- First things first: in Ford vs Ferrari, the cars were less silly-looking.
- More importantly, FvF was a true story, and a period piece, both of which help. It may be a silly way to risk your life, but these are real men who really did it, so they don’t have to convince us that such a thing could or should happen. It really did.
- I think it helps that Christian Bale does in fact die at the end of FvF, as opposed to both racers in F1, each of whom get injured in horrific crashes but return to happily finish out the season. In FvF, I felt like I was being forced to grapple with the “why should they do this?” question, whereas in F1, I felt like I was the only one asking it, which infuriated me.
- I’ve said before that, in the best sports movie, the hero either loses by winning (Downhill Racer) or wins by losing (Rocky). In the main climax of FvF, Bale wins by losing, agreeing to lose the race because he’s overcome his arrogance (then he dies in an epilogue) F1 is a very simplistic winning-by-winning story without a shred of artistry or literary value.
Podcast
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Not on the Best of 2025 List: F1
This movie is astoundingly bad, surely one of the worst ever nominated for Best Picture. As I watched it, I kept thinking, “These men are risking their lives for such silly little races in such silly little cars?” But then I realized that I had just showed my son Ford vs. Ferrari, and I love that movie. Isn’t that also about men risking their lives for silly little races? Why did I have such a different reaction? SPOILERS for both movies.
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Not on the Best of 2025 List: One Battle After Another
Huh? What? This? Really?
Once again, I am baffled by the response to a popular year-end movie. But this time, it isn’t like Everything Everywhere All at Once. In that case I said, “Well, I don’t get this, but I can see why, if I did, I might think it was really awesome.” One Battle After Another is not a case of me not getting the movie. I get it. I just found it really lackluster and off-putting.
This movie is way too bland and way too long, with a big nothing of a performance from DiCaprio. I had read going in that this movie had one of the great car chase scenes of all time. So blah. It was nothing.
The biggest problem with this movie is tone. Every performance feels like it’s in a different movie. We start with Teyana Taylor, who has apparently been told she’s in a Roger Corman or Russ Meyer movie (“This revolutionary is one red hot mama who’ll get you hard before she takes you down!”) Then you get DiCaprio doing a dinner-theater Big Lebowski and I just can’t reconcile the two. Sean Penn and Benecio Del Toro are both fine, but again, don’t feel like they’re in the same movie, and it’s hardly the best performance either has given (Del Toro is so much better in this year’s The Phoenician Scheme) Chase Inifiniti seems like a promising newcomer if you put her in a better movie.
Longtime readers of my year-end lists will remember that I loved The Master and Licorice Pizza (and of course I loved many of his early films) but I don’t love every Paul Thomas Anderson movie, and this definitely seemed to me to be one of his duds.
I suppose if I had to take a lesson from this movie, it’s that anyone can do an American remake of a great foreign film without securing the rights, if you just change and update enough elements. The basic premise here seems to be: “Remember how great The Battle of Algiers was? What if we did an American remake, except in this version, everybody sucks? (And it’s kind of a comedy except not really.)” My answer to that question is, “I’m not interested,” but this movie has been a great success with critics and many moviegoers, so I guess that it was a good idea to base a movie around that question. Find another great old movie and do the same!
Once again, I am baffled by the response to a popular year-end movie. But this time, it isn’t like Everything Everywhere All at Once. In that case I said, “Well, I don’t get this, but I can see why, if I did, I might think it was really awesome.” One Battle After Another is not a case of me not getting the movie. I get it. I just found it really lackluster and off-putting.
This movie is way too bland and way too long, with a big nothing of a performance from DiCaprio. I had read going in that this movie had one of the great car chase scenes of all time. So blah. It was nothing.
The biggest problem with this movie is tone. Every performance feels like it’s in a different movie. We start with Teyana Taylor, who has apparently been told she’s in a Roger Corman or Russ Meyer movie (“This revolutionary is one red hot mama who’ll get you hard before she takes you down!”) Then you get DiCaprio doing a dinner-theater Big Lebowski and I just can’t reconcile the two. Sean Penn and Benecio Del Toro are both fine, but again, don’t feel like they’re in the same movie, and it’s hardly the best performance either has given (Del Toro is so much better in this year’s The Phoenician Scheme) Chase Inifiniti seems like a promising newcomer if you put her in a better movie.
Longtime readers of my year-end lists will remember that I loved The Master and Licorice Pizza (and of course I loved many of his early films) but I don’t love every Paul Thomas Anderson movie, and this definitely seemed to me to be one of his duds.
