Bedazzled is a 1967 British comedy DeLuxe Color film directed and produced by Stanley Donen in Panavision format. It was written by comedian Peter Cook and starred both Cook and his comedy partner Dudley Moore. It is a comic retelling of the Faust legend, set in the Swinging London of the 1960s. The Devil (Cook) offers an unhappy young man (Moore) seven wishes in return for his soul, but twists the spirit of the wishes to frustrate the man's hopes.
Bedazzled | |
---|---|
Directed by | Stanley Donen |
Screenplay by | Peter Cook |
Produced by | Stanley Donen |
Starring | Peter Cook Dudley Moore Eleanor Bron Raquel Welch |
Cinematography | Austin Dempster |
Edited by | Richard Marden Mary Kessell |
Music by | Dudley Moore |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date |
|
Running time | 103 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | $770,000[1] |
Box office | $1,500,000 (US/ Canada)[2][3] |
Plot
editStanley Moon, a cook in a Wimpy restaurant, is infatuated with waitress Margaret Spencer, but is too shy to approach her. Distraught, he attempts suicide by hanging but is interrupted by George Spiggot, a man claiming to be the Devil. In return for his soul, George offers Stanley seven wishes. When Stanley accuses George of being delusional, he offers Stanley a "trial wish". Stanley wishes for a raspberry ice lolly, and George takes him to buy one from a nearby shop. Finding it melted, Stanley confirms that George is the Devil.
Blowing a raspberry undoes the effects of a wish if Stanley changes his mind. George's heightened sense of pride caused God to expel him from Heaven, and they are now in a game: if George is first to claim 100 billion souls, he will be readmitted to Heaven. His staff of seven deadly sins, especially Lust and Envy, are helping him with minor acts of vandalism and spite to reach this goal. Agreeing to the deal, Stanley uses his wishes to try satisfying his love for Margaret, but George twists his words to frustrate him.
- Stanley first wishes to be more articulate. George turns him into a talkative intellectual. Margaret becomes equally pretentious and agrees with all of Stanley's beliefs. When Stanley makes his move, however, she is horrified and starts screaming "Rape!".
- Stanley wishes to be a multi-millionaire with Margaret as his "very physical" wife. She ignores him and his lavish gifts, including the original Mona Lisa, instead being physical with other men.
- Stanley wishes to be a pop singer. However, his fame is quickly usurped by a new rock band, Drimble Wedge and The Vegetation, whose lead singer performs in a hypnotic, monotone voice, expressing disdain for anyone except himself. Margaret and other entranced groupies mob Drimble in excitement.
- Stanley comments in passing that he wishes he were "a fly on the wall" and George turns them both into literal flies on the wall in a morgue, where a police inspector shows Margaret various dead bodies, hoping that she will identify one as Stanley. When the inspector invites Margaret to a vice squad party, Stanley launches an attack on him, only to be felled with bug spray.
- Stanley wishes he and Margaret lived a quiet life in the countryside with children. However, Margaret becomes another man's wife. While deeply in love, Stanley and Margaret's attempt to consummate their affection drives both into emotional agony.
- Determined to frame a wish that George cannot ruin for him, Stanley wishes that he and Margaret loved one another, lived away from the city with no other men around, and would always be together. George turns him into a nun of the Order of Saint Beryl, or the Leaping Beryllians, who glorify their founder by jumping on trampolines.[a] Margaret is also a nun there but refuses to consider consummating their love as they are both women. Stanley attempts to escape the wish by blowing a raspberry, to no effect, and returns to London to confront George.
- When Stanley tries to use his seventh wish, George reveals he has already used it: his trial wish for an ice lolly.
Ultimately, George spares Stanley eternal damnation because he exceeded his quota of 100 billion souls and can afford to be generous. George ascends to Heaven, where God's disembodied voice rejects him again; when he gave Stanley back his soul, George did the right thing with the wrong motive. Thinking he can nullify this by reclaiming Stanley's soul, George tries to stop Stanley from burning his contract but arrives too late.
Back at the restaurant, Stanley, now back to normal, asks Margaret to dinner; despite saying she is busy, she suggests meeting another night, and Stanley smiles. George tries to entice Stanley again, but Stanley says he would rather start a relationship with Margaret his own way. Frustrated, George leaves and threatens revenge on God by unleashing all the tawdry and shallow technological curses of the modern age while God triumphantly laughs.
