Wednesday, May 19, 2021

Cher Shines in Modern Classic: ‘Moonstruck’ 1987


Cher and Nicolas Cage clean up nice for a night at the opera in "Moonstruck."


The fact that nobody involved—except director Norman Jewison—expected much from 1987’s Moonstruck may surprise today’s movie fans. At best, MGM hoped for the comedy to find an art house audience. The then-quirky romance, screenplay by playwright John Patrick Shanley, started to get good word of mouth. Moonstruck then went from sleeper hit to a smash award-winning movie.

"Moonstruck" was an important movie for the careers of Cher, Nicolas Cage, & Olympia Dukakis.

A testament to the charms of Moonstruck is that it’s remained a favorite over the decades, plus even greater popularity as a COVID era comfort film. I think that Moonstruck is a modern romantic comedy classic, a throwback to the smart comedies of the ‘30s and ‘40s.

Cher is a modern day Cinderella as a widow who goes to the opera in "Moonstruck."


Moonstruck is a current day Cinderella story. Loretta Castorini, widowed early in life, reluctantly agrees to marry Johnny Cammareri, long-time bachelor and mama’s boy. While he attends to his “dying” mother in Sicily, Loretta agrees to meet with his estranged younger brother, and invite him to the wedding. Brother Ronny is the total opposite of Johnny, a hot head who’s never gotten over losing his hand while working at the family bakery—and for some reason blames his brother. Despite the widow’s cautious nature, she is stirred by his passion and winds up in the baker’s bed. Meanwhile, Loretta’s father, Cosmo, is having a late mid-life crisis romance, and her mother Rose senses something’s up. Other characters are either happily in love, looking for love, or resolutely lonely. The romantic dilemmas all come to a head, revealed under a magical full moon.

The wolf without a paw meets the bride with bad luck! Big scene from "Moonstruck." 

Some were shocked that a comedy starring Cher won her an Oscar. Well, 40 years before, even more folks were shocked when another veteran glamour girl, Loretta Young, won an Oscar for a comedy, The Farmer’s Daughter. She also sported an accent! Like Loretta, Cher won from a handful of dramatic nominees. This was a great comeback for Cher, who was 41 when Moonstruck was released; the film is still strongly associated with the superstar, who turns 75 on May 20.

Disclaimer: I’ve been a Cher fan most of my life. Second disclaimer: I think the Oscars are meaningless. What ultimately matters is how well a film is remembered in future years. And those seldom match up with Oscar nominees or winners of any given year. But for those that think the Oscars matter, Cher’s win for Moonstruck was a career Oscar, after an uphill battle to get in films. Of course, Glenn Close is a superior actress to Cher. But Oscar has stiffed Close eight times now, so naysayers should place the blame where it belongs, on the Academy of Motion Picture Sciences, not Cher.

Cher with her Oscar for "Moonstruck" in 1988.

John Patrick Shanley deservedly won Best Original Screenplay for Moonstruck. The story is so perfectly told that I'm surprised it hasn't been done as a Broadway play or musical. In this age of re-invention and re-boots, I’m sure that day will come. This fairy tale for adults has wonderful bits of business, unabashed romanticism, smart dialogue, and an atmospheric valentine to New York City. The charm is in the quirky details and dramatically heightened characters.

Norman Jewison, who will be 95 in July, has had a long, diverse career, but his films have always focused on character, often with humor: The Cincinnati Kid; The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming; In The Heat of the Night, The Thomas Crown Affair; Fiddler on the Roof; And Justice for All; and Moonstruck. Jewison is the only director to have guided singing divas Judy Garland, Doris Day, and Cher in their mid-life careers! A great actor’s director, Jewison’s movies are typically smart, well-told, and character driven. It’s a shame that Jewison didn’t win for Best Director, as Moonstruck was his baby, and one of his last big hits. Instead, Bernardo Bertolucci won for The Last Emperor.

The ensemble cast is memorable, from the leads down to the smallest parts.

Nicolas Cage as Johnny, the baker who lost a hand and then his bride-to-be.