I suppose if I had to take a lesson from this movie, it’s that anyone can do an American remake of a great foreign film without securing the rights, if you just change and update enough elements. The basic premise here seems to be: “Remember how great The Battle of Algiers was? What if we did an American remake, except in this version, everybody sucks? (And it’s kind of a comedy except not really.)” My answer to that question is, “I’m not interested,” but this movie has been a great success with critics and many moviegoers, so I guess that it was a good idea to base a movie around that question. Find another great old movie and do the same!
Monday, February 23, 2026
Intro to Best Movies of 2025 and Not on the List: Highest 2 Lowest (And a Bit of Meddler, Too!)
Hello! Sorry I’ve been gone for a while. I do intend to return to “What Should’ve Won That Could’ve Won” after we’re done with this series, but it’s really hard to do it knowing I just have five readers who commented. I had sort of decided that if I didn’t get at least ten I would just peter out, but I guess I’ll summon up the effort to continue, as I would like to turn it into a book at some point.
So, in the three weeks leading up to The Oscars, it’s time to look at the Best (American) Movies of 2025. As usual, I’ll start with what I didn’t see: I saw eight of the Oscar nominees, but I didn’t see Bugonia (violence against women) or Secret Agent (I can’t take movies about fascism right now. And anyway, it’s not American.). I hear they’re both great. I also intended to see but never got around to Is This Thing On?, Nouvelle Vague, If I Had Legs I’d Kick You, The Mastermind and Black Bag, among others.
Now, also as usual, we’ll spend the first week looking at things that are Not on The List.
Not on the 2025 List: Highest 2 Lowest
I’ve written about Akira Kurosawa’s High and Low as an underrated movie, though that was a bit of a stretch, as it’s fairly well known and highly regarded. I just wanted to write about it at the time.
It’s the story of a millionaire who gets a call that his son has been kidnapped, only to discover that they actually kidnapped his chauffeur’s son instead, but they demand the money anyway. In the second half, the police get involved and catch the kidnappers.
I loved that movie so much that I tracked down the American police procedural book it adapted (“King’s Ransom” by Ed McBain, one of the “87th Precinct” series) and I loved that so much that I then read most of the 55 books in McBain’s series. I then recommended one for adaptation in the short-lived column I wrote for Scriptshadow.
Finally, in preparation for watching this movie, I decided to check out the first adaptation of “King’s Ransom,” which was an episode of the short-lived “87th Precinct” TV show in 1961. (Nancy Reagan plays the millionaire’s wife!) So now I’ve read the book twice, seen the TV adaptation once, and seen the Japanese adaptation many times. I’m ready to see, finally, the first American feature adaptation of this very American book.
This movie was completely ignored by the Academy, which is understandable, because it has serious script problems, but it’s very well directed by Lee and I would have liked to see him get a nod.
The big problem with this movie is the era in which it was made. Cops are out of fashion. So this is an anti-cop movie. But how do you adapt an Ed McBain book and not have cops as the heroes??
The solution is to have Denzel Washington as David King realize the cops are not going to solve the case, and go out and solve it himself instead. Well, that doesn’t work.
But here’s the thing: I think there’s a way that could have worked. And the movie almost got there.
There’s a rich tradition of movies where a civilian realizes that he can’t rely on the cops and has to solve this himself. But it’s always tricky to pull off. The hero needs a lot of motivation to make that choice.
In this movie, unlike all previous versions, the chauffeur has a criminal record, and I like that change. This naturally causes the cops to wonder if he’s concocted this whole scheme himself to bilk his employer/friend out of millions of dollars. That’s a good wrinkle to add to the story.
But that never pays off. They never arrest the chauffeur. In the movie, Denzel finds a good lead, but the cops are uninterested for no good reason, so Denzel picks up a gun and goes off to do it himself. If they had confidently arrested the chauffeur, then it would be much more believable that they would be totally uninterested in new leads, and it would have genuinely felt like it was all up to Denzel now.
Or just let the cops be the heroes again.
(Of course, you would still have the problem that it’s ridiculous that 70 year old Denzel could beat up 36 year old ASAP Rocky, but that could just be rewritten to involve a gun instead of fists.)
Anyway, it’s still a well-directed movie and worth checking out, but this fundamental script problem basically wrecks it.
