Ash Wednesday is a startlingly downbeat, low-key drama about a woman in her early-sixties whose marriage is at an impasse. Thinking, perhaps misguidedly, that the trouble is the fact that she's dared to age and become saggy and wrinkled, she checks herself into a Swiss clinic for a full-on overhaul, without even telling her husband!
During the opening credits, we see a series of retouched photos tracing the path of the couple in question, Elizabeth Taylor and Henry Fonda. In real life, Fonda was twenty-seven years older than Taylor, but for the purposes of the story, they are closer together in age so that when she's done with her top-to-toe makeover, she can look much younger.
Some of the photos, like this one, are quite awkward. It also had to be strange for the actors to see real moments from their public life (including weddings!) be augmented this way in order to fabricate the history of their characters.
The movie proper begins with one of the slowest pans across a bedroom imaginable, finally resting on the back of our leading lady.
We see that she is fretful and nervous and, rather than staying situated in her room, she is preparing to leave! She knocks over some cosmetics and toiletries into the sink and then catches a glimpse of her own hand. She's clearly distraught over the condition of it.
Next we find her creeping downstairs, past the reception desk and out the door of the place. She doesn't want to be discovered ditching her stay at the facility.
However, she runs smack into a doctor outside, who is dismayed that she has opted to depart the center before her procedures can be carried out. Now, by this time, we've had enough toying around. We are ready to see our star in all her decayed, hideous glory!
Finally, the camera turns it lens on Taylor's face and we see why she's come to the surgical institute in the first place. She is still determined to leave until the doctor assures her that everything will be just like it was before she arrived. That, she cannot bear! Just so there's no mistake, there's a close-up of her creased, saggy face.
This entire next section is both eerie and clinical in its approach. Taylor is given the once over, has her picture taken with a stark flash and a record is made of her eroding face and figure.
I just happen to be reading a book by Virginia Graham in which she writes of the ghastly pictures they take of a person prior to cosmetic surgery (probably to ensure that you look you're very worst and, thus, will be pleased afterwards at the dramatic changes!)
The last time La Liz donned age makeup like this (Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, 1966), it brought her an Oscar. There would be no such repeat of that this time out.
As the doctor uses a pencil to mark all the spots he intends to cut out, one can't be blamed for thinking of Taylor's famous Cleopatra (1963) makeup, which she designed and applied herself! It's only one of several instances in which other, often better, Taylor roles are brought to mind.
Did you think I was kidding?? |
I don't know that Taylor had undergone much, if any, cosmetic surgery by this point in her life, but she unques- tionably knew all about the rigors of surgery in general! She was operated on more times than most people can ever imagine in their worst nightmares thanks to chronic back issues and other ailments.
When it's all said and done, she is badly bruised and bandaged up like nobody's business.
As she continues to recover, she appears to be giving Clause Rains as The Invisible Man (1933) a run for his money! Incidentally, Taylor undergoes procedures on her hands, but I could swear that the hands are something that generally cannot be fixed much (people always say, "The hands are a dead giveaway of a woman's age.") But what do I know...?
Taylor makes a friend while there at the clinic in the form of Keith Baxter, who is a world renowned fashion photographer, one who likes to look young as he keeps his finger on the pulse of the clothing world. Again, I know nothing about plastic/ cosmetic surgery, but sometimes these people looked more like they'd experienced massive head wounds instead of a nip and a tuck along the hairline!
"How's your head?" "Haven't had any complaints so far..." |
The horror is far from over, however. Now the doctor comes at her with a pointy pair of tweezers, and he's not interested in shaping up her browline.
In another wince-inducing sequence, he picks away at the end of her stitches and proceeds to pull them out of her still sensitive eyelids! All through this, the depleted, weary Taylor is convincing in her understated agony.
She and her buddy spend their days getting to know one another better. It's not a romantic entangle- ment as he's gay as the day is long. They just hit it off during their shared recovery. Her sunglasses here are a scream, aren't they? No clue why his eyework doesn't require any such protection.