Cast
edit- Peter Cook as George Spiggot / The Devil
- Dudley Moore as Stanley Moon
- Eleanor Bron as Margaret Spencer
- Raquel Welch as Lust / Lilian Lust
- Alba as Vanity
- Robert Russell as Anger
- Barry Humphries as Envy
- Parnell McGarry as Gluttony
- Danièle Noël as Avarice (as Daniele Noel)
- Howard Goorney as Sloth
- Michael Bates as Inspector Clarke
- Bernard Spear as Irving Moses
- Robin Hawdon as Randolph, harp teacher
- Michael Trubshawe as Lord Dowdy
- Evelyn Moore as Mrs. Wisby
- Lockwood West as Saint Peter
- Valentine Dyall as the voice of God (uncredited)
Soundtrack
editMoore wrote the film's soundtrack, which was performed by the Dudley Moore Trio.[4] The title track, Moore's best known song, was performed within the movie by the fictional psychedelic rock band Drimble Wedge and the Vegetation, featuring Cook's character as the vocalist. The piece has since been covered widely, including performances by Tony Hatch and Nick Cave. Moore recorded several instrumental versions.[5]
Novelisation
editIn 1968 Sphere Books published a novelisation of the Cook and Moore screenplay written by Michael J. Bird.[6]
Reception
editCritical
editUpon its release, reviews for Bedazzled were mixed. Writing for The New York Times in December 1967, Bosley Crowther called it a "pretentiously metaphorical picture" which becomes "awfully precious and monotonous and eventually ... fags out in sheer bad taste."[7] Crowther does, however, compliment Donen for his "colorful and graphic" mise-en-scène.[7] Roger Ebert’s review for the Chicago Sun-Times was far more genteel, comparing the film's humour to that of Bob and Ray. Ebert enthusiastically called Bedazzled's satire "barbed and contemporary ... dry and understated," and overall, a "magnificently photographed, intelligent, very funny film".[8]
A January 1968 review in The Monthly Film Bulletin panned the film, saying, "'Script by Peter Cook, based on an idea by Peter Cook and Dudley Moore.' Well, it wasn't much of an idea in the first place and distinctly shop-soiled at that, but even the Faust legend still has more life in it than this tired farrago. The story is used simply as a series of pegs on which to hang sketches by Dud, Pete and Eleanor Bron, all of whom appear in virtually every scene. The wit is strictly fourth-form: "Don't you know suicide is a criminal offence? You could be hanged for it," says Spiggott when he finds Stanley rope in hand, after his unsuccessful attempt on his own life. The dialogue also has an embarrassing preoccupation with the Deity and keeps making pussyfooted little dabs at blasphemy like a naughty choirboy putting out his tongue at the vicar. The feebleness of the script would matter less if the performances were on a higher level, but the principals appear to have been given their heads and there is no sign of any control by director Stanley Donen The result, inevitably, is self-indulgent, amateurish and dull, and the one genuinely hilarious moment – three nuns on a trampoline – is repeated from an old television show. Perhaps the kindest thing is to put this one down to experience and hope that next time ambition will not run so far ahead of ability."[9]
In a retrospective review from 1989, Leslie Halliwell wrote that Bedazzled was a "camped-up version of Faust which resolves itself into a series of threadbare sketches for the stars. All rather desperate apart from the leaping nuns."[10] In the 1990s, The Virgin Film Guide said "Cook and Moore brilliantly shift from character to character with just a change of voice (not unlike Peter Sellers), and the movie never flags".[11] The Time Out Film Guide 2009 describes the film as a "hit and miss affair" which is "good fun sometimes", but suffers from a "threadbare" plot.[12]
In the 2010s, The Radio Times Guide to Films gave the film 3/5 stars, writing: "From the days when London was swinging and Peter Cook and Dudley Moore were a partnership made in comedy heaven, this Faustian fantasy has Dud as a cook lusting after waitress Eleanor Bron and being granted seven wishes by Pete, as a drawlingly engaging Devil hungry for Dud's soul. A briefly clad, briefly glimpsed Raquel Welch is one of the Deadly Sins, while Barry Humphries turns in a hilarious performance as Envy. Director Stanley Donen settles for quirky comedy instead of razor-sharp satire."[13]
Film aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gives Bedazzled a 74% approval rating based on 38 reviews, with a weighted average of 7.6/10.[14]
Remake
edit20th Century Fox released an American remake by the same name, Bedazzled (2000), featuring Brendan Fraser as Elliot Richards (counterpart to Moore's role) and Elizabeth Hurley as the Devil.
Notes
edit- ^ Expanding on a sketch that previously appeared in Cook and Moore's TV series Not Only... But Also.
References
edit- ^ Solomon (1989), p. 255.
- ^ Solomon (1989), p. 231.
- ^ "Big Rental Films of 1968". Variety. 8 January 1969. p. 15. Note that this figure is a rental accruing to distributors.
- ^ "Bedazzled [Original Motion Picture Soundtrack] - Dudley Moore, The Dudley Moore Trio". AllMusic. Retrieved 15 June 2016.
- ^ Lewis, John (17 April 2015). "Dudley Moore – from film scores to funk". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 June 2016.
- ^ Wilmut, Roger (2003). "Appendix: Chronology of Peter Cook's work". In Cook, Lin (ed.). Something Like Fire: Peter Cook Remembered. Arrow Books. p. 253. ISBN 0-09-946035-1.
Novelization by Michael J. Bird of the film script by PC and Dudley Moore. Published 1968 by Sphere Books.
- ^ a b Crowther, Bosley (11 December 1967). "The Screen: Son of Seven Deadly Sins". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 January 2019.
- ^ Ebert, Roger (30 January 1968). "Bedazzled". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 19 January 2022.
- ^ "Bedazzled". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 35 (408): 2. 1 January 1968. ProQuest 1305838993 – via ProQuest.
- ^ Halliwell, Leslie (1989). Halliwell's Film Guide (7th ed.). London: Paladin. p. 85. ISBN 0586088946.
- ^ The Seventh Virgin Film Guide. London, UK: Virgin Books. 1998. p. 52.
- ^ Pym, John, ed. (2008). Time Out Film Guide 2009. London, UK: Time Out/Ebury. p. 82.
- ^ Radio Times Guide to Films (18th ed.). London: Immediate Media Company. 2017. p. 79. ISBN 9780992936440.
- ^ "Bedazzled (1967)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
Bibliography
edit- Solomon, Aubrey (1989). Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History. The Scarecrow Filmmakers Series. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-4244-1.
External links
edit- Bedazzled at AllMovie
- Bedazzled at the British Film Institute[better source needed]
- Bedazzled at IMDb
- Bedazzled at the TCM Movie Database