Liv Ullman & Edward Albert in the 1973 romantic comedy "40 Carats." |
The frothy comedy 40 Carats is one of those ‘70s movies
that strives for smart and progressive, but is uneasily mixed with romantic
soap suds.
New Yorker Ann Stanley is on
vacation in Greece when her car breaks down in the countryside. Young and
handsome Peter Latham comes to her rescue on his motorcycle. He’s immediately
attracted, she’s more inhibited. But the lovely Greece beach scenery, plus some
Ouzo, allows them both to drop their defenses, along with their clothes. What
happens in Greece stays in Greece, right? Back in NYC at her upscale realtor
job, Ann instantly meets Peter again through her daughter, Trina. Ann is
mortified, but Peter wants to pick up where they left off.
Lovely couple Liv Ullman & Edward Albert in a romantic moment, "40 Carats." |
Not exactly hard-hitting
stuff, but 40 Carats is lightly entertaining
and surprisingly positive toward the May-December romance. And it’s still
moderately entertaining despite one huge problem.
Norwegian Liv Ullman was Hollywood's "It" actress from 1972-74, seemingly cast--and miscast--in everything, including "40 Carats." |
It’s impossible for me to
watch a film about romance where age is the title factor and not judge the
stars’ respective ages.
Norwegian star Liv Ullman wowed Hollywood with her
foreign film work in the early '70s. So, the studios sought to mold her into a
Nordic star in North America, along the lines of Garbo and Ingrid Bergman. There
were so few roles for actresses at the time, that Hollywood
shoe-horned Liv into everything, including the Broadway comedy adaptation
of 40 Carats. With so many 40-ish
actresses at the time for whom this role could have been perfect, they cast
34-year-old Liv as a woman of 40, who finds love with a 22-year-old man. What undercuts
the premise, along with Liv Ullman's fresh-faced looks, is her heavy accent and
total lack of comedic timing for this feather-weight romantic comedy. Further
emphasizing Liv’s youth is casting Gene Kelly as her ex-husband. Gene was still
an attractive, energetic guy, but standing in scene with Ullman, her soft looks
against his 60- year-old self, with Kelly’s obvious toupee, will have viewers
scratching their heads. At nearly 70, Binnie Barnes is an energetic hoot as
Liv's mother. In the scene where Binnie and Gene disco dance, they look like a
senior couple having a blast. 40-ish Billy Green Bush is the 42-year-old twangy
tycoon who wants to marry 17-year-old daughter of Liv, played by then-20 Deborah
Raffin. And Edward Albert followed up his success in Butterflies Are Free with 40
Carats. At 22, Edward is gorgeous and quite good in his role—as a
22-year-old. Imagine that!
Emphasizing Liv's youth was casting 60-year-old Gene Kelly as her ex, who looks like the easy-chair loving dad on TV's "Frasier!" |
Aside from Ullman’s
Ann Stanley always hedging on her age, there are the throwaway lines to explain
the various accents and ages. Unlike the play’s original Ann, the movie heroine
left Norway at young age, where her father hailed from. Who then moved to
America with his British bride,
played by Brit Binnie Barnes. Got that? And Billy Green Bush’s Alabama drawl was
utilized for his character. And there are some lines that hint that Gene
Kelly’s Billy may be a bit older than
Ullman’s Ann Stanley. Yes, like 26 years older!
Julie Harris got to go glam on Broadway & won a Tony for the smash "40 Carats!" |
40 Carats was based on a smash Broadway play that ran for two years and
won a Tony for leading lady Julie Harris, who got to be glamorous for a change.
How could Hollywood mess up a no-brainer like this? A number of 40-ish
Hollywood divas were considered, but apparently thought to be past their
box-office prime: Audrey Hepburn was a pro at classy comedy; Joanne Woodward
had the everywoman touch; Shirley MacLaine would have handled the comedic
scenes with sass; Elizabeth Taylor played a much older woman who has plastic
surgery in Ash Wednesday during this
time and looked sensational. Best of all might have been Lee Remick at 38, who
looked like a Hollywood version of Ullman with those big blue eyes. But
Columbia thought they were playing it safe with Liv Ullman, miscast the movie,
and the Broadway hit became a Hollywood flop.