Checking in with Taylor later, he finds her quite distraught because she has been completely unable to get her husband on the phone. He implores her not to cry as it will not be good for her wounded face. It may be thanks to the shoddy quality of the video I watched, but I found it tremendously difficult to see any difference between Baxter before and after his procedures!
Also on hand at the clinic are a fat cat business- man with a bimbo in tow. He smokes cigars endlessly despite being warned not to. Then there is a famous German actress (meant to be similar to Marlene Dietrich?) played by Monique Van Vooren. The foursome plays bridge to pass the long hours during their recovery.
Because Taylor isn't feeling as good as she's starting to look, the doctor begins "cell therapy" on her, in which she's injected in the behind with a serum that will supposedly help her organ function and get her to feel younger instead of only looking younger.
Finally, we get to see Taylor free of any bandages, bruises or gory makeup. Baxter is gobsmacked by the rejuvenated lady before him, and she is pretty, but what's strange is that she looks merely young-ish, not truly the way someone who's had real surgery would look. (For example, her eyes still have gently hooded lids... not the hollowed out ones that people pay for!)
Zoom-bleaching was apparently still a thing of the future... |
Off she goes into the tundra-like expanses that lead to Cortina. She is thrilled to be flirted with by two young Italian men in a sports car, though they soon run off the road and need her help to get to the resort.
Even though he's just proven that he can't be trusted behind a wheel, the cutest one of the two convinces Taylor to scoot over and let him drive her car to the hotel. Both of them compliment her beauty as they peel along the icy road to the rather remote resort.
Once there, she is beaming as she heads to the registration desk and inquires about her room. The clerk tells her that he has no such reservation and, hilariously, she never considers mentioning that Baxter reserved her suite and that it might be under his name. Instead she curtly asks to see the manager in a nanosecond.
While in the lobby, she is admiring herself in the reflection of a door when a handsome gentleman catches her eye. Her "window-shopping" complete, she proceeds to her room before heading out to get a new wardrobe and hairstyle.
She's having her hair rolled and set by a fruity hairstylist and when he yanks a bit too hard on the pins of her curlers and she reacts a bit, he mentions that he will be more careful with her tender little scars! This brings about a classic bitch-face expression from our star! LOL
Back in the room, though, she can't help marveling at herself in the mirror, stroking her face and cackling with glee at the way she has turned back the clock.
Nevertheless, without her husband there (who is set to arrive at the weekend), it's a lonely experience for Taylor, with meals eaten alone in the grand dining hall.
She cannot help noticing that the young man (Helmut Berger) who she'd earlier spotted in the lobby has just had a spat with the woman he's there with. She has slapped his face and stormed out in a huff.
Not one to let moss grow on anything, particularly female, Berger shoots Taylor a glance. (For whatever reason, this sort of shot of Berger - seated and facing left - is a common one of him in the film.)
She can't help but shoot him a grin of her own, flattered that such a young, goodlooking man would notice her out of the huge dining hall. Then again, look at her!
Taylor soon gets a big let-down when she finally reaches her wayward, absentee husband Fonda (who has yet to be seen in the film apart from the opening credits) and he informs her that he has to go to Washington and won't be able to join her as soon as she'd hoped.
Now the loneliness is really setting in. She has little to do but browse shops, sip cocoa and basically sit alone while all around her other people are living loud. When she goes to ride the ski tram, hordes of people come off it at once, but she's practically alone on board.
All of this is punctuated by a Maurice Jarre score that is memorable only for the fact that he keeps playing the same musical phrase over and over and over until you want to fly to the clinic and have Taylor's doctor sew your ears shut!
Uh-oh, she's beginning to turn to food in order to assuage her loneliness. She chooses two pastries from the dessert tray in a cafe! (This is a terrible harbinger of things to come in real life as it would only be a couple of years until Ms. T. allowed herself to fall completely apart, weight-wise, causing her to be the butt of countless jokes.)