Nicolas Cage is bizarrely brilliant as Ronny Cammareri, and has Cher to thank for getting the role. Nobody wanted Cage, even after a screen test, or perhaps especially so. However, Cher thought Cage’s take on the bruised romantic baker was fascinating. Nicolas Cage, then not keen on making mainstream movies, thus became a top leading man with Moonstruck. He reminds me of a comic Stanley Kowalski, with some of his monologues near-operatic. As Ronny, Cage’s bellowing rant about his baker not having a hand or bride is hilariously riveting. And the opera loving baker’s impassioned speech on love’s imperfection is a classic moment, comedic but wise. Cage is at the beginning of his youth and offbeat good looks, and gives the role everything he’s got.

Nicolas Cage became a leading man with his off-kilter looks & delivery in "Moonstruck."

Danny Aeillo plays the thankless part of mama’s boy Johnny Cammareri beautifully. Like most of Moonstruck’s characters, he has to decide whether to make a romantic leap or not. Johnny’s got a heart of gold but is a gutless wonder, yet Aeillo makes him funny and empathetic.

Olympia Dukakis & John Mahoney in one of the loveliest scenes from "Moonstruck."

Olympia Dukakis, who got her big movie break in Moonstruck, was perfect casting as Cher’s film mother, Rose Castorini. Aside from their resemblance, Olympia’s no-nonsense demeanor was perfectly in sync with Cher. Dukakis gets big laughs with her deadpan lines, but also wins over viewers as the longsuffering wife of a cheating hubby. Dukakis’ dinner scene with John Mahoney’s man-child professor is flirtatious and bittersweet, and shows both Rose’s softer side and strong character, as she tells Professor Perry, “I know who I am.”

Olympia Dukakis with her Oscar for "Moonstruck."

Vincent Gardenia, as Cosmo Castorini, has one of his best roles as the straying husband. Vincent was a wonderful actor, who was at home in comedy or drama. Here, Gardenia conveys both. He’s utterly believable as the Italian alpha male, a tough businessman who thinks he’s calling all the shots. But every scene Cosmo’s in with wife Rose, you absolutely know he doesn’t have the last word.

Vincent Gardenia and Anita Gillette as Cosmo Castorini & Mona, in "Moonstruck."

John Mahoney, who soon became a favorite TV face, as the dad of Frasier, is charming and wistful in his extended scene as the tomcat college professor mama Rose meets while dining out solo.

Louis Guss is loveable as Rose’s brother Raymond, happily married to Rita. Guss goes big but in a good way as the romantic who lets the whole word know it.  Julie Bovasso, as Rita, so delightful here, was also the dialogue coach for the other actors’ accents. I can hear her in my head her telling Cher’s Loretta, “You were so weird last night!” Or in the finale, as the family member who answers the door, Rita announces in a sing-song voice, “It’s Johnny Cammareri.”

Julie Bovasso & Louis Guss as Rita & Raymond, with Olympia Dukakis.
Everyone's waiting for the arrival of Johnny Cammareri in "Moonstruck."

Feodor Chaliapin, Jr. shines as the paternal grandfather with all the dogs, looks on in bewilderment at the goings on in his family during the full moon.

Anita Gillete, one-time sitcom fave, is great fun as Mona, the “cheap bit of goods” Cosmo is having an affair with. She doesn’t have the biggest part, but she makes her screen time count and is warm and funny as the overripe tart.

All of the characters, right down to the bits are comic gems, like Chrissy from the Cammareri bakery, so snarky to Loretta and sweet on Ronny. Or the crone at the airport, who tells Loretta that she hopes the plane her sister is on crashes, over a man. Everyone gets their moment to shine.

The trouble begins when Loretta accepts Johnny's marriage proposal.
Danny Aeillo & Cher in "Moonstruck."

Finally, there is Cher, who is perfectly cast as Loretta Castorini. It’s hard to believe that Sally Field was actually first choice for the role. I like Sally, I really like her, but I can’t even imagine Field as the hard-bitten Italian widow. I once had a bookstore boss who liked Cher in movies because she didn’t try to “play nice” to win over audiences. That’s Cher’s persona perfectly defined, which has made people love or loathe her for six decades now. She deftly plays the lovelorn Loretta, the brittle bookkeeper who is a romantic at heart. For those who thought Cher wasted her time on TV in the ‘70s, that’s where Cher honed her natural comic timing. And the diva’s delivery is pretty perfect here, barking out some of the movie’s snappiest lines, including the classic, “Snap out of it!”

