herself.
THE STUFF OF FANTASY
In films with lead actresses as talented and drop-dead gorgeous as
Julie Christie, it's not uncommon for the male characters to fade into the
background. Not so with Darling. In
fact, I can’t think of a film with a more solid, impressive, and eye-pleasing
male cast. As a nice change of pace, the men in the cast are, by and large, more
sensitive and emotionally needy than the heroine. Few actors have combined
suave masculinity with vulnerable sensitivity as persuasively as Dirk Bogarde.
As television reporter Robert Gold, Bogarde’s grounded sincerity (so easily
read in his expressive eyes) casts a by-contrast harsh light on the frivolous
affections of Christie’s Diana.
Diana (Christie) allows her vulnerabilities to show with her friend Malcolm (Roland Curram) |
Of course, the terrific Laurence Harvey (a delight in 1959s Expresso Bongo) makes for a rakishly
reptilian—and surprisingly sexy—competitor for Diana’s affections, but Roland Curram in the role of Diana’s photographer
friend, Malcolm, really made me sit up and take notice when I first saw Darling. For not only is the
character of Malcolm funny, handsome, and a good friend, but Malcolm is that rare
of rarities: a likable, non-tragic, non-campy, unapologetically sexual, gay
character. In a film made in 1965, no less! As the only genuinely decent
character in the film, his scenes with Christie are refreshingly convivial and
the only times her character ever appears to relax into herself.
Diana and her Gays Darling was one of the earliest films to depict gay characters in a sympathetic light |
Strangely, for a film with
such a progressive attitude towards homosexuality, it seems the
closets were full-to-bursting behind the scenes. Matinee idol Dirk Bogarde was
deeply closeted yet engaged in a brief fling with openly gay director John
Schlesinger during the making of Darling
(according to authorized Schlesinger biographer William J. Mann). Bogarde
enjoyed a 40-year relationship with his agent, Tony Forwood, but invested
considerable energy (throughout several autobiographies) in portraying himself
publicly as a heterosexual. John Schlesinger harbored hopes that his friend, Roland Curram, might be inspired enough by his role in Darling to come out of the
closet. Amused by his friend's presumption, Curram always insisted on his heterosexuality and went on to marry and
later sire two children. In 1985, on the occasion of his divorce and ultimate coming out
to his family and himself, Curram stated, “Of course, I told John later that he
was right.”
Unfaithfully Yours - Diana's twin deceptions Robert: "Your idea of fidelity is not having more than one man in bed at the same time" |
THE STUFF OF DREAMS
I first saw Darling in 1980,
by which time you’d think the film’s satirical slant would have lost its edge. That
at least would be expected. The scary (and sad) thing is that while the jabs have
lost their bite due to over-saturation, the chosen targets are nevertheless every
bit as wanting of lampooning today as they were in 1965. I find it uncanny that the social absurdities Darling poked fun at 52- years ago (TV commercials, fame whores, liberal
hypocrites, self-righteous homophobes, promiscuity for profit, the myth of “having
it all”, etc.) are still a prominent part of our pop-culture landscape.
Darling is the film that made stars of both Julie Christie and John Schlesinger. Schlesinger's next film would be his last with Christie; the big-budget adaptation of the Thomas Hardy novel, Far From the Madding Crowd (1967). After which he would go on to make the classics: Midnight Cowboy, Sunday, Bloody Sunday, and The Day of the Locust. Schlesinger passed away in 2003.
Julie Christie is a legend, of course, and the promise of Darling has been realized in film after film throughout her career. Few actresses get to become iconic stars; fewer still owe it all to introducing to the cinema a new image of womanhood. There are many remarkable actresses around, but there is only one Julie Christie...she is in a class by herself.