The problems continue to mount when she has a phone conver- sation with her daughter, who was going to come and join her, but has now backed out... This isn't fun anymore.
In an effort to lift her spirits, she gussies up in her best (Edith Head) gown and heads downstairs to the elegant dining hall. Once again, she catches the eye of young Berger.
I've always had to work backwards to appreciate Berger. He was on Dynasty when I was a kid and I thought he was absolutely dreadful and not at all attractive. But looking back at his earlier work, I see him as more handsome and a better actor. He is, perhaps, at his all-time most handsome in this movie. His sometimes hard, angular features are softened.
Anyway, he stops at Liz's table and asks if he can sit down, which she allows. As you might expect, he soon begins to suggest more than just table conver- sation. He wants to know her room number.
Wholly unused to just crass and open sexual finagling, Taylor tells him the number curtly, then gets up and storms out (but stops short of slapping him.)
The next day, we see Baxter shooting a layout in which a gyrating, silver bikini-clad model is positioned in front of a church so that exiting parishoners can be startled as they come down the stairs and become background atmosphere for the photo!
It so happens that Taylor is one of them (!), having gone to church for the first time in eons in order to try to find some level of serenity amid her various personal issues.
Baxter takes her to a party where he knows practically everyone. He revels in gossiping about this one and that one, including a former madam whose son is in attendance as well. He's a former Olympic-level athlete who is now more of a wayward playboy.
Taylor is stunned to see that it is Berger that is being talked about! Once again, he is photo- graphed at this particular angle.
"I call this my Joanne Linville look..." |
The next day, Taylor gets a message that her daughter has changed her mind and is in fact headed to see her mother after all. Taylor is excited about it, but Baxter tells her she should not allow the girl to come to Cortina. She will only complicate things and throw off the dynamic (which hasn't been all that dynamic, to be honest!)
Upon her arrival at the airport, the daughter (Margaret Blye) cannot believe her eyes. She barely recognizes the vision before her as her tired, overweight, wrinkled mother.
In fact, the two could pass for sisters. (Blye was about a decade younger than Taylor, which fit the storyline if Taylor's character was actually about twenty years beyond her own age.) They are rather blatantly coiffed and dressed similarly in order to drive the point home.
It becomes clear as they're having lunch that Blye has spoken to her father and he may not bother showing up at Cortina at all! He's in love with a younger woman (younger even than Blye) and wants a divorce.
Taylor is bereft at the thought. She did all of this just for him and wants her marriage to continue. Blye remarks that she survived her own divorce, so Taylor can as well, to which Taylor rightfully responds that Blye's marriage lasted two years, not a lifetime.
Taylor lets it be known that a man at the resort is interested in her and Blye tells her that she should go for it. In fact, she's not going to continue on to Cortina herself. She's going to send her mother back alone to spread her
Taylor is red hot and ready to go now. She also, in conflict with doctor's orders, is swilling alcohol, but a gal needs something to fortify herself when she's flirting with the idea of bedding down a local stud.
They lock eyes and it's very clear that the time has come for Berger and Taylor to form the two-headed monster up in her suite...
In the aftermath of their lovemaking, Berger is looking on affection- ately at his conquest. We think... hopefully he isn't looking behind the ears for any visible scars??
Taylor confesses to him that he's the first lover she's had in a long, long time. He asks how long it's been since she made love and the answer is so private/humiliating that she won't say it aloud, even though it's just the two of them in the room. Afraid even the viewing audience might find out, she whispers it to him!
He then promises to keep her locked up in the room for the next couple of days making love as much as possible! You know, Berger was one of the pants-droppingest stars of the 1970s and yet we get virtually nothing here. For an R-rated movie, you'd think they could toss in a bare butt shot or something... Anyway, despite all the fun she's had romping with Berger, she's still got it bad for her husband. And he's about to arrive!