So, in the three weeks leading up to The Oscars, it’s time to look at the Best (American) Movies of 2025. As usual, I’ll start with what I didn’t see: I saw eight of the Oscar nominees, but I didn’t see Bugonia (violence against women) or Secret Agent (I can’t take movies about fascism right now. And anyway, it’s not American.). I hear they’re both great. I also intended to see but never got around to Is This Thing On?, Nouvelle Vague, If I Had Legs I’d Kick You, The Mastermind and Black Bag, among others.
Now, also as usual, we’ll spend the first week looking at things that are Not on The List.
Not on the 2025 List: Highest 2 Lowest
I’ve written about Akira Kurosawa’s High and Low as an underrated movie, though that was a bit of a stretch, as it’s fairly well known and highly regarded. I just wanted to write about it at the time.
It’s the story of a millionaire who gets a call that his son has been kidnapped, only to discover that they actually kidnapped his chauffeur’s son instead, but they demand the money anyway. In the second half, the police get involved and catch the kidnappers.
I loved that movie so much that I tracked down the American police procedural book it adapted (“King’s Ransom” by Ed McBain, one of the “87th Precinct” series) and I loved that so much that I then read most of the 55 books in McBain’s series. I then recommended one for adaptation in the short-lived column I wrote for Scriptshadow.
Finally, in preparation for watching this movie, I decided to check out the first adaptation of “King’s Ransom,” which was an episode of the short-lived “87th Precinct” TV show in 1961. (Nancy Reagan plays the millionaire’s wife!) So now I’ve read the book twice, seen the TV adaptation once, and seen the Japanese adaptation many times. I’m ready to see, finally, the first American feature adaptation of this very American book.
This movie was completely ignored by the Academy, which is understandable, because it has serious script problems, but it’s very well directed by Lee and I would have liked to see him get a nod.
The big problem with this movie is the era in which it was made. Cops are out of fashion. So this is an anti-cop movie. But how do you adapt an Ed McBain book and not have cops as the heroes??
The solution is to have Denzel Washington as David King realize the cops are not going to solve the case, and go out and solve it himself instead. Well, that doesn’t work.
But here’s the thing: I think there’s a way that could have worked. And the movie almost got there.
There’s a rich tradition of movies where a civilian realizes that he can’t rely on the cops and has to solve this himself. But it’s always tricky to pull off. The hero needs a lot of motivation to make that choice.
In this movie, unlike all previous versions, the chauffeur has a criminal record, and I like that change. This naturally causes the cops to wonder if he’s concocted this whole scheme himself to bilk his employer/friend out of millions of dollars. That’s a good wrinkle to add to the story.
But that never pays off. They never arrest the chauffeur. In the movie, Denzel finds a good lead, but the cops are uninterested for no good reason, so Denzel picks up a gun and goes off to do it himself. If they had confidently arrested the chauffeur, then it would be much more believable that they would be totally uninterested in new leads, and it would have genuinely felt like it was all up to Denzel now.
Or just let the cops be the heroes again.
(Of course, you would still have the problem that it’s ridiculous that 70 year old Denzel could beat up 36 year old ASAP Rocky, but that could just be rewritten to involve a gun instead of fists.)
Anyway, it’s still a well-directed movie and worth checking out, but this fundamental script problem basically wrecks it.
Thursday, February 12, 2026
New Episode of A Good Story Well Told: Girls Just Want to Have Fun, featuring special guest Grace Lin!
Can a quickie movie adaptation of a song, which didn’t even have the rights to use Cyndi Lauper’s version, actually be a good movie?? Superstar author Grace Lin makes the case, and Jonathan Auxier and I are here for it!
Here’s the link on Spotify or listen here on Apple Podcasts:
Thursday, January 29, 2026
New episode of "A Good Story Well Told" on Hook, with special guest Lindsay Eager!
In this episode, Jonathan Auxier and I welcome our first ever guest, Lindsay Eager, to make the case for Hook, Steven Spielberg’s 1991 movie about a grown-up Peter Pan! Will she be able to convince us that it’s unfairly maligned? Check it out here on Spotify or here on Apple:
Monday, January 19, 2026
What Should've Won That Could've Won: We're a third of the way done! (And please comment Hello!)
Hi everybody!
Well, time has been flying and now we’re a third of the way done with What Should’ve Won That Could’ve Won, at 33 movies in! I thought we should take a moment to look back on the project so far. I also wanted to check in to make sure people are out there reading the series, because nobody comments on blogs anymore. If you’re out there, are you enjoying the series? Anyone still around from when the series began back in 2012 and surprised to see it start up again? Are there any picks that infuriated you that you’re still smarting about? How about the ads, are they funny and worth doing? If you’re reading these, please post a comment below to say hi!
