Lovin' Molly | |
---|---|
Directed by | Sidney Lumet |
Screenplay by | Stephen J. Friedman |
Based on | Leaving Cheyenne by Larry McMurtry |
Produced by | Stephen J. Friedman |
Starring | Anthony Perkins Beau Bridges Blythe Danner |
Cinematography | Edward R. Brown |
Edited by | Joanne Burke |
Music by | Fred Hellerman |
Production company | S.J.F. Productions [1] |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 98 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $1.2 million [2] |
Lovin' Molly is a 1974 American drama film directed by Sidney Lumet and starring Anthony Perkins, Beau Bridges, Blythe Danner in the title role, Ed Binns, and Susan Sarandon. The film is based on Larry McMurtry's second novel, Leaving Cheyenne (1963). Prior to release, the film was also known as Molly, Gid, and Johnny and The Wild and The Sweet.
Over a span of nearly 40 years, Gid and Johnny, a pair of Texas farm boys, compete for the affections of Molly Taylor, a free spirit who cares for both of them. The story is told in three consecutive segments, each narrated by one of the three lead roles.
The first segment is set in 1925 and narrated by Gid, who introduces himself as well as his best friend Johnny and Johnny's girlfriend Molly Taylor with whom Gid becomes smitten. Gid works part-time as a ranch hand at Molly's farm and often competes against Johnny for Molly's affections. Despite their frequent feud and arguments, Gid and Johnny's friendship never ends during their excursions and errands for Molly's father to sell and buy cattle for the family farm. Molly eventually sleeps with Gid, as well as Johnny, but she eventually chooses neither one of them and instead marries school friend Eddie after the death of her father. Gid eventually marries Sarah, a local widow with several children, and Johnny leaves town for places unknown.
The second segment is set in 1945 and is narrated by Molly. It was revealed that Molly had three sons from her three different suitors, and each one of them died in combat during World War II which is currently waging. Molly's husband Eddie also died from an illness several years before. Gid had divorced Sarah and began spending most of his free time with Molly, who withheld the news of their son's death in battle. When he finally did learn the news, Gid took it badly and became more depressed. Johnny re-entered their lives after living away and, having married and divorced his own wife, took a more active part in helping Molly run her late father's farm.
The third and final segment is set in 1964 and is narrated by Johnny. He reveals that Gid is in a local hospital dying from cancer and Johnny has been keeping a bedside vigil over him. Wanting out of the place, Johnny takes Gid away from the hospital for a few days to visit Molly who is still living at her father's farm and is contemplating selling it. After working with Johnny around the farm to relive their "good old days" long gone by, Gid passes away as Johnny is driving him back to the hospital. After Gid's funeral, Johnny meets with Molly where they agree that, despite never getting married or having a life in operating her family farm, they will always be soul mates, before Johnny leaves Molly for the last time.
In March 1966 The Los Angeles Times reported film rights were puchased by Warner Bros for produced William Conrad and Larry Marcus to write the script. [3] McMurtry later says Warners wanted to call the film Gid, after the lead character Gideon, to cash in on the success of the movie Hud, based on McMurty's first novel, Horseman Pass By. The writer recalls, "Something like seven scripts ensued, one of them done by Robert Altman, another of them nursed along for years by Don Siegel. Insidiously unfilmic, the book resisted all but the most foolhardy efforts to drag it onto celluloid, until, in 1974, it finally succumbed to the abundantly foolhardy efforts of Stephen Friedman and Sidney Lumet and appeared as Lovin' Molly". [4]
In June 1969 it was announced Don Siegel would produce a version in Oklahoma, with filming to start in October 1969. [5] However this did not proceed.