She's quite nervous at the train station where she greets Fonda (who only appears in the last 20 minutes of the movie. That had to piss off any fans who went to see the film specifically for the prominently-billed actor.)
Surprisingly, she chooses a fairly unbecoming, shapeless pantsuit for the introductory ensemble in which to greet her estranged hubby. I mean, let's see some curves or cleavage!
He's nonetheless stunned by her new visage, exclaiming, "My God, my God..." as she presses herself to him.
She's so, so in love with him, yet he's rather detached in his manner towards her. It makes you wonder what sort of man he is that could be clinging to some young chippie when he has Elizabeth Effing Taylor throwing herself at his feet...
Later, she watches him sleep, all the while grappling the penile knob of the footboard on her bed. He has a derisive comment or two for her about vanity and when he suggests getting some surgery himself she is aghast! (Actually, it looked to me like Mr. Fonda had had a chin lift by this point.)
At dinner, he picks up a cigar and Taylor offers to light it, but he'll have none of that. He likes to do it his own way...
Liz, sadly I think this match is the only thing you'll be blowing tonight... |
She does the impossible by extracting a smile from him later that evening at a Mardi Gras masked ball. While her clothing was all done by Edith Head for this movie, this particular costume of Taylor's was made by (and credited to) Valentino. She runs into Berger at the gala event and is happy as a clam, or so it seems. (That really is Helmut Berger and Elizabeth Taylor below, not Wayland Flowers and Madame. LOL!)
She's still breaking the rules by drinking. (Surpris- ingly, she never smokes in the film, something else the doctor forbad her to do after the procedures.) Fonda has been observed chatting up a pretty girl, but he doesn't fail to point out to Taylor that she was busy herself with a nice looking young man.
When she asks him if he'd believe her if she told him she'd been to bed with that man, he can only laugh in disbelief and emphatically answer "no!" Hmmm. Well, too bad for you, Henry.
Trying to cool her off - and maybe sober her up - Fonda suggests walking back to the hotel along the deserted streets. Taylor demonstrates a profound lack of musicality as she attempts to sing "She'll Be Comin' Round the Mountain" in about four keys while trying to goad the hesitant Fonda into joining her.
Back at their room, Fonda gets a bit of disap- pointing news on the telephone and the couple proceed to try to hash out their marital issues. Here, we are treated to still more unconsciously familiar moments from Taylor's long life as a movie goddess.
"Tell mama... Tell mama all." |
"I feel all the time like a cat on a hot tin roof!" |
"Appuhamy... APPUHAMY!!!" |
One way that pep was denied is that there was evidently a scene in the hotel pool area in which Berger was seen wearing a skimpy Speedo and this sequence was CUT from the final release! WTF?! Perhaps Taylor was in a swimsuit in this scene and didn't seem up to snuff? No clue. But you don't trim scenes that have Speedos in them. That's a cardinal movie-making rule. LOL
At the time of filming, Taylor's decade-long (first) marriage to Richard Burton was fraying and about to end. He loathed the movie and the fact that she was making it (according to him in order to help remind everyone that she was still a famous movie star.) Her movie career had in fact hit a serious lull despite two Oscars to her credit and this one didn't help matters. Subsequent disasters like The Driver's Seat (1974) and The Blue Bird (1976) didn't stem the decline either, though she still managed occasional successes, sometimes on TV.
An ill-advised marriage to Senator John Warner sent her careening into a period of weight gain and alcohol abuse that had her looking so bad she was damned near unrecognizable as the movie queen who'd held the world in its grasp only a few years before. But, in true ET fashion, she beat her demons long enough to reemerge as a whole new persona; trim, tan and visually stunning.
By the 1980s, she had found a new calling that was far greater than the movies. She became a steadfast advocate for AIDS patients and worked tirelessly to draw attention to the crisis and raise funds for its cure. Always plagued by ill-health, she was proclaimed dead on more than one occasion only to survive, but in 2011 she drew her last breath at age seventy-nine due to heart failure.
