Love in the Afternoon (1957)

Aka Ariane. I always tell you what I’m doing, but you never tell me what you’re doing. Paris. Young cello student Ariane Chavasse (Audrey Hepburn) eavesdrops on a conversation between her father, Claude Chavasse (Maurice Chevalier) a widowed private detective who specializes in tracking unfaithful spouses, and his client, Monsieur X (John McGiver). After Claude gives his client proof of his wife’s daily trysts with American business magnate Frank Flannagan (Gary Cooper) in Room 14 at the Ritz Hotel, Monsieur X announces he will shoot Flannagan later that evening. Claude is nonchalant, regretting only the business he will lose, since Flannagan is a well-known international playboy with a long history of casual affairs. When Ariane cannot get the Ritz to put her through to Flannagan on the phone, and the police decline to intervene until after a crime has been committed, she decides to warn him herself, and leaves for the hotel. When Monsieur X breaks into Flannagan’s hotel suite, he finds Flannagan with Ariane – not his wife (Lise Bourdin), carefully making her escape on an outside ledge. Flannagan is intrigued by the mysterious girl, who refuses to give him any information about herself, even her name. He starts guessing her name from the initial A on her handbag, and when she declines to tell him he resorts to calling her thin girl. She has no romantic history but pretends to be a femme fatale to interest him, and soon falls in love with the considerably older man. She agrees to meet him the next afternoon, not mentioning that she has orchestral practice in the evenings. She arrives with mixed feelings but spends the evening while waiting for him to leave for the airport. Ariane’s father, who has tried unsuccessfully to protect her from knowing about the tawdry domestic surveillance details in his files, notices her change of mood but has no idea that it proceeds from one of his cases. A year later, Flannagan returns to Paris and the Ritz. Ariane, who has kept track of Flannagan’s womanising exploits through the news media, meets him again when she sees him at an opera while surveying the crowd from a balcony. She puts herself in his path in the lobby, and they start seeing each other again … He who loves and runs away, lives to love another day. The first of twelve collaborations between Billy Wilder and screenwriter I.A.L. Diamond, this sprightly adaptation of Claude Anet’s 1920 novel Ariane, jeune fille russe is in fact the fourth screen version of the story, the second of which (1932) had a screenplay co-written by Wilder and the third which supposedly inspired this was made in Germany in 1931 by Paul Czinner. The attraction for Wilder is clearly in the potential for making a film along the lines of his hero Ernst Lubitsch with his fabled ‘touch’ and aside from the judicious use of eavesdropping (a suggestive trope Lubitsch loved), key to this is the casting. For Wilder, Hepburn was kissed by the angels and it was their second film following Sabrina. She shines here as the music student with ideas beyond those of the older men around her, curiosity stoked by those amorous files in her father’s office. According to her biographer Alexander Walker, there were alterations to the screenplay, so “Wilder had a heroine who behaved with the serene composure of a self-confident schoolgirl. It would work, he was sure. Truant and pert, Audrey bubbles along, sticking her oval chin out as if to invite love, the putting up her guard just in time.” Cooper remains an epic iteration of masculinity but wasn’t Wilder’s first choice – that would have been Cary Grant, who never agreed to appear in any of his productions. He comes to Paris every year and I always know because my business improves noticeably. Cooper, however was affable company for a location shoot in a city Wilder loved that had given him respite and a career after fleeing Nazi Germany. It was their second collaboration too because in 1938 Cooper had appeared for Lubitsch as another womaniser in France in Bluebeard’s Eighth Wife on which Wilder had done some writing and that had also marked his first collaboration with previous writing partner and producer Charles Brackett. Now he tailored Cooper’s role more specifically to how he appeared twenty years later. There was a problem, though. “The day I cast Cooper, he got old,” Wilder told Charlotte Chandler. For Chevalier this gave him his first non-singing screen role in a decade. It restored his popularity following his conduct during the war – like many in the French film industry, he agreed to work in tandem with the occupying Germans. He wasn’t especially popular on set however, and Wilder left him out of the cocktails he hosted each evening (just as he had done with Humphrey Bogart on Sabrina).  