Copyright © Ken Anderson 2009 - 2012
Ken, you've written a great post on a film I've seen several times and always found excellent. I've heard many people complain that it's dated, but I don't find this myself. Any movie is going to be a reflection of the social attitudes and filmmaking style of its time, and there are few better examples of this than "Darling" (and I mean this in a good way). It's one of the best film examples I know of of the post-Angry Young Man/pre-psychedelic sensibility in Britain. And in some ways the film hasn't dated at all. As you wrote, "I find it uncanny that the social absurdities Darling poked fun at 52 years ago (TV commercials, fame whores, liberal hypocrites, self-righteous homophobes, promiscuity for profit, the myth of 'having it all', etc.) are still a prominent part of our pop-culture landscape." I couldn't agree more.
ReplyDeleteI've read Schlesinger's self-criticism of "Darling" (also of "Sunday Bloody Sunday") and thought it echoed the criticisms of too many critics. I think he should have had more faith in his work and taken professional critcism less to heart. I find that "Darling" has the most controlled use of satire and irony of any of his films.
You covered many more subjects in your post than I can comment on in a response of reasonable length. But I found your thoughts on the Angry Young Man films, the cast of "Darling," Julie Christie's career and acting style, the degrading stereotyping and sexism of the trend of media portrayals of women as compulsive consumers, and other subjects both well thought out and thought-provoking.
Hi Richard, I'm so happy you enjoyed the post! Thanks for your considered comments on "Darling". I agree with you that a film reflecting the attitudes and technological style of the time it was made is not necessarily representative of it being a dated film. "Darling" really does hold up remarkably well and remains so VERY watchable after all these years.
ReplyDeleteI hadn't known that Schlesinger was equally self-critical of his marvelous "Sunday, Bloody Sunday". Today most directors get defensive rather than take critical reception to heart.
It's nice that this film is a favorite of yours and I'm glad you found a couple of points of interest and concurrence in what I wrote. Now, I see that you've written about Sunday Bloody Sunday on your blog...I'm going to have to check it out!
http://themovieprojector.blogspot.com/2011/06/sunday-bloody-sunday-1971.html
Oh ken, you man of impeccable taste. I do so love this film, such a beautiful film, both in terms of photography, London and a gorgeous cast all round.
ReplyDeleteRoland Curram is a bit of a small screen fave for people with long memories over here in the UK. He played Frank Finlay's charming ladies man business partner in the excellent Bouquet Of Barbed Wire (yes, he really was so far in the closet, despite it being a bit obvious really!) he's a shadowy evil since the dawn of time made flesh in the bonkers Artemis 81 and then in the early 90s he played gay expat in Spain Freddie in the so bad it was good soap Eldorado.
He married Sheila Gish (who you may know from Highlander) and both his daughters became actors; Kay Curram and Lou Gish. Tragically Lou died of cancer at the young age of 38, not long after Sheila succumbed to it. Sheila married Denis Lawson (Star Wars, Local Hero) and he brought the girls up after the divorce from Roland. Denis is the uncle of Ewan McGregor. So quite a 6 degrees of separation going on!
Mark, interesting you should mention Sheila Gish, who I know from British TV shown in the US (like "Charlie Resnick," "The House of Eliott," and "Inspector Morse"). In "Darling" she was one of the guests at that wild party of Laurence Harvey's that Diana Scott went to--so young she was nearly unrecognizable.
DeleteNow that I either didn't know, or if I did I'd forgot! Sheila married Roland in 64, so they were together when this was made. Interesting
DeleteHi Mark. It's nice to hear from someone in the UK about this film. I don't know how it's regarded there, but I like that it is a favorite of yours.
DeleteThanks for all the professional backstory about Roland Curram. I really had no idea of his career at all after "Darling", in which he's so appealing. I saw an online article about his two daughters (very old, since I hadn't been aware that Lou had passed away) in which they comically recount how their father came out to them: "He had brought us up on Judy Garland, Bette Davis, Joan Crawford, and Barbra Streisand, so we were hardly surprised." I love that!
Thanks too to Richard for the Sheila Gish info, of which I wasn't aware. In this John Schlesinger bio I'm reading, it states that Curram dated Schlesinger's sister for a time and that Schlesinger borrowed the sequence where Diana & Malcolm "date" the same Italian waiter, from her real life.
Thanks Mark (and Richard) for the enlightening comments. Oh, and Mark, isn't Julie Christie's birthday a national holiday in the UK by now? :-)
Alas no, but it should be!