Though their romance is at times on thin ice, the "40 Carats" romantic duo prevail. |
Sadly for Ms. Ullman,
Liv’s Hollywood bombs quickly torpedoed her US career. Casting Liv in a
Broadway hit that tanked was bad enough, but Saint Joan, The Abdication,
and Zandy’s Bride quickly sunk, too.
All this paled in comparison to Ross Hunter’s hilariously tacky musical remake
of Lost Horizon. This camp classic quickly
joined other such career-enders as Mame,
At Long Last Love and Can’t Stop the Music. Actually, Ross
Hunter should have produced 40 Carats,
this glossy and glam light comedy would have been right up his alley!
Edward Albert & Liv Ullman meet cute in Greece, in "40 Carats." |
Not that Liv Ullman is
horrible as Ann Stanley in 40 Carats—she's
a naturally empathetic actress—but the foreign star of heavy dramas is just terribly
uncomfortable and miscast. Gene Kelly as Billy Boylan, Liv’s “slightly” older
ex is a bit much, but he knows this type of material like the back of his hand,
as does Binnie Barnes as mother Maud, and Nancy Walker as Liv’s secretary, and
Natalie Schaefer as the annoying client.
Deborah Raffin knew her way around a pool table and light comedy in "40 Carats." |
Note how good Deborah
Raffin was playing pool, and she brings some game to breezy comedy, too. Raffin
and Barnes have a good comic rapport as Trina, the modern young New York
daughter and her with-it grandmother. Binnie Barnes neither looks nor acts her
age and practically steals the movie.
Binnie Barnes is one hip grannie in "40 Carats," w/Edward Albert & Deborah Raffin. |
Edward Albert's
character Peter comes on a bit strong, but that’s from the script’s clumsy
attempt to make his character look like a “no hang-ups” young man. Albert’s
natural sensitivity makes up for the occasionally overbearing script points.
But all’s forgiven in the closing scene, where Albert pulls up on his
motorcycle, and finds Ullman waiting for him. Peter scrutinizes Ann, scowling
slightly and then breaks out in a smile that would melt an iceberg.
Edward Albert, adoring and adorable, at the finale of "40 Carats." |
Don Porter and
Rosemary Murphy play Albert’s wealthy parents. Both are skilled actors, but
Porter in particular comes off absurd, as the heavy who keeps referring to
Ullman’s Ann as of “their generation.” Porter was frankly 60 and and Murphy
pushing 50, so this is one of many instances where Ullman’s actual age
undermines her character and performance.
No, Liv Ullman isn't laughing because Don Porter as her young beau's father, keeps referring to her character as of "their generation!" With Rosemary Murphy. |
I know some of my
friends and family think I know too much movie trivia, but this blew my mind:
M.J. Frankovich, a big producer in ‘60s and ‘70s Hollywood, was the adopted son
of Joe E. Lewis! AND he was also married to Binnie Barnes. I had no idea! I
found Frankovich quite interesting as he produced many sexy comedies in the
late ‘60s and early ‘70s: Bob & Carol
& Ted & Alice; Cactus Flower,
Butterflies are Free, There’s a Girl in My Soup; and 40 Carats. The producer also made a couple unintentional
comedies: The Love Machine and Doctors’ Wives.
"40 Carats" in a nutshell! |
Jay Presson Allen
wrote the American adaptation from the French play for the Broadway version of 40 Carats. Leonard Gershe, a long time
sitcom comedy writer, who also wrote Butterflies
are Free, wrote the screenplay for 40
Carats.
Milton Katselas, a
Broadway, film, and TV director, started off as an acting coach. His first
directing gig was Edward Albee’s off-Broadway sensation The Zoo Story. Milton also directed the Broadway and movie version
of Butterflies are Free. He directed
Bette Davis in her Emmy-winning comeback, Strangers:
The Story of a Mother and Daughter. He later directed Burton and Taylor in
their infamous Private Lives production.