In Paris, people make love – well, perhaps not better, but certainly more often. They do it any time, any place. On the left bank, on the right bank, and in between! They do it by day, and they do it by night. The butcher, the baker, and the friendly undertaker. They do it in motion, they do it sitting absolutely still. Poodles do it. Tourists do it. Generals do it. Once in a while even existentialists do it. There is young love, and old love. Married love, and illicit love.  It was a tricky shoot not merely because of unseasonable weather and mosquitoes but also because of the street demonstrations and violence in Paris following the Russian invasion of Hungary and the Suez crisis, forcing Wilder to speed up filming and organise evacuation plans if the worst occurred. The amoral tale is softened somewhat by the use of music and songs, almost as melodrama (in the original meaning) including Charles Trenet’s L’ame Des Poètes, Henri Betti’s C’est si bon and Fascination, a motif which is hummed throughout the film by Ariane in a score supervised by Franz Waxman and played by those obliging gypsies who also serve as a Greek chorus, discreetly disappearing when the action hots up. Cooper’s advancing age (56) and haggard appearance (he would have a full face lift two years later) made this stylish and witty exploration of sex a hard sell in the US market where the straightforward philandering didn’t go down well at a time when Lolita had just been published. However the content is mitigated by that lightness of touch that disguises discomfort while Hepburn performs beautifully as the naive daughter opposite Chevalier as her concerned father and of course Cooper who is taken in by her assumed identity in a story of double standards and hypocrisy. And a coda was added to the American production to make things right. You could fly in the twins from Stockholm. Hepburn remarked that the enterprise might have made more sense had the men’s roles been swapped. She discarded the possibility of playing Gigi on the big screen in part because Chevalier was in the cast – that twinkle in his eye didn’t seem paternal at all. She was drinking too much during production and presumed guilt led to a bout of the anorexia that plagued her. She’s a very peculiar girl. Not my type at all. As is the custom with Hepburn’s roles, there’s a fairy tale transformation here but it’s really that of Flannagan’s Don Juan – albeit there’s a fun reference to Cinderella when Ariane mislays her shoe in his hotel room. You know who I am, Mr. Flannagan, I’m the girl in the afternoon. Hepburn was outfitted by Hubert de Givenchy (and an uncredited Jay A. Morley) but her hairdo was altered from her previous urchin look in Funny Face with a centre parting introduced to a soft pageboy bob by Grazia di Rossi. She retained the look off the set, which caused quite the fashion brouhaha, and the Yorkie, Mr. Famous, which absent real life husband Mel Ferrer had bought to keep her company and wound up having a co-starring role here. The tiny creature gets smacked so much! For all its issues and complications, this is an irresistible, seductive, tart, wistfully romantic and sophisticated delight with an absurdly moving ending (plus that coda to emphasise a morally correct conclusion). And isn’t the Saul Bass poster ingenious? We did have a good time, didn’t we?

High Noon (1952)

When he dies, this town dies too. Hadleyville, New Mexico Territory. Marshal Will Kane (Gary Cooper) is newly married to Quaker Amy Fowler (Grace Kelly) on the eve of retirement. The happy couple will soon depart for a new life: to raise a family and run a store in another town. However, word arrives that Frank Miller (Ian MacDonald) , a vicious outlaw whom Kane sent to prison, has been released and will arrive by the noon train, one day ahead of the new marshal. Miller’s gang – his younger brother Ben (Sheb Wooley), Jack Colby (Lee Van Cleef) and Jim Pierce (Robert J. Wilke) – await his arrival at the train station. For pacifist Amy the solution is simple: leave town before Miller arrives. But Kane’s sense of duty and honour make him stay and he says Miller and his gang would hunt him down anyway. Amy gives Kane an ultimatum: she is leaving by the noon train, with or without him. If Kane were to leave with her, he would be forced to confront Miller and his gang at the station, rather than in town. He visits a number of old friends and allies, but none can or will help: Judge Percy Mettrick (Otto Kruger) who sentenced Miller, flees the town on horseback and urges Kane to do the same. Kane’s young deputy marshal Harvey Pell (Lloyd Bridges) remains bitter that Kane did not recommend him as his successor and says he will stand with Kane only if Kane goes to the city fathers and puts the word in for him. When Kane refuses, Pell turns in his badge and pistol. Kane’s efforts to round up a posse at Ramírez’s Saloon and then the church are met with fear and hostility. Some