DeleteI think reception to Darling here was mixed. Some felt it was less successful than previous offerings from the creative team at Woodfall. Personally I think it stands up as well, it's just a different story being told to Billy Liar say, and there's nothing wrong with that.
I believe Roland writes novels now. I certainly haven't seen him on TV in the last ten yrs (he was in an episode of Holby City, a favourite of mine, which is a medical drama like St Elsewhere or ER over there) Lou died in the mid 00s. Shame, she'd been a rather capable actor in the hilarious comedy Coupling shortly before her death.
You'll see a piccie of Roland in Bouquet Of Barbed Wire on my blog here http://randomramblingsthoughtsandfiction.blogspot.co.uk/2012/02/lazy-sunday-afternoon.html
Hi Mark. Just finished looking at your post for "Bouquet of Barbed Roses" on your site. I love seeing Roland Curram all grown up and looking all pervy in his 70s polyester!
DeleteYou're right about Curram being a novelist now. I've seen a novel or two of his on Amazon. One, about a married man with a roving eye for a gay male model/escort, sounds positively autobiographical!
Mark, I'm starting to think of you as a foreign correspondent, you have such a vast knowledge of film and filming. Much appreciated!
Haha Our Man In The UK. Yeah, fair enough!
DeleteHere's a rather nice pic of him in the soap Eldorado. Hope the link works
http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m104/markbc79/97d2860871f3d35e35f6eb0477d3015a_L.jpg
Keep the great blogs coming Ken
I just re-watched this film again just last week as a double feature with PETULIA. Christie turns a very amoral character into someone the viewer ultimately sympathizes with. This may have turned out differently in the hands of another actress.
ReplyDeleteWhen I was young I always confused Julie Christie and Judy Geeson. I am surprised no one ever had the bright idea of casting them as sisters in something.
I agree, Christie's depth as an actress allows for a more fully-actualized characterization. The entire point of the film could have been lost with a less capable actress.
ReplyDeleteThere were quite a spate of British blondes in the 60s who adopted that bangs and pale lipstick look of Julie Christie, but Judy Geeson was so similar in looks that it was easy to confuse the two. I love the idea of their appearing in something together as sisters!
Being the big Christie fan as I am, I'm ashamed to say I've never seen Petulia, but on getting your comment, I've put it on my Netlix queue.
I'm now trying to think if Judy ever actually appeared in anything alongside her real life sister, Sally Geeson?
DeleteOur man in the U.K...we're counting on you to inform us. (Especially me, as I didn't know Judy Geeson even had a sister!)
ReplyDeleteBy the way, has Judy ever commented on always having been referred to in the press (here at least) as the "poor man's Julie Christie"? I've always thought she was an excellent actress (10 Rillington Place) but have never been able to shake the Julie Christie thing when looking at her.
http://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/224/judysallygeesonir5.jpg/
Delete^Pic of them both. Hope the link works :)
Sally was more familiar here I guess, especially on our TV screens.
I'm not sure Judy had that much of an issue here to be honest. I agree she was excellent in 10 Rillington Place, such a brilliant film. Hers was a strange career, doing big movies like that and at the same time doing smaller films like the TV spin off movie Doomwatch and, at the end of the 70s, appearing on TV in wartime serial Danger UXB
Thanks so much! That's a perfectly charming photo of Judy and her heretofore unknown-to-me sister. Nice of you to dig it up.
ReplyDeleteI hadn't followed Geeson's career much after the 60s, but was nicely surprised when she turned up as the neighbor on the 90s sitcom "Mad About You."
A fave of mine is Joan Crawford's "Berserk" where Judy gives the classic line: "Kill! Kill! Kill! That's all I have inside me!" How the hell does one deliver a line like that with a straight face? She should be knighted for that alone.
As always, Mark, you're a wealth of info. Much appreciated!
Mark's Blog: Random Ramblings,Thoughts & Fiction
http://randomramblingsthoughtsandfiction.blogspot.com/
Ken! You've NEVER seen PETULIA?!!! You need to rectify that immediately! Brilliant, brilliant film and performance by all involved!