Film rights were eventually obtained by Stephen Friedman, a lawyer who had moved into producing with the film version of McMurtry's The Last Picture Show. [6] (Friedman appears to have bought them off Universal Studios, who got them from Warner Bros. [7] ) Friedman was an admirer of Leaving Cheyenne calling it "full of extraordinary insights into people". He particularly appreciated how "the men have to adapt to the women in the story. Usually it's the other way around." [8]
Friedman had not been involved in the writing or casting of Last Picture Show. He decided to adapt Leaving Cheyenne into a screenplay himself. [9] He said that despite the success of Last Picture Show at the box office he had as much trouble raising finance for Leaving Cheyenne. "It's still difficult to convince the industry that films about love and humanity and people will be as grabbing as lustful, violent action drama." [10] Finance was eventually raised independenly although Columbia Pictures - which had made The Last Picture Show - later picked up the film for release. [7]
Friedman said the title was changed from Leaving Cheyenne after "we took a survey and found that most people expected it to be a Western. It's about people and we didn't want to attract people that wanted a simple action movie and got a sensitive drama." [8]
Friedman says Sidney Lumet was the third director he approached to make the film. "He doesn't like to typecast he likes to cast people in the opposite of their type," said Friedman. "It's a challenge to him, it's a challenge to the performer. That's the kind of concern I was looking for in this picture. It was set in Texas but could have happened anywhere. The people are more important than the film" [8]
At one stage the filmmakers considered using three different actors to play the characters during three different timelines but eventually decided to use the same actors and make up. [10] (Friedman later said the film should have just used two timelines. [7] )
In an interview with another of the actors in the film, Paul Partain (better known for his role in The Texas Chain Saw Massacre ) described the origins of the film:
When Sidney [Lumet] and producer Stephen J. Friedman got into town, they came with what they hoped would be the perfect formula for success. It had worked on The Last Picture Show , and they knew it would work here. It was this: get a Larry McMurtry novel, hire your three lead actors from Hollywood, get a great director, pick up all the rest of the actors and the crew from the local pool and you were set. Great plan, and it almost worked ...
Danner started rehearsing for the movie twelve days after having given birth to her daughter Gwyneth Paltrow. [10]
Filming started on November 6, 1972 under the working title Molly, Gid and Johnny in Bastrop, Texas. The unit stayed at Bastrop until December 8, after which there was two weeks of filming on a set in New York. [11]
The filming was witnessed by a Texan journalist who later wrote a 1974 Texas Monthly article about it. Lumet directed this film during a span when his Serpico , Murder on the Orient Express , Dog Day Afternoon , Network and Equus were nominated for a combined 27 Academy Awards. McMurtry has claimed to have hated the movie as it wasn't very true to his book and says that it "just about killed his father."
Lumet said:
There were so many problems with that film! First, I should have taken a year to prepare it, because I wasn’t at all familiar with life down South. I should have researched it more. It was an independent film, with little financing, so we had to shoot quickly, and that’s why the makeup, for example, is not all that convincing. Anyway, it was a failure, due in great part to my haste. [12]
McMurtry felt Lumet's "indifference to locale was so total that one is sorry he was put to the anguish of uprooting himself from home and hearth for even the few short weeks he could bring himself to stay in Texas." [13] He added "indifference to detail, on the scale to which it is evident in Lovin' Molly, adds up to indifference to substance." [14]
Variety called it " a misguided, heavy-handed attempt to span 40 years in the lives of three Texas rustics and their bizarre but homey menage a trois. Despite some good performances, pic just doesn't work, and b.o. prospects are dim... If the basic concept is arguably unfilmable, Lumet’s execution of it is haphazard. Early sequences are surprisingly sloppy (mismatched shots etc.) and overall direction is lacklustre." [15]
The Los Angeles Times wrote "Perkins is expressive and incisive in one of the richest roles he's ever had" but felt the film "leaves one with the impression that we'd be better off having read McMurtry's book." [16]
Sight and Sound wrote, "imagine Jules and Jim transplanted to rural Texas, with destructive Catherine replaced by constructive Molly, and you arrive at the thematic basis of this adaptation... Unlikely as it sounds, Anthony Perkins, Beau Bridges and Blythe Danner as the lovable trio come dangerously close to making it work." [17]
Jonathan Rosenbaum reviewing it in Monthly Film Bulletin called the movie:
A kind of rural Carnal Knowledge, with the lives of three characters split into discrete and isolated episodes from which the physical fact of their environment is virtually stripped away. (The film was shot on location, but for all that Sidney Lumet makes of the terrain, he might as well have used a sound stage.) To compound difficulties, we have three evidently urban actors out to impersonate country folk... straining after verisimilitude and continuity all along the way. And yet, with the odds stacked so firmly against it, the film gets away with a lot more than one would have any right to expect. At his best, Lumet has always been an actor’s director, and the cumulative impact of the three leads often persuades one to forget the quaint precocity of the material with which they are working. [18]
In a 1975 review of Hearts of the West Pauline Kael referred to Lovin' Molly which she called "crudely made, but there were suggestive spaces in 1t—you couldn’t tie it all up. Danner’s full-blown, straightforward Molly, who didn’t worry about being conventional, because conventions meant nothing to her, was like a Hardy heroine—Eustacia Vye, or Tess—growing up in Texas. I thought Blythe Danner was going to become a great movie star, but Lovin’ Molly got measly distribution and vanished, and stars aren’t made by flop movies." [19]
Critic Danny Peary wrote "Film reputedly has a cult following, but I have never come across a true fan. However, if you’re a Blythe Danner fan and consequently regret that she didn’t make it as a ticket-selling leading lady, this is the picture that proves she had the beauty and talent to have been a star if she’d been promoted properly." [20]
Blythe Katherine Danner is an American actress. Accolades she has received include two Primetime Emmy Awards for Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series for her role as Izzy Huffstodt on Huff (2004–2006), and a Tony Award for Best Featured Actress for her performance in Butterflies Are Free on Broadway (1969–1972). Danner was twice nominated for the Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series for portraying Marilyn Truman on Will & Grace, and the Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or Movie for her roles in We Were the Mulvaneys (2002) and Back When We Were Grownups (2004). For the latter, she also received a Golden Globe Award nomination.
The Last Picture Show is a 1971 American coming-of-age drama film directed by Peter Bogdanovich and co-written by Bogdanovich and Larry McMurtry, adapted from the 1966 semi-autobiographical novel by McMurtry. The film's ensemble cast includes Timothy Bottoms, Jeff Bridges, Ellen Burstyn, Ben Johnson, Cloris Leachman, and Cybill Shepherd. Set in a small town in northern Texas from November 1951 to October 1952, it is a story of two high school seniors and long-time friends, Sonny Crawford (Bottoms) and Duane Jackson (Bridges).
Dog Day Afternoon is a 1975 American biographical crime drama film directed by Sidney Lumet and produced by Martin Bregman and Martin Elfand. The film stars Al Pacino, John Cazale, James Broderick and Charles Durning. The screenplay is written by Frank Pierson and is based on the Life magazine article "The Boys in the Bank" by P.F. Kluge and Thomas Moore. The feature chronicles the 1972 robbery and hostage situation led by John Wojtowicz and Salvatore Naturile at a Chase Manhattan branch in Brooklyn.
Serpico is a 1973 American biographical crime drama film directed by Sidney Lumet and starring Al Pacino in the title role. The screenplay was adapted by Waldo Salt and Norman Wexler from the book written by Peter Maas, with the assistance of its subject Frank Serpico. The story details Serpico's struggle with corruption within the New York City Police Department during his eleven years of service, and his work as a whistleblower that led to the investigation by the Knapp Commission.
Larry Jeff McMurtry was an American novelist, essayist, and screenwriter whose work was predominantly set in either the Old West or contemporary Texas. His novels included Horseman, Pass By (1962), The Last Picture Show (1966), and Terms of Endearment (1975), which were adapted into films. Films adapted from McMurtry's works earned 34 Oscar nominations. He was also a prominent book collector and bookseller.
Sidney Arthur Lumet was an American film director. Lumet started his career in theatre before moving to film, where he gained a reputation for making realistic and gritty New York dramas which focused on the working class, tackled social injustices, and often questioned authority. He received several awards including an Academy Honorary Award and a Golden Globe Award as well as nominations for nine British Academy Film Awards and a Primetime Emmy Award.
Marilyn Burns was an American actress. She was known for playing Sally Hardesty in Tobe Hooper's horror film The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974), which established her as a scream queen and a catalyst of the final girl trope. She was involved in two more films of its resulting franchise: a cameo in The Return of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1995) and a supporting role in Texas Chainsaw 3D (2013). In 2009, she was inducted into the Horror Hall of Fame at the Phoenix Film Festival.