Austrian-born Berger was the protegee and companion for a dozen years to famed Italian director Luchino Visconti. Berger worked to great effect in the directors movies such as The Damned (1969), Ludwig (1973) and Conversation Piece (1974), though he also worked for Vittorio De Sica in The Garden of the Finzi-Continis (1970.) In 1976, both he and Taylor would appear in the TV-movie Victory at Entebbe. Though he has long since passed his hey-day as an "It Boy" of the jet-set and decadent movies, he has nonetheless continued working and is still acting now at age seventy-five.
Welsh Baxter was a well-regarded Broadway actor who occasionally worked in films and on TV. He'd initially been set to play Octavian in Taylor's Cleopatra (1963) and even filmed some scenes, but her illnesses shut the project down to the extent that he had to bow out when it reconvened. Roddy MacDowall portrayed the part in the finished film. He also was noted for his role as Prince Hal in Orson Welles' Chimes at Midnight (1965), a version of Falstaff. Still with us today at age eighty-six, he retired sometime prior to 2000.
Fonda, a stage-trained actor who had been a cinema leading man since 1935 was by now doing more cameo roles than starring ones. He'd just come off a one-season sitcom called The Smith Family and a nice TV-movie The Red Pony (1973) with Maureen O'Hara, which earned him an Emmy nomination (though Laurence Olivier won for Long Day's Journey Into Night.) His career sputtered along with projects of highly varying quality until his daughter Jane Fonda arranged On Golden Pond (1981) for him. The result was a Best Actor Oscar, which he (barely) lived to receive at home. He died at seventy-seven of cardiorespiratory arrest.
Blye had toiled on TV as a guest in various series until Hombre (1967) led to more film roles such as Waterhole #3 (1968) and The Italian Job (1969.) Her time as a popular ingenue was brief, though she continued to work in movies like Little Darlings (1980) and The Entity (1982) along with lesser-known fare after that up through 2010. She was claimed by cancer in 2016 at age seventy-six. (Her age is in dispute with some sources giving an earlier birth date than others.)
Belgian-born Van Vooren had an eclectic performing career to say the least. She was the title villain in Lex Barker's Tarzan and the She-Devil (1953), but then mostly had tiny roles in movies like Ten Thousand Bedrooms (1957) and Gigi (1958.) She also acted on Broadway and was a game show panelist. After appearing in Pier Paolo Pasolini's The Decameron (1971), she lolled in bed with Joe Dallesandro in Andy Warhol's Flesh for Frankenstein (1973) and has only appeared on screen twice briefly since! She is ninety-two today.
As I mentioned earlier, it had to be odd for the stars to see moments from their own real lives changed into fake moments for the opening credits of this movie. This shot of Fonda and Taylor (in which her eyes have been aged!) is actually from an event Taylor attended with Richard Burton and his Bluebeard (1972) costar Raquel Welch in Monaco!
I leave you with this typically off-beat piece of Japanese promotional art which does prepare the viewer for lots of looks at the visage of Miss Elizabeth Taylor!
Okay, I lied. One more shot of Helmut in his trunks. Take care and I'll be back asap with more movie and TV fun. (It may be a little longer than usual as I am about to spend several days filming a small role in a local independent film!)
18 comments:
First of all, congrats on the film role!
This is one of those movies I've wanted to see all the way through for years, having caught a chunk of it on TV and having read reviews.
Great job (as usual) of breaking down the film, and thanks for the work involved with the many frame caps and stills you always do.
Just a couple of added notes: Helmut Berger had ironically played the title role in 1970's "Il dio chiamato Dorian/Dorian Gray", a modern-day Eurotrash version of Wilde's classic novella.
I remember Liz's stint as Mrs. John Warner quite well. At one point, he was briefly seeking the governor's seat and they moved into an apartment a couple of blocks down the street from me. She had originally inquired about my building, but wanted to knock out a wall to suit her and they said no.