And if you’re new to the blog, welcome! This is a series called What Should’ve Won That Could’ve Won where I declare which movie should have won the Oscar for Best Picture for each of the Academy’s first 100 years. Below, you can click on each line and link to a post where I go through each movie and explain what the nominees were, how hard my decision was, who made the movie, what the story is, whether my pick got any nominations or wins, why it didn’t win (if it lost), and, finally, 4-6 reasons why is should’ve won (or did win).
- 1928: What Did Win: Wings, What Should’ve Won: The Crowd
- 1929: What Did Win: Broadway Melody of 1929, What Should’ve Won: Applause
- 1930: What Should’ve Won and Did Win: All Quiet on the Western Front
- 1931: What Did Win: Cimarron, What Should’ve Won: City Lights
- 1932: What Should’ve Won and Did Win: Grand Hotel
- 1933: What Did Win: Cavalcade, What Should’ve Won: I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang
- 1934: What Should’ve Won and Did Win: It Happened One Night
- 1935: What Should’ve Won and Did Win: Mutiny on the Bounty
- 1936: What Did Win: The Great Ziegfeld, What Should’ve Won: Modern Times
- 1937: What Did Win: The Life of Emile Zola, What Should’ve Won: The Awful Truth
- 1938: What Did Win: You Can’t Take It With You, What Should’ve Won: Holiday
- 1939: What Did Win: Gone with the Wind, What Should’ve Won: The Wizard of Oz
- 1940: What Should Have Won and Did Win: Rebecca
- 1941: What Did Win: How Green Was My Valley, What Should’ve Won: Citizen Kane
- 1942: What Did Win: Mrs. Miniver, What Should’ve Won: To Be Or Not to Be
- 1943: What Should’ve Won and Did Win: Casablanca
- 1944: What Did Win: Going My Way, What Should’ve Won: Double Indemnity
- 1945: What Did Win: The Lost Weekend, What Should’ve Won: Scarlet Street
- 1946: What Did Win: The Best Years of Our Lives, What Should’ve Won: It’s a Wonderful Life
- 1947: What Did Win: Gentlemen’s Agreement, What Should’ve Won: Black Narcissus
- 1948: What Did Win: Hamlet, What Should’ve Won: Fort Apache
- 1949: What Did Win: All the King’s Men, What Should’ve Won: The Third Man
- 1950: What Did Win: All About Eve, What Should’ve Won: Sunset Boulevard
- 1951: What Did Win: An American in Paris, What Should’ve Won: A Place in the Sun
- 1952: What Did Win: The Greatest Show on Earth, What Should’ve Won: High Noon
- 1953: What Did Win: From Here to Eternity, What Should’ve Won: Roman Holiday
- 1954: What Did Win: On the Waterfront, What Should’ve Won: Rear Window
- 1955: What Should’ve Won and Did Win: Marty
- 1956: What Did Win: Around the World in 80 Days, What Should’ve Won: The Court Jester
- 1957: What Did Win: The Bridge on the River Kwai, What Should’ve Won: 12 Angry Men
- 1958: What Did Win: Gigi, What Should’ve Won: Vertigo
- 1959: What Did Win: Ben-Hur, What Should’ve Won: Some Like It Hot
- 1960: What Should’ve Won and Did Win: The Apartment
Thursday, January 15, 2026
New Episode of A Good Story Well Told on Real Steel!
Jonathan Auxier and I continue our Guilty Treasures series, where we (or guests) make the case for critically maligned works! This episode, can Jonathan convince me of the value of the Hugh Jackman robot-boxing movie Real Steel?
Tuesday, January 13, 2026
What Should’ve Won That Could’ve Won: 1960
What the Nominees Were: The Alamo, The Apartment, Elmer Gantry, Sons and Lovers, The Sundowners
Other Movies That Should Have Been Considered: In terms of American films, the two giants in the room here are Psycho and Spartacus. Other great American films include The Magnificent Seven and Comanche Station. Overseas was an embarrassment of riches as well, with Breathless, La Dolce Vita, Shoot the Piano Player and Peeping Tom.
What Should’ve Won and Did Win: The Apartment
How Hard Was the Decision: Very hard. Psycho is obviously a great film, and Spartacus is easily the best of the sword-and-sandal epics. Either of them could have been a shoe-in most other years, but I just couldn’t take away The Apartment’s win.