Cher, who’s made no pretense of being a natural beauty, plays the Cinderella aspect of her role perfectly. I recall the audience I watched Moonstruck with ooh over Cher’s makeover for Loretta’s night at the opera. A Catholic pal told me at the time that she thought it hilarious that Loretta runs smack into some nuns after leaving the beauty parlor—and on her way to sin some more!

Loretta's luck finally turns, with a a love match proposal, in "Moonstruck."

My late, great movie pal, Alice once told me she liked the way Cher looked before her makeover, and I could see her point. It was a rare look at Cher, minus most of the drag, and her soulful big eyes and cheekbones are photographed beautifully. Cher works well with an ensemble, as most of her big movies were, and is effortlessly believable as a daughter in this big Italian family. And as Cher’s stone cold Loretta warms up, Cher’s charm and charisma is lovely to watch. To me, Loretta’s a great character for any actress to play, and Cher more than does her justice.

Nicolas Cage & Cher are "Moonstruck" lovers.

I saw Moonstruck at an art theater in Suttons Bay, MI during the winter of ’88. There were titters of laughter mixed with guffaws of disbelief at this unconventional romantic comedy, as the movie kept the audience off-balance. I also remember during the closing credits, there were many happy, smiling faces as people slowly left the movie. More than a few folks were humming or singing along to the Dean Martin standard, That’s Amore. And there were more than a few pleasantly surprised comments on how good Cher was in Moonstruck. Cher’s been surprising audiences for almost 60 years now.

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All in the family: The cast of 1987's "Moonstruck."



Monday, May 10, 2021

‘Elizabeth and Monty’: Bio Explores Famed Friendship

Author Charles Casillo is the first to write a duo biography of iconic film team
 Elizabeth Taylor and Montgomery Clift.


Elizabeth Taylor and Montgomery Clift’s fabled friendship has been written about before. However, Elizabeth and Monty: The Untold Story of Their Intimate Friendship, by Charles Casillo, is the first full-length book about their relationship. The duo biography comes out May 25th.

 Author Casillo mixes interviews from show business folk that he has gathered over the years. Also, Casillo has a discerning eye, as he culled information from a wide range of books and interviews that have documented the stars' lives and careers. As author of several movie biographies and a show biz professional himself, Casillo has a keen knowledge of classic Hollywood and offers an even-handed, empathetic eye toward great stars living and working under the scrutiny of the press and public.

Montgomery Clift & Elizabeth Taylor: The '50s movie dream team.

Elizabeth and Monty is a subtle rebuttal of the recent Making Montgomery Clift documentary. The project was made by Clift's nephew, utilizing materials archived by Clift's brother. The doc correctly zeroes in on the biggest problem of celebrity bios of troubled stars: Books and film stories of tragic stars accentuate the negative, and give the impression that such stars never had a happy moment in their lives. Marilyn, Judy, and Monty are always held up as cautionary tales of this genre. While Elizabeth Taylor was alive, the tabloid media was gleeful when she was sick, divorced, or fat, with handwringing over how fame and fortune doesn't bring happiness. Making Montgomery Clift shows a playful side of Monty, not tormented from being gay, per se. However, what the doc doesn't address at all is WHY Monty was so spectacularly self-destructive. Charles Casillo goes further in exploring that Clift wasn’t unhappy about his gay side, but having to hide it. The author does feel that Clift’s core unhappiness goes back to a childhood, where he was held up by his strong-willed mother as the special one in the family. Yet, Casillo sensibly points out that there is too much emphasis on trying to show a specific incident or reason as to why an artist like Clift went off the rails. Whatever the reasons were, the sensitive Clift reacted to it throughout his short life. Elizabeth had a similar upbringing with her mother, which is perhaps why Taylor and Clift bonded instantly. She similarly melded the same way later with Michael Jackson, who had a difficult childhood and stage parent from hell, too.

Elizabeth Taylor was an empathetic, loyal friend to Montgomery Clift.

Clift’s good friends—performers who didn't become professional show biz tale tellers later—recalled how they had to ultimately walk away from him. Those reliable sources note his obsession with pills, massive boozing, and how he turned into an infantile version of Mr. Hyde when high on either or both.

'Raintree County': Even before Montgomery Clift's famous car crash, at 35,
Monty's alcohol and pill abuse was already taking its toll on his face and body.