I never managed to spot her on the street, but I did run across the storyboard for a rejected campaign commercial ("Hello, I'm Mrs. John Warner.") with an added note to the sketch artist: "Make Liz look less fat!" A second note was added in response: "ARE YOU KIDDING?!?"
I've actually seen this movie! It was indeed gruesome. I felt it was very slow going, but I sat through the whole thing. I loved the whole ugly duckling/before and after thing. I remember thinking it made no sense that Henry Fonda was so immune to her and that he was pretty wooden in it.
It also brings to mind when Jeanne Cooper was appearing on The Young and the Restless and her character (Katherine Chancellor) underwent a face lift. They showed footage of Coopers actual facelift being performed. It scarred me for life.
Thanks for the post Poseidon!
Let's just say I'm a sucker for any movie with a facial bandage removal scene! The drama! The anticipation! The let down because they just look like you expected them to!
At one point, as you were describing Liz's travails I felt like I was reading the plot to a Ruth Chatterton movie! Could this have been a re-make of an old movie?
I saw part of this movie when I tuned in to it years ago on TV. Could that have been when American Movie Classics actually showed classic movies? (Memories of "Remember When") Anyway, I tuned in right when Liz was preparing to meet up with Fonda again and once they did it seemed like there was such a disconnect between them I stopped watching the movie! What did she see in that old fogie? LOL
Liz looks great in this movie, even with her recovery scars. Those eyes override everything else! And the picture of her you posted of her from the 80's, she looked so good!
Keith Baxter is someone I would have paid an awful lot of attention to if I'd seen him in some of his roles. To me he would have played a much better Octavian than Mac Dowell because he looks so much more like Liz/Cleo and Roddy to my mind was too drama queen in the role.
@hsc I saw Helmut Berger's Dorian Grey Movie at the theater when it can out. I remember reading about how scandalous it was but it seemed kind of tame to me. At one point he was sitting in a sports car and gave eyes to a black dock worker and that was as scandaloso as I remember. It did intrigue me enough to find out about the Oscar Wilde story so that was good. And I remember seeing Ludwig but my memories are of the castle and how fabulous it is.
Also regarding Liz's campaign commercial and the story board comments, Laugh out loud funny!
@Poseidon3 your "How's my head?" caption, I immediately responded "Ask Helmut Berger."
When this movie came out in 1973 I was 20 years old and had I seen it I would have been completely mad to get myself a lynx zip front parka! Without a turban!
Also, what the heck does "Ash Wednesday" have to do with this movie? I mean, I went to Catholic school for 4 years but I just can't make the connection.
Thank you for another trippy movie, Posiedon3!
Brian
During the brief but glamorous Warner/Taylor era, a rather naive young friend of ours was thrilled - had been picked up, er, MET a rather attractive older man who drove a flashy new Jaguar and claimed to not only know the Warners, but was invited to a do at their Middleburg estate! And he was taking Joey as his guest! He took Joey shopping for a complete new wardrobe (including RIDING BOOTS, if you can believe it). The dream was shattered one day when Joey looked out the window to see the Jaguar being towed away. Then the awful truth - his gentleman friend was actually a towel boy at a local bathhouse. I swear, this is a true story.
Poseidon--
You beat me to the punch on this one! 'Ash Wednesday' has been on my to do list for awhile.
Appreciate your even-handed review on what is a trifle of a film. But I've never understood reviews then and now that totally trash this glorified Lifetime movie. It's watchable, Elizabeth Taylor looking the best she ever looked in 'the '70s, with the star of stars giving a sympathetic, restrained performance after years of playing blowsy bitches. The scenery and music was lovely. So was Helmut Berger! And great Edith Head costumes for ET!
Thought Henry Fonda as the pill of an aging husband was showing us a bit of his real self!
And thought it was amusing that Burton was so put off by ET choosing Ash Wednesday... what was HE doing at the time? Bluebeard? The Klansmen? Villain? Etc. Etc.
