Billy Wilder
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It should come as no surprise that the obituaries for legendary
film director Billy Wilder have displayed a remarkable
consistency. When a successful figure lives into his 90s, as did
Wilder, his public image becomes fixed into a permanent
portrait. To the movie maven, Wilder was the last of his kind,
the most visible link to the Golden Age of Hollywood. Honored
with frequent awards and encomiums, he epitomized the
professional spit and polish that the factory system of the
major studios promoted.
An old-school believer in the primacy of the word and the
utility of the image, Wilder outlived the emergence of more
fashionable forms of presentation and became the touchstone for
a kind of worldly wisdom that did not condescend to the
mainstream audience. If he rankled at his early and extended
retirement, and financiers' failure to bankroll one more movie,
Wilder remained an artist Hollywood could revere as the epitome
of certain venerable, if rarely achieved, ideals.
In a community that prizes team players, Wilder remained a
maverick despite being a member of a most elite club. Wilder
possessed, in the words of his biographer Ed Sikov, "the
fastest, funniest, meanest mind in Hollywood." He exercised his
wit without censorship upon his profession and his peers. Little
fazed him about either fame or failure. "Medals, they're like
hemorrhoids," he remarked. "Sooner or later, every asshole gets
one." When he met with Sydney Pollack, who in 1995 remade
Wilder's Audrey Hepburn vehicle Sabrina (1954), he
compared the number of their respective Oscars (Wilder's six to
Pollack's two), and dismissed Pollack's commercially successful
Out of Africa (1985) as "classy but boring."
Amusing as it is to dwell upon such anecdotes, Wilder was more
than the cocktail-consuming, zinger-dispensing sophisticate who
regularly punctured the balloon of convention. First and
foremost, and as much as we associate Wilder with spurning
sentimentality, his movies time and again pull their punches in
the final reel. Andrew Sarris refers to it as the "cancellation
principle" in Wilder's work. For example, in Double
Indemnity (1944), hardboiled dame Barbara Stanwyck shoots
Fred McMurray once but then drops her gun, her homicidal
intentions interrupted by a final pang of affection. In Ace
In The Hole (1951), Kirk Douglas's ruthless reporter
rediscovers his lost ethics when the man whose story he's milked
for all its worth, dies. Or, Jack Lemmon's con artist, in The
Fortune Cookie (1966), leaps out of his wheelchair in
defense of a friend, thereby putting the kibosh on an elaborate
insurance scam.
Perhaps Wilder felt compelled to pull back from the brink, to
make the "bitter pill" of his social commentary easier for his
audiences to swallow. Or maybe he realized that successful box
office required the soft peddling of his personal point of view.
Whatever the case, his outrageousness never succumbed to
out-and-out nihilism. Even the cruelest of Wilder's characters
eventually pay for their misdeeds. His films may incorporate
some of the most skeptical and scathing images of American
small-mindedness and stupidity, yet he regularly redeemed his
characters before the final credits.
Wilder has been celebrated for his urbane characterizations, yet
he rarely created a well-rounded figure in his films. More
often, he played opposing types off one another, typically a
wiseass and a wimp. This pattern appears in the Tony Curtis/Jack
Lemmon pairing in Some Like It Hot (1959), as well as the
three pictures that joined Walter Matthau with Lemmon: The
Fortune Cookie, The Front Page (1974), and Buddy
Buddy (1981). He treated women characters similarly, pitting
the elegant Marlene Dietrich against the mousy Jean Arthur in
A Foreign Affair (1948), going out of his way to make the
attractive Arthur look uncommonly plain.
This practice might have resulted from Wilder's temperamental
incapacity to commit to a broad-minded perspective of human
behavior. It is worth noting in this context that he always
collaborated upon his screenplays, and co-workers noted the
contrast in personalities between him and his colleagues: the
patrician Charles Brackett and the less aggressively acerbic
I.A.L. Diamond.
On the other hand, when Wilder committed himself to a strong, if
somewhat monodimensional figure, the results were powerful.
