| |
 |
|
|
Movies Forum Index » Movie Reviews Forum » Retrospective: The Beat Generation (1959)...
Page 1 of 1
|
| Author |
Message |
| Mark R. Leeper... |
Posted: Thu Sep 11, 2008 1:45 pm |
|
|
|
Guest
|
THE BEAT GENERATION (1959)
(a film review by Mark R. Leeper)
CAPSULE: This is obviously a decent script mangled
by a very bad production. There are two distinctly
different styles apparent in the writing. One style
is a tense police thriller about a serial rapist.
The other is a Cloud-Cuckoo Land cartoon of beatniks.
What is good almost certainly comes from talented
writer Richard Matheson, but the film is more a study
of bad filmmaking than the decent thriller it might
have been. Rating: -1 (-4 to +4) or 3/10
Suppose one was to take a painting by a grand master and paint onto
it a mustache, glasses, cross-eyes, etc. The net effect would be
ludicrous. Stroke by stroke the observer would know which paint
strokes were from the master and which by the vandal. And in the
end you would be sorry that you could not just see the painting as
it was at first. That is the impression one gets from THE BEAT
GENERATION. This is a film supposedly co-authored by Richard
Matheson and Lewis Meltzer. Richard Matheson is a good writer of
suspense stories, though he is better known for his science
fiction, horror, and fantasy. He was a frequent contributor to the
original "Twilight Zone". He wrote many of the scripts for Roger
Corman's "Edgar Allan Poe" series. His novel I AM LEGEND has been
adapted three times to the screen. He wrote the scripts for
television's THE NIGHT STALKER and THE NIGHT STRANGLER. He wrote
the novel that was adapted into SOMEWHERE IN TIME. The list of his
film accomplishments goes on and on. And at base there is a good
crime thriller in THE BEAT GENERATION. But repeatedly getting in
the way is a plot super-imposed with the agenda of cartoonish
making fun of beatniks and occasionally adding a religious message.
From moment to moment there is never any question which author's
work we are seeing because the writing is either improving the
effect of the thriller or sabotaging it. Almost certainly Matheson
sold the script and then was helpless to protect it as it was
defaced and ruined by his co-author Meltzer and the filmmakers.
Just a few years later Matheson was more ready to insist he could
have his name taken off of film credits if he did not like the
film, and THE BEAT GENERATION may have been the film that convinced
him to do that.
Stan Hess (played by Ray Danton) leads a double life. He is the
lead poet whose jive verse is the coolest thing to the cadre of
local beatniks. (Example of his poetry: "The sky blooms radiation
gumdrops.") But he leads a double life. He is also an extremely
devious serial rapist. The police know the rapist as the "Aspirin
Kid." He preys on women he knows to be alone, pretends to know a
husband or friend and to be returning money to him to get into a
home. He then feigns a headache and asks for water to have with
his aspirins. When the woman returns he jumps her, beats, and
rapes her. Before he leaves he plants signs that he was sharing a
drink or a meal with the victim so the police think the victim knew
and is shielding her attacker. Investigating is police detective
Dave Cullorah (Steve Cochran). Cullorah unknowingly runs into Hess
and Hess is able to get Dave's address. When Cullorah's wife is
assaulted and then discovers she is pregnant, the game becomes
personal between Hess and Cullorah. The story continues at two
levels. The police story is one of some real dramatic tension,
especially when combined with what then would have been the
controversial issue of whether to abort. Then there are the coffee
house scenes that have no reality at all and area sort of
burlesque. In one sequence they cut back and forth between the two
realities as in a back room of the coffee house the rapist is
attacking Georgia (Mamie van Doran) while in the next room there is
a ridiculous caricature of beatnik dancing.
One can gage the feel of the film by some of the casting. Jackie
Coogan and Sid Melton play cops who work with Cullorah. They might
almost be okay. Bombshell Mamie van Doran is one of Hess's
intended victims who seems less than bothered by her peril.
Professional wrestler and occasional film comic relief actor Max
"Slapsie Maxie" Rosenbloom is completely miscast as the wrestling
beatnik. He seems to be here merely to have a dubious celebrity.
(A wrestling beatnik?) Jim Mitchum is along as someone who
supposed resembles Ray Danton's character. Jim Mitchum does not
look much like Ray Danton, but he does strongly bear a resemblance
to his father Robert. Louis Armstrong also performs throughout at
the coffeehouse and is actually given two or three lines of
ineffectual dialog. William Schallert plays an inspirational
priest who provides spiritual inspiration for Francee Cullorah.
How the usually prestigious MGM ever released this strange travesty
is something of a mystery.
Full of hokey dialog and absolutely no feel of authenticity for the
"beat" movement, THE BEAT GENERATION gets a -1 on the -4 to +4
scale or 3/10.
Film Credits: <http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0052610/>
Mark R. Leeper
mleeper at (no spam) optonline.net
Copyright 2008 Mark R. Leeper |
|
|
| Back to top |
|
| |
|
Page 1 of 1
All times are GMT - 5 Hours
The time now is Fri Dec 05, 2008 3:30 am
|
|