Being There (1979) 7.5 of 10
-I think up to that point in time as a kid I thought "Pink Panther" movies were the only things Peter Sellers did. I didn't see it at the time and not until on VHS in the late 80s but it took me awhile to revisit it again. It is a brilliant performance and honestly if the Academy had known Sellers just had a few months to live when they gave out the awards, maybe they would have given him the recognition he deserved (I have not seen "Kramer vs. Kramer" but who honestly remembers that??). Supposedly Sellers though the decision to run an endless scene of blooper outtakes from an unused scene over the credits killed his chances and he might have been right because after seeing him maintain his poise throughout the film suddenly we get this jarring sight of Sellers letting go and getting giggle attacks as he was so often prone to do (similar behavior can be seen in many Panther film outtake reels). Curiously when I saw the film on VHS I know this was NOT the end credits version used then.
-The film takes its time for the humor to kick in when everyone starts misinterpreting "Chance" and what he really is and that's when the satire does become quite effective. In effect from today's vantage point the fact that someone like Chance is able to confound the masterminds of the Deep State of politics *really* hits close to home when you think of how a 20 year old kid could likewise outwit our vaunted security agencies and nearly bring down this country as I think Crooks would have done. Plus there is also the sense of how simple-minded Chance with his simple-minded declarations at the end being touted as the next President sure makes one think of how we got sold a leader with his tall tales of Corn Pop and his uncle the cannibal victim etc.
-I think the scene of Shirley MacLaine pleasuring herself goes on way too long. If they wanted to make the point then just shorten it. It came off as the one moment of really bad taste (at least they didn't thankfully retain the scene from the book where Chance is shown going up to watch the two men engage in gay sex). As for the ending.....it is indeed positively surreal and I guess open to interpretation. The alternate ending, which I wasn't familiar with was amazingly conventional.
The Elephant Man (1980) 7.5 of 10
-This one I did see when I was 11 because it had a PG rating (which looking back seems very inappropriate). The film has incredible B/W photography, outstanding performances and the makeup is incredible (The failure to give it a special award was what shamed the Academy into creating a makeup category). The story is also moving and touching on many levels and special kudos to John Hurt (doing this just a year after "Alien" really shows how much he was being put through the wringer!) for enduring the makeup and giving a great performance that works because he wasn't a big name (as they pointed out if you'd cast a big name you would have probably been looking to see where the makeup ended and the familiar face began) What I think keeps me from giving me it as high as a 9 is the dramatic liberties that were taken that IMO stretched things too much. Joseph Merrick (Dr. Treves for some reason deliberately changed his name to "John" in his memoir and consequently most people don't realize that Joseph was his true first name and he was always know by it) actually wasn't abused by a sadistic freak show owner, he had actually gone into it willingly because he knew it was the only way he could likely make a living. He did find himself cheated and broke in Belgium and made his way back to London and only then did he meet Dr. Treves. I think it would have been a lot more credible that if there was going to be a need to show Merrick as the victim of sadism that should have come upfront in the beginning of the film and the rest of the film devoted to his attempts to adjust to the care of Treves. To me, the sudden plot twist of the ridiculous night watchman raid on his room (could a hospital like this REALLY be so lax in its security??) and being kidnapped back into slavery by Freddie Jones occurring so late in the narrative really is too much of a gut punch to the audience that's been cheering him along up to this point and it wasn't necessary to do it this way. This was the young David Lynch going for shock value and IMO losing the audience for a brief stretch. Put that up front in the beginning and the story narrative would have been better. The trade-off probably would have been that if you did it that way you couldn't do the game of hiding Merrick from view for the first 50 minutes which of itself is effective and the fact we don't see him as he is at first allows us to build sympathy for him before we see him unmasked (I would note the image of the masked Merrick became VERY iconic in pop culture in the day. After the film came out was when New Orleans Saints fans started wearing bags over their head as a statement of protest over their team's futility and I can remember a "Barney Miller" episode about a man being denied service in a restaurant because of his appearance and how people were shouting, "Get a bag for the Elephant Man!") Lynch's surreal opening and ending though was a little too bizarre as well.
-This was the first film I ever saw Anthony Hopkins in and because he is so good as the kindly Dr. Treves, it was hard for me to think of him as a screen villain in his later parts (and I've never seen his Hannibal films). It's worth nothing this came out at the same time when there'd been a hit Broadway play of the same name but it was not an adaptation of that production necessitating the rather silly credit, "Based on the True Story of John Merrick and not upon the Broadway play of the same name or any other fictional account." This credit I think tried to be too cute and suggest there's was the TRUE story in all details compared to the play but that wasn't exactly so.
-In the end, the film is ultimately powerful but just short of being a true masterpiece. But since it was the only film nominated for Best Picture in 1980 that I actually saw (and to this day I have still not seen "Ordinary People", "Raging Bull", "Tess" or "Coal Miner's Daughter") I was rooting for it at the Oscars and it struck out on all of the ones it was nominated for (0 for