ReplyDeleteAs for Judy Geeson as Sidney Poitier said to her character in TO SIR, WITH LOVE, she was a "smasher!"
Never saw 10 RILLINGTON PLACE but I see it's available through the SONY CLASSIC MOD (Movies On Demand) program.
I did see her in HERE WE GO 'ROUND THE MULBERRY BUSH, PRUDENCE AND THE PILL, BERSERK and THREE INTO TWO WON'T GO and of course TO SIR, WITH LOVE.
Hey! They just screened your girl in "For Those Who think Young" on TCM tonight. Yes, and it is pitiable that I've never seen "Petulia" even once but have seen "Hot Rods to Hell"at lest four times. Movie love makes no sense.
DeleteAnyhow, "Petulia" is on my Netflix list right after I return "The Damned" (my first time seeing THAT!)
I've seen all of those Judy Geeson films you listed. Even that rarity "Two Gentlemen Sharing." I think I'm more a fan of hers than I'd thought.
And yes, Geeson was indeed a "smasher!"
The Damned? Is that the Hammer with Oliver Reed?
DeleteSpeaking of Hammer and Geeson, I'll be blogging about Fear In The Night later ;)
"The Damned" is that 1969 Dirk Bogarde film by Luchino Visconti. Since I saw those pics of Bogarde on your site I've been going through a Bogarde rediscovery phase. he may have been fucked up as a man, but what a hell of an actor!
DeleteAs for "Fear in the Night": Judy Geeson AND Joan Collins?...be still my camp-loving heart! Can't wait.
Ah of course yes. Have to say not one of my faves, always preferred The Night Porter.
DeleteWith the eye-candy of Bogarde, Helmut Berger, and Helmut Griem, "The Damned" will have to be pretty awful for me not to be besotted (alas, my superficiality, vis a vis onscreen beauty, is well-documented on this blog).
Delete"The Night Porter" ...that is really a disturbing favorite of mine, too.
Yes my girl was on TCM last night but I CAN'T STAND that movie! Godawful doesn't even BEGIN to describe it.
ReplyDeleteOh and I am SO GUILTY of superficiality vis a vis on screen beauty.
We need to discuss that one at great length, LOL!
Yes!
Deletehttp://randomramblingsthoughtsandfiction.blogspot.co.uk/2012/04/fear-in-night-1972.html
ReplyDeleteif any Geeson fans are interested :)
Hello,
ReplyDeleteI just want to say that I just love your web site. I recently discovered it and was amazed to see so many of my favourite films reviewed by you. Not only with good pictures from the film but with also very interesting and thoughtful comments.
I have printed out many of your reviews and I enjoy reading them so much. I would have written sooner but I didn't know in which review I would leave a comment. So I chose "Darling" as it is the one I most recently read.
I love Julie Christie and it seems almost everyone falls in love with her when they watch her "Darling". She was a hot star for a while in the 60's but very quickly her popularity faded. The critics seemed to turn on her, she made few films and many of them flopped. I'm amazed that her career in films cooled down in the 70's but she seeed to want to do less, which is a shame. I'm happy she's back in movies now!
I'm so glad I finally got to see her in "In Search of Gregory" which could have been a better film in a more mysterious Antonioni-esque sense. Her role in it wasn't very good and I'm surprised that she took it!
As for Judy Geeson; I love her too. So sweet and actually more easy to cast in films in the 60's. I wish more people knew of her!
Thank you! -Wille
Hello Willie
DeleteI was absolutely charmed by your comment and thank you for putting a big smile on my face! It pleases me that you found some of my posts interesting.
Always a pleasure, too, to hear from a Julie Christie fan. She really is marvelous, and I've always felt her absolute disinterest in being a movie star has played havoc with her career longevity. I agree with you about "Search for Gregory" which I only saw a couple of years ago. She looks radiant, but an odd role to take.
Happily she still makes films and is as incandescent as ever.
Also, I love that you know Judy Geeson! I hope you've seen her in "10 Rillington Place" she's so great in it.