How Hard Was the Decision: Very hard. Psycho is obviously a great film, and Spartacus is easily the best of the sword-and-sandal epics. Either of them could have been a shoe-in most other years, but I just couldn’t take away The Apartment’s win.
Director: Billy Wilder
Writers: Wilder and I. A. L. Diamond
Stars: Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine, Fred MacMurray, Ray Walston, Edie Adams
Writers: Wilder and I. A. L. Diamond
Stars: Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine, Fred MacMurray, Ray Walston, Edie Adams
The Story: A nebbish named C. C. Baxter lets higher-ups at his insurance company use his apartment to sleep with their mistresses. His boss finds out and demands it stop …because he wants exclusive use of this privilege for himself. It turns out the boss’s mistress is the elevator operator Baxter has a crush on, Miss Kubelik. When the boss jilts her, she attempts suicide in Baxter’s apartment, and he has to nurse her back to health.
Any Other Nominations or Wins: It won Picture, Director, Original Screenplay, Art Direction and Editing. It lost Cinematography, Sound, Actor, Actress, and Supporting Actor for Jack Kruschen, who played the doctor next door.
How It Won: One can understand why Psycho wasn’t nominated (it may have come from an acclaimed director, but it was still a lurid low-budget horror shocker) but Spartacus would seem like a lock for a nomination and win. Maybe the Academy was prejudiced against it because it hired a blacklisted screenwriter? With that out of the way, there was really no competition for this stellar comedy-drama.
How It Won: One can understand why Psycho wasn’t nominated (it may have come from an acclaimed director, but it was still a lurid low-budget horror shocker) but Spartacus would seem like a lock for a nomination and win. Maybe the Academy was prejudiced against it because it hired a blacklisted screenwriter? With that out of the way, there was really no competition for this stellar comedy-drama.
Why It Won:
- Why was this the first comedy to win best picture? I have postulated in the past that the fundamental difference between literature and entertainment is that literature is about unintended consequences and entertainment is about intended consequences. If that definition holds, then this movie is obviously literature, because every action leads to a delightful spiral of consequences nobody foresaw or wanted, each an ironic reversal of anybody’s intentions. The movie ends with both Baxter and Kubelik getting exactly the happy endings they were promised by the supposed bad guy (who leaves his wife for Kubelik and promotes Baxter) …only to realize they never wanted them.
- If Baxter was told to “be a mensch” by someone who fully understands his situation, it would just be good advice and much less interesting. But coming from a man who mistakenly thinks he’s much more of a heel than he is, at a time when Baxter is ironically doing the mostly right thing, it hits so much harder.
- Miss Kubelik’s broken hand mirror changes hands several times, and of course so does Baxter’s key, and each one gives off a big bang every time it’s exchanged. The shot of Baxter seeing his reflection in the broken mirror and realizing what that means (that she’s his boss’s mistress) is one of the most heartbreaking shots in cinema.
- Imagine making Some Like It Hot and then turning out The Apartment just one year later. We have some talented directors working today, but none who can work this fast in the current system. Just think of all the great films we’re losing out on!
- We started this whole project by looking at The Crowd from 1928. This movie’s opening shot is copied from that movie, surely intentionally, and this too is an examination of an average American chewed up by the American Dream. My father once asked me what the point of homage shots are. Don’t they just take you out of the film? I said that the sort of people like me who recognize homage shots are never fully “in” a film, and such shots are a delightful shout-out to the fact that this film is in a certain tradition.
Thursday, January 08, 2026
What Should’ve Won That Could’ve Won: 1959
The Year: 1959
What the Nominees Were: Anatomy of a Murder, Ben-Hur, The Diary of Anne Frank, The Nun’s Story, Room at the Top
Other Movies That Should Have Been Considered: Hitchcock’s most delightful confection North by Northwest, Billy Wilder’s seminal Some Like it Hot, and the wickedly modern romcom Pillow Talk
What Did Win: Ben-Hur
How It’s Aged: It’s bloated. Too long and too impressed by itself, and I’ve never been a fan of Charlton Heston’s wooden acting. The chariot race is a lot of fun, but not worth sitting through the rest of it. And talk about a deus ex machina!
How It’s Aged: It’s bloated. Too long and too impressed by itself, and I’ve never been a fan of Charlton Heston’s wooden acting. The chariot race is a lot of fun, but not worth sitting through the rest of it. And talk about a deus ex machina!
