Billy Wilder’s Buddy
Buddy (1981) might be one of the most obvious go-to examples in the annals
of conventional wisdom when it comes to the cinephile’s parlor game of pointing
out a great director’s greatest foible. Upon release the movie was summarily dismissed
by critics and ignored by audiences—it managed a paltry $7 million
domestically, three million less than its production budget.
Roger Ebert, in his review, called Buddy Buddy “a comedy without laughs,” one apparently so vile that it could inspire not only
audience indifference but also one of the revered reviewer’s laziest pieces of
criticism. Ebert’s short piece quickly degenerates into name-calling-- “This
movie is appalling” is the first sentence of the review, and the movie’s name
goes unmentioned until the second paragraph—sans much in the way of actual
insight. And unfortunately the critic’s disdain ends up functioning as a
substitute for examination of what the movie actually is, unless you count Ebert’s characterization of Wilder’s picture
as being “like one of those pathetic Hollywood monsters drained of its life
fluids,” with no elaboration forthcoming as to exactly which pathetic Hollywood
monster is being evoked.
Most reviewers
followed suit-- one exception being Richard Corliss, who recommended Buddy Buddy to the unsuspecting
readership of Time magazine-- and the
picture inauspiciously slipped into movie history as a first-ballot
hall-of-shamer without much further regard.
Wilder would
never make another movie after Buddy
Buddy, and in his conversations with Cameron Crowe the director reached for
some sort of rear-view-mirror explanation for why the movie was a failure. Buddy Buddy, Wilder claimed, “was not
the kind of comedy I had an affection for” and offered the speculation that if
an audience laughs at this sort of material they end up resenting it, “because
of the negativity—dead bodies and such.” A strange claim, one might think,
coming from the man who once mined comic gold from the St. Valentine’s Day
Massacre and who was well acquainted with the function of cynicism as a satirical
tool. (I’m unaware of Wilder ever checking in on the cinema of, say, Quentin
Tarantino, not to mention the proliferation of hitman-oriented comedies that
came in Tarantino’s wake, but if anyone can direct me to such comments I hope
they will do so.)
Wilder was
offered the adaptation of Frances Veber’s 1973 farce A Pain in the Ass (from Veber’s play) by MGM as a project with
longtime screenwriting partner I.A.L. Diamond, and Jack Lemmon and Walter
Matthau, teamed twice by Wilder already in The
Fortune Cookie and The Front Page, were quick to sign on. Wilder
was undoubtedly feeling pressure to bring his movie up to date with current
standards in terms of sex and language, which resulted in a movie that most who
hated it dismissed as evidence of the director being “out of touch” with modern
audiences. But of course, the most obvious thing about Buddy Buddy, especially considering that many of its most vocal
detractors were well-versed in at least the high points of Wilder’s career, is
how very much like a typical Billy Wilder movie it feels. The thing that, I suspect, throws lots of
viewers, is that in many ways Buddy Buddy
seems as though it was made in and somehow transported from 1966 and placed on
MGM’s 1981 Christmas release schedule, its other-era societal reflections left untouched
by the influences of political correctness, acknowledgement of the shifting
rhythms of Hollywood comedy or even, in some instances, common sense.
Despite its
French pedigree, Buddy Buddy is very
much a movie made by the man who wrote and directed Kiss Me, Stupid, as well as my favorite jackhammer political comedy
of all time, One Two Three. It shares
with those movies a strange mixture of the sophisticated and the puerile, a
“get off my lawn!” attitude toward encroaching and inevitable social and sexual
realities that can be as hilarious as it is disorienting. And it is by this very odd
time-capsule effect, this retreat to within norms and functions and style which
were specifically identifiable as having had their genesis from the
cantankerous brain of Billy Wilder (a retreat perhaps compelled by the reaction
to the smothering self-reflection of Fedora),
that the charms of Buddy Buddy can be
located.
Walter Matthau’s
Trabucco, a hit man with little tolerance for distraction while on the job, is first
seen in the disguise of a mailman, delivering a package to a mailbox that looks
suspiciously rural to be perched, red flag up, on the sidewalks of Beverly
Hills. The package, which turns out to be a bomb, is opened and exploded by a gravelly-looking
mug who saunters out of his house draped in a robe which looks more like a
straitjacket than a casual morning garment, the sort that was replaced by mugs
of this sort (myself included) with gym shorts and a T-shirt a decade or so
before Wilder staged this scene. Next up, Trabucco disguises himself as a
milkman who delivers a bottle of poisoned milk to the doorstep of yet another
unsuspecting Beverly Hills resident who is apparently engaged in a very
loosey-goosey program of witness protection headed up by some particularly
witless police officers. The two very easily accessed dead men were potential
government witnesses to a crime boss’s involvement in a shady land deal, and
it’s Trabucco’s mission to shut them up before they get their day in court.
Soon after,
Trabucco crosses paths with the aggressively avuncular and self-absorbed Victor
Clooney (Jack Lemmon), a high-strung standards-and-practices executive at CBS.
