A FINE PAIR (1968) AND THE OUTER LIMITS OF CLAUDIA LOVE
This fall semester I started taking an Italian language
class two evenings a week with my daughter, and Thursday night I was looking to
decompress after our first big quiz. (Scores haven’t been revealed yet, but I
think we did just fine.) So I started rummaging through my shelves and came
across the Warner Archives DVD of Francesco Maselli’s A Fine Pair (1968), an
ostensibly breezy romantic caper comedy which reteams Rock Hudson and Claudia
Cardinale, a pairing their public was presumably clamoring for after their
previous outing together in Blindfold (1965),
a Universal programmer written and directed by Phillip Dunne, the screenwriter
of, among many other notable movies, How
Green Was My Valley. I’ve had a mad crush on Claudia ever since I first saw
her in Circus World (1964) with John
Wayne when I was but a youngster, and I always welcome the chance to visit
movies of hers I haven’t yet seen. I was also hoping that she might speak a
little italiano in A Fine Pair so I could bolster my
current educational experience. As it happens she did, and I even understood
some of what she was saying—a win all around, right? Well…
A Fine Pair
features a typically nonsensical and, in the context of ostensibly breezy
romantic caper comedies of the 1960s, fairly familiar sort of setup—Claudia’s an
Italian jewel thief who travels to New York City to enlist the aid of Rock, a
no-nonsense NYPD police captain and old friend of her father’s, in a scheme to
contritely return the baubles she’s stolen from a prominent Austrian family
before said family returns from an overseas trip so that she might escape
punishment for her crimes. The thing that Rock doesn’t know is, the jewels
Claudia’s claiming to have already stolen are fakes, and she means to use him
to help her gain access to that Austrian family compound where she can pluck
the real stash of gems.
Will the self-serious police captain fall in love with his
gorgeous, carefree, apparently amoral companion? Will the jet-setting lifestyle
of the international jewel thief, and the added extra bonus of bedding and
taking showers with La Claudia, eventually get good to Rock, compelling him to
shed the trappings of his confining and molto
convenzionale stateside mores? Will she unexpectedly fall in love with this
relatively stiff and cranky hunk and suddenly feel pangs of remorse for luring
him into a series of compromising criminal positions? Will the charming the
couple prance around various stunning European locations, laughing, riding
snowmobiles, drinking with abandon from le
fontane di varie belle piazza? Will Rock find out he’s being used?
If you’ve ever seen a movie before, you’ll probably know the
answers to these questions just like I did. But the prospect of ogling beauties
like Cardinale and Hudson as they bop from the grit and bustle of New York City
to the luxurious old-world cityscapes of Vienna and Rome on their sundry
escapades holds a certain appeal, one that for some of us will be near
irresistible. Unfortunately, director Maselli, best known for ripe dramas like Gli Indifferenti (A Time of Indifference; 1964), which cast Cardinale alongside Rod
Steiger and Shelley Winters, and Codice
Privato (1988) starring Ornella Muti,
doesn’t seem all that interested in his glamorous stars, and he directs
almost the entire movie as if he’s a rooftop or two separated from the main
action, struggling to maintain interest and engagement. He and his otherwise very talented
cinematographer, Alfio Contini (Il Sorpasso, Zabriskie Point), have
chosen to shoot nearly every situation, whether close-ups or master shots, with
long lenses of varying extremity, and they deliver a movie filled with human
and architectural splendor which has been interpreted with alarming distraction.
Then, to compound the offense, they’ve turned the footage over to one Nicoletta
Nardi, who by all appearances seems to have edited the picture in a dark closet
with a tenderizing hammer and a meat cleaver. The result, exacerbated no doubt
by Warner Archives’ decision to release the film in a grainy transfer cropped
down from wide-screen Panavision, makes absolute hash not only of the locales,
but also of simple one-on-one conversations between the actors. Maselli
assembles his scenes with the basest regard for the fundamentals of continuity
and pacing, and his camera always seems to be lunging and darting around,
trying to follow the actors and keep them at least partially in the frame. A Fine Pair might just be the clumsiest
and clunkiest attempt at frothy frolic I’ve ever seen.