Binnie Barnes & Gene Kelly boogie down and steal a scene in "40 Carats." |
40 Carats is very 70s, but in a good way. The worst comes at the
beginning, with a sappy ballad over the opening credits, by Michel Legrand and
Marilyn Bergman. Luckily, they wrote a truly lovely ballad that year, The Way We Were, which won them an
Oscar.
Jean Louis wardrobe
designs/selections are chic and character appropriate. Except Liv’s engulfing
fur hat—that comes off as very Lucy Ricardo-esque. The opening and closing
Greece scenes are lovely and the early ‘70s N.Y.C. scenes are evocative of the
era, too.
Liv's Ann doesn't fit in at her young boyfriend's party, and neither does her hat! |
For a ‘70s film, where
there’s some characters that are shocked by Ann and Peter’s 18 year age
difference, an equal number of characters are okay with their romance. And Gene
Kelly’s ex-hubby gives a nifty little monologue about why numbers don’t matter
when it comes to love. And Ann gets her happy ending with Peter after all. That
was pretty progressive, for early ‘70s mainstream Hollywood!
Sadly, the two young
stars of 40 Carats, Edward Albert and
Deborah Raffin, beautiful to look at and charmingly well-cast, died young.
Edward died of lung cancer at age 55 on Sept. 22, 2006 and Deborah of leukemia
at 59 in 2012.
This photo is a giveaway that "40 Carats" came from a stage comedy. |
Edward Albert died at 55 in 2006, just a year and a half after his 99-year-old father, Eddie Albert. |
Here’s a tribute to
Edward Albert, in his first starring role, Butterflies
are Free: https://ricksrealreel.blogspot.com/2021/02/edward-albert-forever-young-in.html
FYI: I put all the movie overflow on my public FB movie
page.
Check it out & join! https://www.facebook.com/groups/178488909366865/
The studio in fact wanted Audrey Hepburn for the role. But newly married to an Italian, she insisted the movie be made in Rome. Discussions then fell apart.
ReplyDeleteHi, I know a number of actors were considered, and I'm sure bringing Audrey back to the screen would have been a big deal. Sure she wanted to be close to her family and I think she finally came back with Robin and Marian in '76.
DeleteThanks for writing,
Rick
Doris Day was also considered. Briefly, when Ross Hunter first came to Columbia from Universal, "Forty Carats" was discussed. He wanted, however, to focus his energy on doing the remake of "Lost Horizon". Had Hunter remained involved, Doris would have been great in "Forty Carats". One has only to look at her modeling a bikini, in 1973, on her CBS comedy series, to see how sexy, attractive and appealing she would have been as a mature woman in love with a younger man. Almost as much of a loss as "The Turning Point" turned out to be. There was a brief consideration of Doris Day in the MacLaine role and Audrey Hepburn in the Bancroft part but it never got far.
DeleteHi Paul, I actually thought DD looked better in the '70s, as her look became more natural than in the '60s. Doris would have been 50 when "40 Carats" filmed, but with her overall film clout and a popular TV series, Columbia might have gone for it. And Ross should have skipped Lost Horizon and did 40 Carats... would have been a win-win!
DeleteLike a lot of "women's movies in the '70s, I've read that Natalie Wood wanted "The Turning Point," and that producers tried to lure Princess Grace out of retirement for the Bancroft part, but said that she would do it only if Elizabeth Taylor played MacLaine's housewife role. Grace knew that ET would turn it down, as she was embarking on life as a senator's wife. As it turned out, Shirley and Anne were great casting. Remember how few good women's roles there were for most of the '70s?
Rick
I love this movie. I do agree with everything you said. Amazing how this subject still raises eyebrows....the older women/younger man. I also love that they show how men have been doing this since the dawn of time with her daughters engagement to her mothers supposed interest & he is even way older then Ann is to Peter, the double standard.
ReplyDelete