Tuesday, November 24, 2020

Poseidon Quickies: Bathtub Hopper

Keeping the gears moving here at P.U. (I'll say!) with another brief post. This time, we look at a scene from the 1973 (though filmed in '71) revisionist western character study Kid Blue. The story concerns a young ne'er do well (Dennis Hopper) who winds up living in a town and attempting to go legit. He comes under the wing of a respectable couple (Warren Oates and Lee Purcell) who both grow fond of him.

Hopper (who was about 35 at the time of filming yet somehow retained a sort of baby face in the midst of copious drugs and alcohol!) takes on legitimate work in an attempt to go straight. He'd initially been involved in a robbery gone awry prior to arriving in town.

Oates is an upstanding citizen with a pretty young wife. Things ought to be hunky-dory with them, yet there seems to be a bit of a disconnect, principally in their marital relations. 

One night, Oates has Hopper over for a visit and is ecstatic to reveal a spanking new nickel-plated bathtub, costing $12.29 (not including freight!)

Then he begins quizzing Hopper on when the last time he had a bath. Determining that it's been about two weeks, Hopper senses that he may be about to partake in one whether he likes it or not. But Oates has an even better idea. Since the wonderful warm water is too good to "waste on just one person," he suggests that they "do like the old-time Greeks" did and take a bath together!

Hopper suggests that perhaps the Greeks had larger tubs than this one! Oates won't be put off, though... Purcell promises not to look as Hopper prepares for his warm (not to mention cozy!) bath.







Perhaps sensing something in the air, Hopper asks what the Greeks did "afterwards?" Oates explains that they sorta "laid around, drank wine... one thing or another."

Before that can truly sink in, Oates asks a bemused Purcell to wash his back some. He also indicates that Hopper will soon have his turn, which he swiftly declines, though - again - he's not going to get out of this that easily.

Just about then, Oates gets soap in his eyes and can't open them from the sting. (Lord knows it was probably lye soap back then!)

Purcell's motherly predilections soon seem more affectionate than expected.

Hopper, who is utterly unresponsive to Oates' thinly-veiled overtures (which are semi-subconscious on his part anyway), finds himself a skosh more intrigued by what Purcell has to offer.

Following bath time, the trio has no clue how to properly dispose of the water! Hopper slinks downstairs in his cowboy hat and a towel and scores an enema bag with tube, which seems to really delight Oates...! But really all Hopper intends to do is use the tube to siphon the water out the window. Both wear their towels in a Grecian toga fashion.

Perhaps two of the last actors imaginable one might find sharing a narrow 6' long bathtub together (they had nine wives between them in real life), this was a fun and intriguing sequence in an uneven film. Reportedly, Oates was creating concoctions with hallucinogenic mushrooms, Dexedrine and LSD after work while Hopper was in the middle of his own drug and alcohol scene at this time (fresh off a 9-day marriage to Michelle Phillips!) They both, however, deliver thoughtful, coherent performances nonetheless.

4 comments:

  1. What a find. I bet you perked right as soon as the scene went there. Haha. But it makes me think that the screenplay was probably originally intended for the sexual relationship to be between the couple, and that it got whittled down. It would be a great thing if someone could find all the instances in film history where a significant gay narrative was cut out of or heterosexualized in the end product.

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  2. Wow, the sixties and early seventies sure were interesting times. No way could an actor get away with all the drugs now. Dennis had married Brooke Hayward by then, I had forgotten about Michelle Phillips.

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  3. The picture where Warren's holding up a bar of soap looks like he's taking a selfie!
    And no, I won't be watching this picture, either!
    Cheers, Rick

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  4. Shawny, I did bat my eyes a bit when this section came along. I do recall once watching a documentary on the Old West (albeit this film is a town story, not as remote as the frontier) and being told that most cowboys were homosexual, chiefly out of circumstances (re: like prison) due to the almost total lack of women in many areas. Certainly a side we don't tend to see in that very, very prolific genre! (Except maybe in our dirty fantasies! Ha ha!) The same documentary (whose title I long ago forgot) also noted that one bullet almost never took down a cowboy as they do in nearly every movie. It could take up to 5 or 7 to bring a man down completely. But we always see one hit eliminate an enemy immediately. So I did appreciate the inclusion of some unusual circumstances being tossed in.

    Gingerguy, Hopper had a really wild life and a roller-coaster career. He was virtually blackballed from studio films after a run-in with Henry Hathaway, but crawled back with Easy Rider, then fell out again, then came back with quite a vengeance in the 1990s. A lot of adventures (many of them unpleasant) crammed into his 74 years.

    Rick, as God is my witness, I was going to caption that shot with a mention of "selfies" and either decided not to or neglected to! Hilarious, isn't it? Could be photoshopped with a cellphone in place of the soap with little effort...

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