John Holland Cazale was an American actor. He appeared in five films over seven years, each of which was nominated as Best Picture at their respective Academy Awards. Cazale started as a theater actor in New York City, ranging from regional, to off-Broadway, to Broadway acting alongside Al Pacino, Meryl Streep and Sam Waterston. Cazale soon became one of Hollywood's premier character actors, starting with his role as the doomed, weak-minded Fredo Corleone opposite longtime friend Pacino in Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather (1972) and The Godfather Part II (1974). He acted in Coppola's The Conversation (1974) and Sidney Lumet's Dog Day Afternoon (1975). In 1977, Cazale was diagnosed with lung cancer, but he chose to complete his role in The Deer Hunter (1978). He died shortly after, in New York City on March 13, 1978.
John Brown was an American college football player and film actor billed as John Mack Brown at the height of his screen career. He acted and starred mainly in Western films.
Prince of the City is a 1981 American epic neo-noir crime drama film directed by Sidney Lumet. It is based on the life of Robert Leuci, called ‘Daniel Ciello’ in the film, an officer of the New York Police Department who chooses, for idealistic reasons, to expose corruption in the force. The screenplay, written by Lumet and Jay Presson Allen, is based on a 1978 non-fiction book, by former NYPD Deputy Commissioner Robert Daley.
Paul Alan Partain was an American actor, perhaps best known for his role in the original The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) as the wheelchair-user Franklin Hardesty.
Walk the Line is a 2005 American biographical drama film directed by James Mangold. The screenplay, written by Mangold and Gill Dennis, is based on two autobiographies by the American singer-songwriter Johnny Cash: Man in Black: His Own Story in His Own Words (1975) and Cash: The Autobiography (1997). The film follows Cash's early life, his romance with the singer June Carter, his ascent in the country music scene, and his drug addiction. It stars Joaquin Phoenix as Cash, Reese Witherspoon as Carter, Ginnifer Goodwin as Cash's first wife Vivian Liberto, and Robert Patrick as Cash's father.
Murder on the Orient Express is a 1974 British mystery film directed by Sidney Lumet, produced by John Brabourne and Richard Goodwin, and based on the 1934 novel of the same name by Agatha Christie.
Equus is a 1977 psychological drama film directed by Sidney Lumet and written by Peter Shaffer, based on his 1973 play. The film stars Richard Burton, Peter Firth, Colin Blakely, Joan Plowright, Eileen Atkins, and Jenny Agutter. The story concerns a psychiatrist treating a teenager who has blinded horses in a stable, attempting to find the root of his horse worship.
Jake Paltrow is an American film director, screenwriter and actor. Coming from a family of actors, he is the younger brother of Gwyneth Paltrow and the son of Bruce Paltrow and Blythe Danner.
Long Day's Journey into Night is a 1962 American drama film directed by Sidney Lumet, adapted from Eugene O'Neill's Pulitzer-winning play of the same name. It stars Katharine Hepburn, Ralph Richardson, Jason Robards, and Dean Stockwell. The story deals with themes of addiction and the resulting dysfunction of the nuclear family, and is drawn from O'Neill's own experiences. It was shot at Chelsea Studios in New York, with exteriors filmed on City Island.
That Kind of Woman is a 1959 American drama film directed by Sidney Lumet, who was nominated for the Golden Bear at the 9th Berlin International Film Festival. It stars Sophia Loren and Tab Hunter. The screenplay by Walter Bernstein, based on a short story by Robert Lowry, is highly reminiscent of the 1938 film The Shopworn Angel.
Stephen Jay Friedman was an American film producer known for The Last Picture Show (1971) and The Big Easy (1986). In 1980, he formed Kings Road Entertainment—named after the West Hollywood street where he lived—making him one of the first independent film producers to raise substantial film funding through a publicly traded company.
Lee Richardson was an American character actor who frequently appeared in Sidney Lumet's films.
Leaving Cheyenne is the second novel written by author Larry McMurtry. It was published in 1963. The novel portrays the lives of people living in Texas from about 1920 to about 1965.