The Honey Pot

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The Honey Pot
HONEYPOT-00AA1-.jpeg
Directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Screenplay byJoseph L. Mankiewicz
Based onMr. Fox of Venice
by Frederick Knott
The Evil of the Day
by Thomas Sterling
Volpone
by Ben Jonson
Produced by Charles K. Feldman
Starring
Cinematography Gianni di Venanzo
Pasqualino De Santis (uncredited)
Edited by David Bretherton
Music by John Addison
Production
company
Famous Artists Productions
Distributed by United Artists
Release dates
  • March 21, 1967 (1967-03-21)(UK)
  • May 22, 1967 (1967-05-22)(U.S.)
Running time
150 minutes (UK)
132 minutes (US)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The Honey Pot, also known as The Honeypot, is a 1967 American crime comedy-drama film written and directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz. It stars Rex Harrison, Susan Hayward, Cliff Robertson, Capucine, Edie Adams, and Maggie Smith. The film was based on the play Mr. Fox of Venice by Frederick Knott, the novel The Evil of the Day by Thomas Sterling, and loosely on the 1606 play Volpone by Ben Jonson.

Contents

Plot

Susan Hayward as Mrs. Sheridan Susan Hayward in The Honey Pot.jpg
Susan Hayward as Mrs. Sheridan

The film is set in Venice as a contemporary tale.

Struggling actor William McFly (Cliff Robertson) is hired by wealthy Cecil Fox (Rex Harrison) to play his personal secretary for a practical joke. Pretending to be on his deathbed, Fox invites three former lovers to his Venetian palazzo for a final visit: penniless Princess Dominique (Capucine), fading movie star Merle McGill (Edie Adams), and Texas millionairess Mrs. Lone Star Crockett Sheridan (Susan Hayward). Accompanying Mrs. Sheridan is her nurse, Sarah Watkins (Maggie Smith). By chance, each of the women brings Fox a timepiece as a present.

The three women warily size each other up. Mrs. Sheridan boldly announces that the others might as well go home, as she is Fox's common-law wife, and they can expect to inherit nothing. However, when Sarah returns from a late-night date with McFly, she finds her employer Sheridan dead of an overdose of sleeping pills, an apparent suicide. Police Inspector Rizzi (Adolfo Celi) investigates.

Sarah knows that the pills Mrs. Sheridan had been taking are harmless fakes. McFly has already revealed to Sarah that Fox is perpetrating a charade, and that the final joke is to be the reading of the will, empowering McFly to choose the heir. She therefore suspects him not only of being the murderer, but also plotting to kill Fox. When she confronts McFly, he locks her in her room, telling her it is for her own safety. She manages to escape via a dumbwaiter and warns Fox. However, his displeased reaction puzzles her. He sends her back to her room.

The next morning, Fox is found dead. McFly reveals that Fox was the killer of Sarah's employer. He was broke and wanted Mrs. Sheridan's fortune. Once McFly had figured it out (and more importantly, told Sarah), Fox realized it was all up and committed suicide. Fox's spirit continues in the film as a voice over.

Sarah asks McFly to write her name down in the will as the heir of Fox's worthless estate as a souvenir, with Rizzi signing as a witness. After McFly complies, an amused Rizzi compliments him on his "generosity"—while Fox may have been deeply in debt, Mrs. Sheridan's estate is so vast, Sarah will still emerge an extremely wealthy woman. She informs McFly that she will marry him and hand over the money once he resumes his law studies and becomes a lawyer.

Cast

Anne Bancroft originally was offered the role of Merle McGill, but she chose instead to star in Michael Cacoyannis' Broadway staging of John Whiting's The Devils . [1]

Production

It was originally called The Tale of the Fox. [2] of Anyone for Venice?. [3] [4]

Production began in September 1965 and was edited in 1966. Cinematographer Gianni Di Venanzo died during production and was replaced with Pasqualino De Santis [5] who refused to take credit.

The film was shot on location in Venice and in the Cinecittà studios in Rome. In Venice, Palazzo Soranzo Van Axel was featured in the movie. [6]

Reception

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 57% based on reviews from 7 critics.

Variety called The Honey Pot "a rich confection in every department" praising both cast and crew, but it found the film's pace too slow and wondered whether "its hark-back to the days when the turn of phrase and the tongue-in-cheek were a staple" would weaken its appeal for contemporary audiences who preferred "Bondian brashness" to Mankiewicz's "innuendo." [7] Boxoffice also criticized the film's length, but welcomed Mankiewicz's witty style, calling The Honey Pot "one of the most sophisticated and stylish pictures to come along in several seasons...Welcome back, Mr. Mankiewicz!" [8] British film critic Graham Clarke gave the film a favorable review in the Kinematograph Weekly, writing: "It is so full of cunningly contrived intricacies, of cynical, witty and serious dialogue and of boldly presented renaissance flamboyance." [9]

Home media

The Honey Pot was released to DVD by MGM Home Video on January 15, 2011, via its MGM MOD (manufacture-on-demand) service available through Amazon.

See also

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References

  1. Smith, Richard Harland. "The Honey Pot (1967)". Turner Classic Movies . Retrieved June 8, 2014.
  2. Capucine Cast in 'Tale of the Fox' Martin, Betty. Los Angeles Times 15 May 1965: 23.
  3. https://www.filmscoremonthly.com/notes/honey_pot.html
  4. https://catalog.afi.com/Catalog/moviedetails/23808
  5. p. 233 Moliterno, Gino Encyclopedia of Contemporary Italian Culture Taylor & Francis, 2000
  6. Pigott, Michael (2013). World Film Locations: Venice. Intellect Books. p. 36. ISBN   978-1-84150-720-0 . Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  7. Hawk (March 22, 1967). "Film reviews: The Honey Pot". Variety. No. 246. p. 6. Retrieved September 26, 2022.
  8. "Feature Reviews: The Honey Pot". Vol. 91, no. 6. May 29, 1967. pp. a11. Retrieved September 26, 2022.
  9. Clarke, Graham (March 25, 1967). "Reviews: The Honey Pot". Kine Weekly. Vol. 597, no. 3102. p. 10. Retrieved September 26, 2022.