Film Review
If there was ever a film that deserved the caption 'Any resemblance to
real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental' that film is
surely
Night and Day, a
supposed biographical account of the wonderful life of Cole
Porter. A complete fabrication from start to finish, the film
makes a too obvious attempt to re-invent Porter's life as the classic
rags to riches story, with all the less wholesome aspects of the truth
(Porter's crippling bouts of depression and frequent homosexual love
affairs) conveniently airbrushed out of the picture. The film has
nothing to say about the real Cole Porter and is much more a
celebration of his work than a serious attempt at a biopic Whilst
the songs are certainly enjoyable to listen to (even in their heavily
sanitised form) the film is let down by the fact that it is trite,
shallow and painfully contrived.
Of course, Cary Grant was the man who was best suited to play Cole
Porter. Who better to portray the composer than a man who
differed from him in just about
every
respect? Grant was presumably how Cole Porter would liked to have
seen himself, or, more precisely, how he would have preferred the world
to have seen him. Yet Porter's character is so ill-defined in the
film that Grant's presence hardly seems to register. He could
conceivably have been replaced by the Invisible Man (with or without
bandages) and the chance is that no one would have noticed the
substitution. Without exception, all of the characters in the
film are no more than uninteresting, thinly sketched archetypes,
totally eclipsed by Porter's music and the over-garish staging of the
show-stoppers from his hit shows.
Perhaps the most bizarre thing about the film was the casting of Monty
Woolley, one of Porter's real-life lovers, as himself. Of course
there is no hint of impropriety between Woolley and Porter in the film,
and the fact that neither men is seen to age by so much as a day in the
course of the thirty or so years spanned by the film is no less
credible. By showing a flagrant disregard for the truth and
instead employing lazy clichés of the worst kind,
Night and Day is almost the perfect
example of how
not to make a
biopic. The only thing that saves it is the sheer genius of
Porter himself, which is well-represented by the twenty songs of his
that pad out the film and make it bearable viewing. There's more
pleasure to be had, however, and far less effort involved, in just
putting a CD of Porter's best tunes onto your music system. Quite
what purpose the film serves (other than to allow reviewers to use
up their daily quota of sarcasm) is beyond me.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Michael Curtiz film:
White Christmas (1954)
Film Synopsis
Once upon a time there was a handsome young man named Cole Porter who
threw up the prospect of a brilliant law career so that he could do
what he most wanted to do, which was to become a hugely successful
songwriter. Alas, his first Broadway show was a total flop but
even when he was fighting bravely in the trenches during World War I he
still couldn't get out of the habit of writing songs.
Convalescing from a war wound, he is nursed by a former girlfriend
Linda Lee who is absolutely mad about him and encourages him to go on
composing, so certain is she that one day he will be a fine
composer. On his return to America, Cole struggles to sell his
songs to a public which is too ignorant to appreciate his worth, and
then one day during his lunchbreak he makes up his mind to stage
another musical, with the help of his old university friend (that's all
he is, a friend), the prematurely aged Monty Woolley. The show is
a success and in no time at all Cole Porter is one of the hottest names
in show business, lauded by everyone for such songs as Night and Day,
which he wrote for the woman he loves. They say that
lightning never strikes twice in the same spot, but not so for Mr
Porter. He has another serendipitous encounter with Linda Lee
and, being a hot red-blooded heterosexual male he wastes no time making
her his wife. But, alas, Cole's workaholic disposition (and
nothing else) soon puts an intolerable strain on their marriage and in
the end Linda Lee is forced to leave her husband, as success just keeps
on coming his way. But then disaster! Cole falls off his
horse (it was the horse's fault) and he loses the use of both of his
legs. But Cole is not one to be beaten by adversity and he
subjects himself to a long series of operations that will ultimately
allow him to walk again. Linda Lee is finally reunited with Cole
and they all lived happily ever after. And that's the honest
truth...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.