(“You’d call it censorship,” he offers in self-defense to the supremely deadpan
and disinterested killer.) Clooney, distraught over having been ditched by his
wife for a screwy sex cult guru (Klaus Kinski as Dr. Hugo Zuckerbrot, whose
offices are decorated with Chinese erotica and whose every appearance is
accompanied by a sitar on the soundtrack), chooses the very hotel from which
Trabucco plans to assassinate the final witness, to stage a series of suicide
attempts which will inevitably draw attention to Trabucco, himself perched with
a 30.06 pointed at the courthouse steps across the street where the witness will
soon appear under police escort.
Add to the
mailbox and milk bottle the cracked notion that even in 1981 an assassin could
so easily access such a publicized crime figure whose two other confederates
have already been killed, and you begin to key on the insularity with which
Wilder and Diamond created Buddy Buddy. And
the movie’s disregard for modes of irony and youthful irreverence which were making
a popular surge (the ripple effects of Saturday
Night Live and National Lampoon’s
Animal House were still dominating the culture of comedy) are evident in
the presence of Wilder’s familiar and unhurried long-take style, the
functionally flat lighting provided by cinematographer Harry Stradling, Jr.,
and particularly in its embrace of Wilder’s crotchety, satirically mothballed
attitudes on the counterculture (hippies who would have been embarrassing in
1967 are somehow stranded in 1981); racial portrayals (that Mexican hotel maid—iMadre di Dios!); dated gags about the
sexual revolution (“Premature ejaculation means always having to say you’re
sorry!”); and even throwaway observations about everyday life, like that
mailbox and milk bottle.
Matthau's Trabucco exhibiting "a little human warmth!" to bellboy Miles Chapin
You’ll have to forgive
me if all of this sounds like the foundation of an epic pan, but I promise you
it’s not. Despite Buddy Buddy being
quite literally at least 15 years out of its time and appearing clunky and
listless by standards of comic hyperactivity circa 1981, to say nothing of
2016, I find its hermetically sealed nuttiness extremely appealing, to say
nothing of frequently hilarious. The movie plays like nothing so much as an
aging director’s defiant “fuck you” to a system he could sense was about to
toss him to the curb, a last blast of venom disguised as a tired formula
comedy. It’s not hard to see Wilder’s sense of antipathy and resignation
embodied in Matthau’s ace deadpan performance, which for the casual viewer is
the single best reason to see Buddy
Buddy. The barely concealed hostility beneath the drooped eyelids, which
becomes enflamed by Matthau’s dead-eyed stare at anyone and anything—usually
Lemmon—standing in the way of the completion of his mission, is the work of an
actor who knows when to turn it on and when to let a muted reaction carry the
day. Certainly there’s no funnier, or more resonant moment in the movie than
when Matthau collars the hotel bell boy to prevent him from reporting Lemmon’s
first suicide attempt with a little gentle persuasion: “Don’t you think that
poor son of a bitch has enough trouble? He doesn’t need cops, he needs
sympathy, understanding, a little human
warmth!”
Lemmon’s Clooney,
on the other hand, offers a slightly more mixed bag. The actor never finds a
balance between Clooney’s insecurity, which should be cushioned somewhat by our
sympathies, and his own mannered affectations, which in 1981 were already on
their way to becoming a running gag on The
Simpsons. Lemmon has his moments (“Have I done something to offend you?”
Clooney pleads to Trabucco, after a movie’s worth of having done nothing but),
and if you ever loved him and Matthau together, for Wilder or for anyone else,
you’ll likely find lots to enjoy here. But clearly Wilder, all reservations
expressed to Cameron Crowe aside, is on the side of the killer here. It’s hard
to imagine the writer-director didn’t get a silly kick out of having Matthau
toss off a “fuck off” in his costar’s direction as they (temporarily) part
company near the picture’s conclusion.
The whole of the
picture’s appeal seems nestled in the final images of the hit man having made
it to retirement on his South Pacific island (“On a clear day you can see
Tahiti”), having gotten away with it all. Trabucco watches a snowy Pittsburgh
Steelers football game on a shitty portable TV with rabbit ears (Rabbit ears
picking up network TV in the South Pacific! Right!), only to have his tropical
paradise blitzed by the reappearance of Clooney, who’s tracked him down over 93
islands after having made his own criminal exit from society.
By 1981 Wilder
had done it his way. He was headed off to a life of retirement, collecting art
and enjoying being feted by younger, talented artists who were smart enough to
understand and appreciate his contributions to film history. Yet the bad
reviews for Buddy Buddy, his
ignominious swansong from the picture business, continued to swarm around his
head. And just like Trabucco, as he preps the unsuspecting Clooney for a
rekindling of the local natives’ tradition of human sacrifice to the volcano
that looms over his island paradise, it’s fun to imagine Wilder climbing that
volcano, tossing the bad reviews, if not some of the more annoying reviewers
themselves, into the mountain’s fiery maw and yelling, “Here’s a little human
warmth for ya! And I’ll set up a mailbox in Beverly Hills if I goddamn well
want to!”
(Buddy Buddy is unavailable on DVD, but
it can currently be seen on YouTube.)
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Shamefully, I've never seen this movie, but I greatly enjoyed the French original, superbly cast with Leno Ventura as the hitman and jacques Brel as the suicidal 'pain in the ass'. I'd highly recommend it as one of Verber's best.
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