Gloria Swanson's self-absorbed madwoman in Sunset
Boulevard (1950) is famously riveting. Less well known but
equally overwhelming is Douglas's bile-soaked reporter in Ace
In The Hole. The film was one of Wilder's most notable
commercial failures, yet it is hard to imagine he assumed that
the public would accept his image of them as mindless voyeurs,
obsessed with calamities and scandals. Few pictures -- not even
Elia Kazan's A Face In The Crowd (1957) or Sidney Lumet's
Network (1979) -- can equal Ace In The Hole's
dissection of the news industry's pattern of chewing up its
subjects and spitting them out for consumers with short
attention spans.
Each obituary I have read details how Wilder fell out of
commercial favor with Hollywood in the 1980s, unable to finance
a picture during the last twenty years of his life. Each
succumbs to the common wisdom that his last several films were
not only box office failures, but also lapses of skill and
intelligence, as his age and temperament increasingly excluded
him from his audience. I beg to differ with that assessment, for
two of those late pictures hold my interest more fully than a
number of their more renowned predecessors. Part of their
wistful appeal lies in the cynical Wilder's surrender to
something approximating sentiment, and his interest
(understandable, considering his age at the time) in our common
mortality.
The first, The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes, released
in 1970, in part reflects the period's tendency to mock its
idols and reveal their feet of clay. Wilder deviates from the
customary depiction of the detective (played dispassionately by
Robert Stephens), by presenting him as a lonely misogynist whose
lauded powers of deduction are betrayed by a woman who proves to
be a foreign spy. Holmes mistakes one clue after another, only
to have his brother, Mycroft (Christopher Lee), correct his
errors and tidy up the damage: he sees to it that the foreign
agent Gabrielle Valledon/Ilsa Hoffmannstahl (Genevieve Page) is
returned to the German government. When Holmes discovers in the
final sequence that she has been executed for espionage, he
locates the cocaine that Dr. Watson (Colin Blakeley) keeps
hidden, shuts himself behind closed doors, and medicates away
his sorrow. No final quip or caustic riposte accompanies the
plaintive image of inconsolable sorrow.
Even more commanding is Wilder's altogether underrated
Avanti! (1972). Superficially a bedroom farce, it
incorporates what is for the director an unaccustomed
appreciation for the pleasures of the flesh, the beauty of the
physical world, and a fleeting liberation from the taxing
demands of social custom. The central character is an uptight
businessman, Walter Armbruster Jr., played by Wilder's Everyman,
Jack Lemmon. Called suddenly to the isle of Ischia to recover
the body of his late father, he meets a polite and notably plump
Englishwoman, Pamela Piggott (Juliet Mills), who has come to
claim her dead mother. At first, she serves as little more than
the object of Armsburster's ham-fisted fat jokes and recurrent
Ugly American diatribes about the insufficiencies of foreign
culture.
The eventual revelation that the two corpses were longtime
lovers who met each year on Ischia leads to a recapitulation of
their relationship on the part of Walter and Pamela. She gains a
lovely glow as the affair develops, which in turn deflates his
high-velocity chatter and results in one of the least common
plotlines in contemporary Hollywood film: a believable and
sensual relationship between middle-aged adults. Not that Wilder
altogether dispenses with out-and-out-farce and tomfoolery, for
Avanti! includes what is likely one of Lemmon's only nude
scenes, a charming skinny-dipping escapade in the clear waters
off Ischia.
And Avanti! is not without its liabilities. It's a little
too long and more than a little slow, but that can be forgiven.
Wilder has seldom been so relaxed as he is here, or as able to
reveal interest in life's simple joys. However, as much as
anything, what lingers in my mind about the film is a brief shot
when Walter and Pamela visit a local chapel in order to view the
bodies of their respective parents. Wilder by and large believed
camerawork ought to be little more than utilitarian: words first
and images second. But here, the director of cinematography,
Luigi Kuveiller, permits some exterior light to enter the church
through a window and bathe the scene with glorious luminescence.
How uncommon for Wilder to include such a shot, and how
delightful. For once, no wisecracks, no pratfalls, and no snide
annotations. In that brief moment, the cynic embraces his
repressed sentimentalism, and he breaks your heart.