And given Maselli’s camera subjects, one might think a
little lounging, some time to appreciate the lovely actors and their
surroundings, would be appropriate, part of the design. But even when the movie
does settle down, the lighting is
often indifferent at best, impenetrable at worst, frustrating even the
potential joy of luxuriating in all that apparently useless beauty. The movie’s
central adventure sequence—the infiltration of that Austrian castle—is patently
absurd on its surface and would never pass muster for audiences weaned on the
sort of surreptitious high-tech shenanigans that are part and parcel of movies
like Entrapment (1999) and the Mission: Impossible series. Rock deduces
(because that’s what police captains do) that the castle is protected by a
temperature-sensitive alarm system that can be disabled simply by heating up
its cavernous halls. So, by some sort of fuzzily defined technological means,
Rock hikes the temp up to about 190 degrees and the two sexy invaders get to
work, he opening the safe where the jewels will be replaced, she seeking out
the location of the treasure she really wants to get her hands on. But the heat
ends up overwhelming them both and, this being a “sophisticated” romp, it’s not
long before Claudia is down to her exquisite lace bra and panties, writhing on
the floor in a pre-heat stroke-induced state of agony while Rock, thinking
practically, douses her with a conveniently available bottle of seltzer water.
God knows I have no objection to watching Claudia Cardinale
soaking wet and undulating in her undies—the possibility of just such a
spectacle might be one of the primary
reasons a person like myself would ever be compelled to throw A Fine Pair (the jokes just write
themselves, don’t they?) into his or her DVD player in the first place. But
Maselli undermines even that base pleasure. He makes the cut-rate decision to
indicate the intense heat radiating through the castle by tinting the frame
red, because red makes you think, you know, “hot.” So the grandeur of Claudia
and, in the spirit of fair play, eventually Rock both getting drenched under
duress, a cinematic event which ought to least be imbued with some measure of
good, dirty fun, ends up, under cinematographer Contini’s injudiciously grainy
guidance, looking like a seedy Super-8 S&M porn film shot in a serial
killer’s basement and lit by the dim glow of Rudolph’s nose. By the time Rock
ends up dragging Claudia’s near-unconscious body out of the room and toward
cooler climes, I found it necessary to turn my eyes away, as if I were seeing
something truly transgressive, something I shouldn’t be seeing. To construct a
scene like this so shoddily as to compel me to turn away from the sight of
Claudia semi-nude, well, that ranks, if you’ll forgive me, as a cardinal,
unforgivable sin in these blighted eyes.
The one bright spot in A
Fine Pair, other than the simple presence of Claudia Cardinale, comes
courtesy of the lively champagne fizz of Ennio Morricone’s playful score, which
at times gracefully creates the illusion of the good time the audience should
be having. Rock Hudson looks trapped in the movie’s clutter, as if he hadn’t a
clue what was being asked of him except to look tall and densely packed and
vaguely grumpy. It’s up to the legendary Italian beauty to make this limp
comedy seem less interminable than it inarguably does—90 minutes has hardly
ever seemed like such an insurmountable sit—and she does as well with that task
as any legendary Italian beauty possibly could.
As it stands, the picture is certainly for Rock Hudson and
Claudia Cardinale completists only, and both actors would, with their very next
films, come up with ample reward for the faithful having endured this one.
Hudson would subsequently be featured in the sturdy blockbuster adventure Ice Station Zebra alongside Ernest
Borgnine, Jim Brown and Patrick McGoohan. And Cardinale, with the wind beneath
her wings once again provided by Morricone, would fashion one of the most
lyrical entrances in the annals of the movie western to begin her memorable
appearance in Sergio Leone’s landmark masterpiece Once Upon a Time in the West. By any account those two films would
be penance enough, and a much finer pair, despite the undeniable sex appeal of
its two stars, than the one on display in Francesco Maselli’s fatally flaccid
affair.
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1 comment:
Since Warner Archive is generally very prudent about preserving original aspect ratios on their releases, coupled with the film's previous difficulty in being seen, and the fact that IMDb is a user-submitted medium, I am 85% sure that A FINE PAIR is not a 2.35 Panavision production as it says on the IMDb, and that the 1.85 presentation on the DVD, grainy as it may be, is in fact correct.
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