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:: Monday, December 01, 2003 ::

I tivo'd 1969's "Paint Your Wagon" recently. The movie is, along with "Hello Dolly", , released the same year, part of the reason why big budget musical comedies died at the end of the sixties. Audiences were not in the mood for big budget musicals at the end of the sixties, even though the best picture of 1968 was "Oliver". "Dolly" came at the wrong time, and put MGM out of business. "Wagon" made the mistake of casting leads who couldn't sing. "Paint Your Wagon" was the most expensive film of it's time, and nearly every critic at the time of it's release gave it the ol' "thumbs down". I believe it is an essential piece of work, however, and this isn't just because I like musicals. It seems everybody can single out Lee Marvin's rendition of "I was Born Under a Wandrin' Star" as one of those songs, like Leonard Nimoy's rendition of "Bilbo Baggins", that are soo bad they are classics, in a Dr. Demento sort of way. At the time, I don't know what the filmmakers were thinking, but in retrospect, seeing both Marvin (as prospector Ben Rumson) and a marvelous Clint Eastwood (as "Pardner") in their only co-starring effort together, was a real treat. The tivo copy, from a standard DirecTV feed on Turner Classic Movies, wasn't good enough to view on the HDTV, but showed up on the analog 60" screen very well.
The Broadway musical was very popular. Joshua Logan directed the movie. The songs were well known, in addition to "Wandrin' Star", there was "I talk to the Trees" and the excellent "They Call the Wind Maria." (To the producer's credit, Harve Presnell as Rotten Luck Willie sings the latter.) The plot concerns what happens when a gruff prospector, Marvin's Rumson, meets up with a homesteading farmer (Eastwood) whose brother dies in the film's opening covered wagon crash, as gold is found in the brother's grave. The pardners, along with other prospectors, found the town "No-Name City", which soon blossoms into a bustling boom town. Albeit with no women in sight. When a Mormon straggles into town with his two wives, the menfolk decide that one man having two wives in a this town is unfair, so the second wife (Elizabeth, played by Jean Seberg) is auctioned off. Although Rumson wins her hand, his pardner Pardner is granted an equal share, and Elizabeth sets up homesteading with them both. Later, the men kidnap a coach full of prostitutes bound for another boom town, and No Name City grows into a metropolis.
The actual town was constructed in Oregon, and this was way before miniatures and digital imaging, so everything is real. The sets are a delight, and the plot moves forward easily, even though the movie clocks in at over three hours. Musicals did pretty much die after the release of "Paint Your Wagon" but I still admire the cinematography, by William Fraker, and the byplay between Seberg, Eastwood, and Marvin is excellent.
I also recently tivo'd "How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying" from 1967, when the musical was still in full flower. The choreography is by Bob Fosse. Robert Morse is at his cutest. Michelle Lee is a delight. Although some of the songs from the Broadway musical were trimmed for the film, the music that is on film, including "It's Been a Long Day", "The Company Way", and "Old Ivy", are staged tremendously. My favorite number from the film is "A Secretary is Not a Toy."
:: Michael Nyiri 5:00 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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