As for Elizabeth, I think her issues with substances started with her unending health issues, some nearly deadly. But like many showbiz people, who are expected to “sparkly, Neely, sparkle” 24/7, Elizabeth found that a pill or a cocktail, then more and more, took the edge off. I found it admirable that Elizabeth, at an age when most addicted stars were well down the slippery path, sought help, and did so publicly. That inner strength was perhaps what once led Elizabeth to swear that she’d never end up like Judy. It's interesting though, that while Monty and Elizabeth had a love/hate relationship with fame, Taylor wore it far more lightly.

The car accident that changed Montgomery Clift's life, after leaving
Elizabeth Taylor's home on May 12, 1956.

The book balances the hectic personal and professional lives of both stars well, wisely focusing on their most important times together. In intelligent, yet very readable prose, Casillo tells of “Bessie Mae” and Monty’s relationship, on-screen and off. I also admire that the author doesn’t shy away from the more sexual aspects of Taylor and Clift’s personal lives, but doesn’t sensationalize them, either.

Montgomery Clift at age 39 in "Suddenly, Last Summer."

Taylor and Clift teamed for three films—A Place in the Sun, Raintree County, and Suddenly, Last Summer—and their last attempt was a reunion that wasn't meant to be: Reflections in a Golden Eye. Casillo offers great on-screen and off-screen backstories on all counts.

Montgomery Clift in his last completed film, 'The Defector,' in 1966.
Monty's co-star is friend and one-time lover Roddy McDowall. 

Monty died shortly before filming began on Reflections in a Golden Eye. And judging from Clift’s looks in his last film, The Defector, Monty was in no shape to play an Army type, in such a demanding role. Had he been in better shape Clift might have been just fine, a counterpoint to macho From Here to Eternity. 

Elizabeth Taylor is flanked by Richard Burton & Montgomery Clift at the
'Night of the Iguana' premiere in 1964. The film's director, John Huston,
was to direct Taylor and Clift later, in 'Reflections in a Golden Eye.'

In Making Montgomery Clift, Clift's nephew notes that Monty made just as many films after Raintree County as he did before. That basically sums up the rose-colored glasses clarity of this Clift family doc. True, Monty turned in some fascinating performances that were informed by his post-accident persona, but his few hit movies were carried by other stars. And Elizabeth Taylor figured prominently in his latter day work. MGM floated the idea of partially recouping costs with their insurance and replacing Monty on Raintree County. Also, during Suddenly, Last Summer, the powers that be wanted to re-cast the erratic Clift. Elizabeth’s response to these suggestions was along the same lines: “Over my dead body.” And when studio execs didn’t want Monty for Reflections in a Golden Eye, because he was considered uninsurable, Taylor settled the situation by putting up her million dollar salary as collateral. You how many friends there are like that in Hollywood? Yeah, one in a million! As for the doc’s claim that Clift wasn’t all that perturbed losing his looks to his car crash—please. What actor, much less one of show business’ most handsome faces, would think that? Again, author Casillo subtly refutes this notion with facts from Clift’s friends.

The beginning of a beautiful friendship: Elizabeth Taylor & Montgomery Clift
at the premiere of 'The Heiress' in 1949. Taylor was 17 & Monty a dozen years older.

Charles Casillo could have written volumes about the twist and turns of Taylor and Clift’s lives. Casillo offers a fine focus on the two film legends times together, a recap for their fans and a primer for those just finding out all about Elizabeth and Monty.

Author Charles Casillo.

This duo biography is out May 25.

Here’s the link to Charles Casillo’s Elizabeth and Monty: The Untold Story of Their Intimate Friendship at Amazon:

https://www.amazon.com/Elizabeth-Monty-Untold-Intimate-Friendship/dp/1496724798

Rick’s film blog here: https://ricksrealreel.blogspot.com/

My review for Taylor and Clift’s A Place in the Sun here: https://ricksrealreel.blogspot.com/2020/10/monty-still-has-place-in-sun-1951.html

My review for Taylor and Clift’s last pairing, Suddenly, Last Summer, here: https://ricksrealreel.blogspot.com/2018/03/suddenly-last-summer-1959.html

My tribute to the 10 year anniversary of Elizabeth Taylor’s passing here: https://ricksrealreel.blogspot.com/2021/03/reflections-of-life-long-elizabeth.html

FYI: I put all the movie overflow on my public FB  movie page. 

Check it out & join!  https://www.facebook.com/groups/178488909366865/