If they can put Boom! on DVD they can put Ash Wednesday, a document of ET's latter day beauty, as well!
Cheers!
Rick
Thanks to you for resurrecting another obscure film, once again offering your insightful and funny narrative. I remember seeing Ash Wednesday as a third drive-in feature on a Paramount triple bill that also included Serpico and Paper Moon. My favorite scene was the bedroom showdown with Henry Fonda. If I remember correctly, she fondled her breasts through her negligee, telling Fonda she had all the nipping and tucking done for him. Dominick Dunne, the crime novelist, was a producer on this film (his last). His autobiography detailed how the booze-fueled Burtons took command over the entire production, with their ever-present little yapping dogs crapping all over the hotel. My favorite Liz role from that year was another obscure film, Night Watch, based on a successful Broadway play starring Joan Hackett. I finally had a chance to download it from YouTube. Keep up the great website.
I think Dominick Dunne produced this and wrote about what a nightmare it was. Congrats on your movie role and thanks for great entertainment.
Love Ash Wednesday saw it at an AMC I was working in in 1973. Ive been trying to get a decent copy of it,. I have the VHS from Paramount and the image is soft and the colors runny. You screen caps are very near the quality of the official VHS. Ive ordered 2 different foreign DVDs but both were dubbed with no English version or subtitles. I have a lead on a German Version that might have English audio.
Poseidon you're a riot. I saw this in a theater last year and missed so much. I took a friend for his birthday and we thought it was a good. I hated most of her clothing with a few exceptions. The red gown was beautiful. She looks great in most of this film. Agreed that it's grim, she's basically delusional and goes through all this physical torture for very little payoff. A must for Liz fans. Should be a double feature with "Eyes Without A Face" for the gross out surgical scenes.
hsc, Thank you so much! It's a LOT of work putting as many pictures into posts as I do, but as they say, a picture is worth a thousand words. But then I still add in a few thousand words as well! LOLOL Patient is the reader of nearly all the posts at Poseidon's Underworld....! I meant to mention Berger's role as "Dorian Gray!" Thanks for bringing that up. That is an AWESOME story about the campaign advertisement storyboard...!
A, I'm a sucker for almost any makeover story whether it be people or houses or people as big as houses! LOL The ne plus ultra of all that was "The Swan," a hideously shallow plastic surgery-beauty pageant series that was on about 15 or more years ago. I also meant to mention Jeanne Cooper in this post, but - as you can see - it was long enough! Thanks!!
BrianB, please tell me that you've seen "The Promise" with Kathleen Quinlan. There is a tribute to it here on my site! And I really don't know what ANYONE saw in Hank Fonda. He must have had "hidden talents." I, too, was let down by "Dorian Gray" but I may still profile it sometime. And I also have no clue about the title....! LOL
Dan... oh my God. Crazy!!!!
Rick, it's about time I beat you to the punch on SOMETHING! Ha ha! You often pick movies that I have on my radar for tributes as well. I agree about Fonda. My stepfather hates Jane Fonda not only for the "Hanoi Jane" stuff, but also because she is always "trashing her father" -- well, I don't know that that's the terminology I would use, but one thing is clear. Two, TWO of his wives ended their life in suicide (granted, one was an ex), so I don't see that it was any treat being married to him or having him as a father, though perhaps by the time of Shirlee things were better. And, yes, Burton is disparaging of this while he's boozily making total garbage himself!! How about "Exorcist II: The Heretic?!" LOL
FilmFan1, I have written a tribute to "Nigh Watch" here as well! Hopefully, you got to read it if you like that one. I've always been a little stunned at how FILTHILY the Burtons lived, with the unremoved dog turds all over their homes, yachts, etc...! Ah, the glamorous life...
Thanks, Scott! Glad you liked this. I have all my moments in the can now except this Wednesday I have to go film a farewell scene at a local train station. :-)
Kevin, isn't it exasperating that a reasonably major film cannot be obtained in any sort of decent condition?!?! I went through this so many times. ("Eye of the Cat" is an example, but that finally came out on Blu-Ray so there is always hope.)