What Should’ve Won: Some Like It Hot
How Hard Was the Decision: Not that hard. Some Like It Hot is the most acclaimed movie of 1959.
How Hard Was the Decision: Not that hard. Some Like It Hot is the most acclaimed movie of 1959.
Director: Billy Wilder
Writers: Wilder and I. A. L. Diamond, based on the French film “Fanfare of Love” written by Robert Thoeren and Michael Logan
Stars: Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon, George Raft, Pat O’Brien, and Joe E. Brown
Writers: Wilder and I. A. L. Diamond, based on the French film “Fanfare of Love” written by Robert Thoeren and Michael Logan
Stars: Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon, George Raft, Pat O’Brien, and Joe E. Brown
The Story: Chigago musicians Joe and Jerry accidentally witness the St. Valentines Day massacre, and have to flee town in drag as members of Sweet Sue’s Society Syncopators (using the names Josephine and Daphne). They both fall for the band’s singer, Sugar, but Joe wins her by adopting a third identity: Oil heir Junior. Daphne, meanwhile, accepts a wedding proposal from a millionaire. When the gangsters show up at the resort, everything gets quite chaotic until the millionaire spirits them all out of town. When Daphne finally reveals she can’t marry him because she’s a boy, he just replies, “Nobody’s perfect.”
Any Nominations or Wins: It won Costume Design but it lost Director, Actor for Lemmon, Adapted Screenplay, Art Direction and Cinematography. And it didn’t even get nominated for picture!
Why It Didn’t Win: It’s tempting to say that biblical epics are a shoe-in, but that’s not true at all, because Ben-Hur was the only one that won. Just chalk this up to the Academy’s distaste for comedy. (And yet, that too feels like an insufficient answer, because Wilder and Lemmon would win Picture the next year with another comedy, but that one had more sour to leaven the sweet, as we’ll soon see.)
Why It Didn’t Win: It’s tempting to say that biblical epics are a shoe-in, but that’s not true at all, because Ben-Hur was the only one that won. Just chalk this up to the Academy’s distaste for comedy. (And yet, that too feels like an insufficient answer, because Wilder and Lemmon would win Picture the next year with another comedy, but that one had more sour to leaven the sweet, as we’ll soon see.)
Why It Should Have Won:
- Sugar says, “I come from this musical family. My mother is a piano teacher and my father was a conductor.” Joe asks, “Where did he conduct?” Sugar replies, “On the Baltimore and Ohio.” (A railroad.) The big question is, does Sugar know she’s being funny when she says that or not? Monroe plays it as if she doesn’t, but then you think about it and realize that of course she does, she’s just deliciously deadpan. As a result, she couldn’t be funnier.
- One of those pieces of movie trivia everyone knows is that Curtis said kissing Monroe was like kissing Hitler, but you’d never guess it. Of course, the whole gag is that Sugar is doing all the work, and boy oh boy is she working those kissing scenes. Despite Curtis’s warning, there’s not a red-blooded, straight American male that wouldn’t take his place.
- One aspect of drag comedy is watching our heroes discover what women have to go through, in terms of unending unwanted physical contact. Josephine says to an indignant Daphne, “Now you know how the other half lives.” As Shakespeare could tell you, drag always gets a laugh, but it also allows you to show things that don’t usually get shown. (There have been two hit Broadway adaptations of this movie. In the more recent one, Daphne was shown as being happily and permanently trans, but then I realized halfway through that they couldn’t end on the line “Nobody’s perfect” because they wouldn’t want to say there was anything less than perfect about her transition. Indeed, the line did not appear, though they did gesture to the fact that it wasn’t there.)
- When I broke down the structure of genres, I said that the second and third quarters of comedies frequently boil down to “success with mask”. Well that would make this the ultimate comedy because Curtis’s character is having success with two masks, for twice the fun. When he’s doing a quick change from Josephine to Junior, he forgets to take his earrings off, and, because they’re sparkly, we’re very aware that he’s running off to his date with them still on. The comedic tension builds and builds until he finally discovers them and whips them off just in time.
- The movie is leisurely paced: The St. Valentine’s Day Massacre, which is the inciting incident, doesn’t happen until 21:04, when it could easily have happened ten minutes earlier. They don’t arrive in Florida until 48:29. All of Wilder’s post Apartment movies (many of which I love) are too bloated, and this one is just pushing the line, but ultimately it justifies its shaggy-dog pacing, because things get quite zippy at just the right points.
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