townspeople, worried that a gunfight would damage the town’s reputation, urge Kane to avoid the confrontation entirely. Some are Miller’s friends, others resent that Kane cleaned up the town in the first place. Others are of the opinion that their tax money goes to support local law enforcement and that the fight is not the job of a posse. Sam Fuller (Harry Morgan) hides in his house, sending his wife Mildred (Eve McVeagh) to the door to tell Kane he is not home. Jimmy (William Newell) offers to help but he is blind in one eye, sweating, and unsteady. Kane tells him he will call him and gives him money for a drink. Mayor Jonas Henderson (Thomas Mitchell) encourages Kane to just leave town. Martin Howe (Lon Chaney Jr.), Kane’s predecessor, is too old and arthritic. Herb Baker (James Millican) agrees to be deputised as Sheriff but backs out when he realises he is the only volunteer. A final offer of aid comes from 14-year-old Johnny (Ralph Reed) . Kane admires the boy’s courage but refuses his help. While waiting at the hotel for the train, Amy goes upstairs and confronts Helen Ramírez (Katy Jurado) in her room. Helen was once Miller’s lover, then Kane’s, then Pell’s.  Amy believes the reason Kane refuses to leave town is because he wants to protect her, but Helen reveals there is no lingering attachment on Kane’s part and she, too, is leaving. When Helen questions why Amy will not stay with Kane, she explains that both her brother and father were gunned down by criminals, a tragedy that compelled her to become a Quaker in the first place. Helen nonetheless chides Amy for not standing by her husband in his hour of need, saying that if she was in Amy’s place, she would take up a gun and fight alongside Kane. At the stables, Pell saddles a horse and tries to persuade Kane to take it … Time’s getting short. The tension is palpable throughout the unfolding drama of this Fifties western with issues of loyalty and cowardice placed front and centre. The legend goes that John W. Cunningham’s 1947 Collier’s short story The Tin Star was adapted by blacklisted screenwriter Carl Foreman for producer Stanley Kramer, a man not known for subtle stories of social justice. In fact Foreman gave Kramer a four-page plot outline that happened to contain certain broad similarities to the published story the rights to which he then acquired. Then (maybe) director Richard Fleischer helped him flesh it out while they made another film together. Fleischer was contracted with RKO so couldn’t shoot High Noon. On the other hand altogether, the story might be just a rip off of The Virginian. Foreman refused to name names at HUAC so Kramer tore up their agreement, Foreman fled to England and John Wayne refused to make the film believing it to be a protest against blacklisting and celebrating ‘communist’ Foreman’s departure. Bizarrely, Cooper was abroad when he won the Academy Award and asked Wayne to accept it on his behalf – and Wayne did. Only in Hollywood. Cooper’s stoic and righteous brave persona is crystallised here as he stands up for the little guys, the closeups of those features as inimical as Mount Rushmore. Kelly was discovered by Kramer performing on Broadway. She reportedly felt embarrassed by her stilted performance here but in retrospect the very nature of the role and her wonderful posture and expression radiates a kind of luminosity that feels appropriate. Her scene with Jurado is just right. Both women are outstanding – each representing the poles of femininity that typify the genre, one the past, the other Will’s potential future, each in a position to help save him, each defending her right to do so. Van Cleef was originally supposed to play Pell but refused to have a nose job so was relegated to villain and he doesn’t have a single line – the only such role in his career. This is such a clear-eyed vision of small town viciousness, self-interest and structured so effectively with the editing decision to make it a race against time raising the dramatic stakes to those of a suspenseful thriller. It’s lustrously shot in monochrome by Floyd Crosby and the lilting score by Dimitri Tiomkin and the theme song with its words, Do Not Forsake Me, Oh My Darling, ironically compound the lack of sentimentality. It has often been remarked of director Fred Zinnemann that he made films of conscience and this is exemplary: sturdy, well-paced, characterful but also psychologically probing and deeply moral, a grim portrait of what happens to people when the chips are down and the bullies are in town and they’ll say and do anything to avoid getting involved, a statement that enraged both John Wayne and Howard Hawks and allegedly resulted in their humorous riposte, chamber western, Rio Bravo, seven years later. A bona fide classic that just looks better with the passing of time, the title has long entered the lexicon. Utterly iconic. We’ve got an hour