Gingerguy, I can't believe someone ran this in a theater! Was the quality of the print any good? It's damn near impossible to get a look at any versions that aren't dulled and blurry. I bet Liz looked great up on the screen! Thanks.
I saw this movie when it came out, with my Mom & Dad, at the Pantages Theater on Hollywood Blvd. That surely must have been the last time one of Liz's movies was showcased at such an opulent movie palace. The Pantages was then on its last legs (just like Liz's movie career,) as a movie theater, anyway. After being shuttered for a while it reopened as a legitimate theater for touring Broadway shows, which it still is today. As for the resurrection of Ash Wednesday (in a decent presentation,) I wouldn't hold my breath, but who knows? I just saw H. Berger's "Dorian Gray" in a beautiful restoration, streaming on an app called Kanopy. If that obscure flick could find new life after all these years, maybe there's still hope for "Ash Wednesday."
Hey Poseidon,
My criteria for writing about a film is if I can find a decent copy to watch, and it is ridiculous that movies with great stars that may interest fans are so hard to come by.
As for Ash Wednesday, I recall that ET was trying to get away from artsy movies where she played crazy women, to more mainstream (Night Watch and Ash Wednesday).
Also, Dominick Dunne enjoyed dining out on his Ash Wednesday stories about ET, but was a bit more reticent about the gory details of his own unravelling during this time: booze, drugs, and male hustlers. Plus, hubris that basically made him persona non grata in Hollywood.
Despite ET's film career winding down in the '70s without a hit comeback (The Bluebird and A Little Night Music), aside from the TV movies, Taylor always had something up her sleeve: Broadway, Betty Ford, AIDS activism, and her perfume line, where she made more $ than she ever did as an actress.
I'd love to watch Ash Wednesday on the big screen, just to look at ET at her '70s finest!
Cheers, Rick
@ Poseidon I haven't seen The Promise but I did read your synopsis and I have to say I howled when I scrolled down to the screen capture of Ms. Quinlan in her post-op bandages because she looked just like the Abominable in Rudolf the Red Nosed Reindeer! Perhaps after Herbie the Dentist Elf did his work on him! But really talk about over kill in the recovery room!
I just today saw part of Dark Passage with Bogie and Bacall and when she removes his bandages it's so crazy because there is NO bloodstain on the bandages and NO scars healing on his face! As scary looking as his surgeon was in the movie I want HIM to work on me! I give it all a big pass because I love this movie!
BrianB
Well, Brian, at least that movie was based upon the premise that her whole face had to be rebuilt to the point that her own fiance wouldn't know her upon sight. LOL Considering "Dark Passage" and its ilk, "Ash Wednesday" gets kudos for trying to strive for some true realism, I guess! Thanks.
We went to see this when it was first released, and indeed, the surgery scenes were so revolting that I declared (in full blush of youth) I would never go under the knife no matter how badly I aged. As for ET's appearance, she was beautiful in some of the later scenes of the movie, but nobody ever talks about how spectacular she looked nearly 15 years later in the TV movie There Must Be a Pony. She looked even better than in Ash Wednesday. Advancements in plastic surgery science? Who knows?
rigs-in-gear, I must agree. I didn't watch "There Must Be a Pony," but in all the ads, promos, clips, etc... she looked spectacular! I mean, after the late-'70s/early-'80s, who'd have thought she could ever come back like that?!
I saw this movie when it came out back in 1973. I was a teen and a complete Elizabeth Taylor fiend. Another ET movie I remember from that era was Night Watch with Laurence Harvey and Billie Whitelaw. BTW, I think one can see Ash Wednesday on YouTube
Glitter, I did a tribute to "Night Watch" here also that you might enjoy reading! Thanks.
https://neptsdepths.blogspot.com/2018/04/watch-out.html
Post a Comment