SILVER STREAK: MYSTERY TRAIN REVISITED
And now, a dispatch from the Favorites of Youth Revisited
Department.
After a long day at work a couple nights ago I sunk into my chair and threw on Silver Streak (1976), courtesy of Netflix Streaming, having not seen it in probably 30 years, at least. You know, one of my favorite things is going back to check out a movie I liked as a kid and discovering that it holds up well, that the things which tickled me about it way back before I became the sophisticated aesthete I am today (…) are still a source of guiltless pleasure. Unfortunately, outside of the presence of Richard Pryor, who doesn't show up until around minute 65 of this nearly two-hour picture, Silver Streak has precious little to recommend to the unrepentant nostalgiac in 2017.
After a long day at work a couple nights ago I sunk into my chair and threw on Silver Streak (1976), courtesy of Netflix Streaming, having not seen it in probably 30 years, at least. You know, one of my favorite things is going back to check out a movie I liked as a kid and discovering that it holds up well, that the things which tickled me about it way back before I became the sophisticated aesthete I am today (…) are still a source of guiltless pleasure. Unfortunately, outside of the presence of Richard Pryor, who doesn't show up until around minute 65 of this nearly two-hour picture, Silver Streak has precious little to recommend to the unrepentant nostalgiac in 2017.
Because for an action-comedy/Hitchcock pastiche, or more
accurately an action-comedy movie with a few cursory nods toward the “Hitchcock
tradition” (a.k.a. some well-worn plot devices favored by the director), this
is a surprisingly flaccid, suspense-parched affair. Most of that Pryor-less
first hour is taken up by a steam-free romance between Gene Wilder, a publisher
of art books taking an aimless holiday, and Jill Clayburgh, assistant to a
famous art professor who just happens to be on board the same passenger train.
Their interminably paced flirtation and eventual kissy time is diluted even
further by intercut montages of the titular train moving across the landscape
in long-shot to the sleepy strains of Henry Mancini's John Williams-in-disaster-romance-mode-esque
score. (A little of that one theme goes a loooong way in this picture.)
But even when the gears of the
did-he-see-a-murder-or-didn't-he? plot finally kick in (it’s Clayburgh’s boss
who may or may not have been glimpsed dangling from the roof of the train on his
way to eternity), the movie still never gathers up its slack-- director Arthur
Hiller, a determined anti-stylist, was never one to get the pulse pounding, and
the limp trajectory of this would-be thriller suggests heavy sedation on his
part.
The Pryor character's seemingly random insertion into
Colin Higgins' script is welcome, but outside of that famous bit in the train
station, this is a pretty tepid pairing. (For the easily triggered and/or the foggy of memory, that scene involves shoe polish, a radio and a lot
of shuck and jive-- on her way to bed, my daughter stopped and watched in
horror, completely confused by whatever weird movie I'd decided to suffer through
this time.) Higgins never figures out what to do
with his team besides black guy keeping white guy company, despite a few
isolated moments (perhaps improvised?) when Pryor shows us a flash of the anger
underneath his genial persona that would never get a chance to rage outside of
his concert films, and consequently Wilder and Pryor never really get many
sparks going. (I seem to recall that they had a better connection in Stir Crazy, but after this time-travel
experiment I'm not entirely eager to find out if my memory is correct.) The
thing that their pairing in Silver Streak
did make me think of was the missed opportunity, due to studio nerves, to see
them together two years earlier in Blazing
Saddles, along with the fact that of all the great comics in movie history
Pryor’s specific talents as a satirist, or even just a physical performer,
might be among the most ill-used.
Pryor, however, remains
the best reason to see Silver Streak,
outside of the brief cameo by everyone's favorite desert dweller, Lucille
Benson ("Where you goin', Steve??!!")—a friend suggests, rightly I
think, that however dull Silver Streak
might be, it’s probably the closest movie audiences ever came to getting what
they really wanted from Pryor, even after having had to wait so long to get it.
But on just about every other count this alleged express is one logy ride—even Gene
Wilder’s occasional apoplexy seems uninspired-- and it doesn't hold a candle to
the delirious trashy fun of a doomed all-star train voyage like the one
undertaken in The Cassandra Crossing,
which came out a year later and—surprise, surprise—holds up just fine. No,
better to ignore the ease of access Netflix has afforded Silver Streak and just rent Cassandra
(if you can find it), or go straight back to the source and see The 39 Steps, or North by Northwest, or The
Lady Vanishes instead. But then, you already knew that, didn't you?
1 comment:
Hi, Dennis,
I happened to revisit this as well late last year and had a different experience. Yes it's a product of its time; there was a weird wave of "Hitchcock-ian thrillers" then, from DePalma's run to the foldly remembered (by me) Eyewitness ('81). That was a "thing"). Gene Wilder was a leading man and they still didn't know what to do with Richard Pryor (besides letting him steal the whole thing).
Not as quirky as other Wilder films, but you hire Hiller (the guy who directed Love Story (although he gets a pass for In-Laws)) for a reason. Colin Higgins, the writer, said he was more interested in the train, the plot moving and that it couldn't be stopped. It does give this comedy a sense of momentum without any heavy lifting. (And is paid off literally in the end.)
I really liked the pace, although I was surprised Pryor isn't in the film for the first hour. Talk about not remembering correctly. Kind of like Bo Derek in "10" -- she's not in it for the first hour either, and then has like only 2 or 3 scenes!
Collin Higgens, clearly enamored by the genre, would go on to direct Foul Play.
Keep up the great work. Roger
Post a Comment