I hope you stop by again and share some thoughts about other films on this blog that may be your favorites. You needed feel compelled to say anything about the post itself, just sharing your own affection for is always interesting to readers and other film fans. Thanks again, Willie!
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ReplyDeleteHi Gregory
DeleteI kind of know what you mean by that quality you detail in those actors. It certainly is something I personally perceived in Foreign actors while growing up, and only occasionally in American actors (Both Michael Sarrazin and James Fox had it for me).
Love how you describe it, for it feels like something it would take a young person to take note of , not having a fully developed "sense" in adolescence, but perceptive nonetheless.
Unless it's a factor of my age or a factor of the blandness of contemporary actors, but I have't seen the likes of a Dirk Bogarde, Laurence Harvey, or Tony Perkins in ages.
This comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteBonus points for the keen observation on the blank surfaces that are modern male stars, and double bonus points for the Ah Men reference! My childhood "Victoria's Secret" catalog.
DeleteI will look for The Running Man. Googled some images and it looks fascinating!
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteOh, I really had (have?) a thing for Dirk Bogarde! Although after reading the lengthy book of his diaries I imagine him to have been a particularly odious sort of man.
DeleteI'm glad that reading about "Darling" sparked so many of your thoughts and touched off your discussion of a film i absolutely adore (The Servant) and makes me want to check out one I'm wholly unfamiliar with (Antonioni's). Thank YOU for such an excellent memory-tome and sharing your impressions of that elusive something found in all those fascinating actors. You've got an eye!
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DeleteHi,
ReplyDeleteI was so pleased to find this review here: Darling is a film which is not talked about as much as it deserves. It is one of my favourite movies of all time, and, like you, I love all the actors in it: everyone of them gives something special and unforgettable to this film which is painfully beautiful to watch.
Thank you
Hello
DeleteA pleasure to hear from someone who loves this film as much as I do! It is a pity that "Darling" has fallen through the cracks somewhat and is rarely mentioned.
Perhaps it's due to it not being as ostentatiously as groundbreaking a film as it was at the time of release, but I think, independent of its place in the formative years of British New Wave, it remains an extraordinary film. As you mention, especially the marvelous cast. Thank you very much for visiting this site and taking the time to comment!
Hello
ReplyDeleteIt is such a great pleasure to watch Julie Christie in "Darling"..it is my favorite movie of all time. I have all of her movies, but in Darling she stands out with such talent. I can't help but feel sorry for her in the end. Dirk Bogarde lets her think they can go back together again with one last sexual episode.....I thought they could make a go of it if he would have given her another chance.....I watch this film once a month with great joy.
Hello
DeleteThat's wonderful that you are such a fan of "Darling" and Julie Christie's performance. Part of her brilliance is portraying a very selfish creature in such a humanizing way, it is very easy to feel some sympathy for her at the end. Of the two, I personally think Bogart is the more wounded, but at least he's wiser and knows that for all her tears, she will be back to her old ways as soon as she gets bored again.
But I love that there is something redeeming you see in her and you want her to have a better end than the film provides. I like when movies can get you to care about a character's fate. Thank you for sharing your feelings for this film with us. Your expressed enthusiasm for it is enlivening to read.
A wonderful appreciation of my favourite film - thanks
ReplyDeleteMuch appreciated! Thank you for reading this and making the extra effort to comment.
DeleteHey, Ken!
ReplyDeleteI just came here to tell you that I've seen a video essay about Julie's career that echoes this essay of yours... It's called "Julie Andrews and Julie Christie: Opposite Personas Vying for Best Actress" on the Be Kind Rewind channel. It's a 43 minute video explaining the factors behind Julie Christie's explosion and I thought of you all through it. So I came to recommend it to you in case you'd like to see it.
Have a great weekend! Stay happy and healthy :)
Greetings, Joao Paulo - I always get a kick out of hearing from you. And your passing on Julie Christie-related info is icing on the cake! I've seen a couple of videos from that superb Be Kind Rewind channel and I so look forward to seeing this. Thank you very much for passing it on to me (and interested readers). Hope all is well with you and sending my best. Have a great weekend!
Delete