- 
Erin a.k.a. EB brings up EVITA (1997)
 Grey Zone 1 presents an article on SAMBO
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- Al Dekker:
- 
 Yes! Our Smithee working in the musical, war, and exploitation genres;
 and yet each film has that signature style we all love. Thanks, Erin and
 GZ, for your fine research.
- ngraham:
- 
 It's so hard to pick, but I think you're neglecting a short-lived but
 important interlude in his career. I'm speaking of course of 
SMITHEE'S MACBETH
, which had a brief run at the Thalia in 1977. Yvonne de Carlo
 played Lady MacBeth, Juliet Lewis in her first screen appearance played the
 baby she dashed against the wall in a magnificent splatter sequence (and I
 think it explains a lot that Lewis performed her own stunts), and the
 ever-popular Smithee staples Patrick McGoohan--as MacBeth, and John Saxon--
 in a virtuoso turn, playing several supporting roles. The film was further
 distinguished by its casting of Michael MacLiammoir, who had starred in
 Orson Welles' OTHELLO and made something of a
 comeback in  WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH HELEN? (1971) .
 Smithee intended to
 out-Welles Welles, asking the cast to deliver their lines in unintelligible
 Scottish accents, and it really worked magnificently. He also adopted a
 monochromatic red color scheme for the film that is nothing if not creepy,
 although the colors have already faded and all the prints you see now (and
 they don't pop up much, maybe on late night TV once in a while, I hear
 William K. Everson has 15 prints) look like they've been dipped in red
 clay. His most scholarly and, I think, most affecting effort. Yvonne de
 Carlo breaks your heart, she really does. It is, at the core, a love story.
 
- Grey Zone 1:
- 
 Indeed. When Smithee's work breaks one's heart, it stays broken.
 I bow to the fine scholarship of Ms. Graham in regards to this criminally
 neglected, and so often imitated work.
- toxic shakti:
- 
 And let us not forget Smithee's radical version of 
KING LEAR, starring
 Jerry Lewis in a dual role as Edward and the Fool. Maybe Jer thought he was
 reprising his split-personality number in THE NUTTY PROFESSOR, but Smithee
 coaxed the Frogs' Fave into depths of characterization that he would not
 approach again until Scorsese's THE KING OF COMEDY. When Jerry, as the
 Fool, says, "Gosh, Mr. Lear. That Reagan!! She took away you-your
 knights...and EVERYTHING!" one at last realizes the elemental pathos of
 Lear's situation. The film's only drawback is that Jerry eclipses Keenan
 Wynn's more stolid Lear, who does more slow-burn fuming than actual
 ranting. (Granted, too, Wynn seems to be reprising his star turn in the
 legendary SHACK OUT ON 101). Mamie Van Doren holds her own as Goneril,
 though: by always shooting her from below, Smithee gave her breasts the
 appearance of seige weapons. And Barbara Steel gave a soupcon of authentic
 English grandeur to Cordelia, particularly during her death-by-flaying
 scene
 Once again, Smithee proves himself equal to the most demanding material,
 deviating from the strictures of mere fidelity in order to rediscover the
 bleak heart of Shakespeare's vision
- Al Dekker:
- 
 Yes! Exceptional observations, Mr. Shakti.
- nemo:
- 
 Smithee's Ealing productions (
MRS. EVANS' BLEPHAROPLASTY (1952)
 and DON'T I KNOW IT! (1954))
 featured cameos from the young Peter Sellers and
 the even younger Paul and Mike  McCartney as tap dancing siamese twins and
 their wacky surgeon father (MRS. E.'S B. )
 and Sellers again as a dustman with a
 very peculiar 
problem (DON'T I KNOW IT). Musical sequences featuring the harmonica
 of Goon Show regular Ray Ellington were supposed to draw in the crowds,
 but people were just not in a movie mood in England in those years.
- x. trapnel:
- 
 One is rarely in the mood for a Smithee film, and when one is the matter
 is probably best taken care of either through strong medication or the brief
 application of a large mallet.
- Al Dekker:
- 
 Regarding the Smithee Ealing films, I recall that even more of a thud
 resounded with 
THE WRONG WIDGIT (1955),
 the caper comedy with Herbert Lom
 in eight roles.
 Smithee's free adaptation of 
ALICE IN WONDERLAND (1967)
 is another
 interesting case from the British period. One couldn't ask for a better
 cast: Julie Christie in the title role, James Fox and Dirk Bogarde as the
 March Hare and the Mad Hatter, Ruth Gordon as the Queen of Hearts, Mick
 Jagger as the Mock Turtle; but everyone just looks confused. The director's
 continual references to '60s London culture---day-glo set design,
 marijuana at the tea party, "light show" effects during Christie's
 shrinking/growing scenes, the Queen's soldiers as fascist thugs in
 playing-card motifed police uniforms---grow tiresome after 30 minutes. This
 initially was to be a Joseph Losey project---what a different film that
 would have been.
 
- ngraham:
- 
 I'll say!
 And what a different film Norman Jewison's JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR was from
 Smithee's Christian-musical-bandwagon-jumping-ripoff effort of the
 following year (1974), 
THE VOICE OF ONE CRYING IN THE DESERT: JOHN THE
 JAZZMAN BAPTIST
, starring Ben Vereen. I'll go ahead and quote the lyrics of
 the title song (no one took credit for the music and lyrics of course,
 and it was thought to have been taken from Andrew Lloyd Weber's
 wastebasket by Smithee's assistant while Weber was writing SUPERSTAR) to
 save you the trouble--I think we've all had them stuck in our heads at
 inopportune moments. 
 
 Crying crying! Crying crying!
 Oh ho ho I'm cryin' in the desert
 
 Weeping oh no I'm not weeping
 Hear my cry! I beseech you!
 
 Coming coming! Coming coming!
 Oh Lord Oh Lord he's coming
 To bring you his ever lovin'
 Ever lovin' ever lovin' ever lovin'
 Bringing you his ever lovin' love!
 
 
 Predictably, Maltin gives it one star and calls it "turgid," but he's
 overlooking scenes that are downright visionary--I'm referring of course to
 the dream sequences in which John the Jazzman discusses man's future with
 a brontosaur, and another in which he sings a searching duet with Charles
 Darwin (John Gielgud) about doubting creationism. If the 70s was the decade
 that made a hippie of Jesus, Smithee was the iconoclast who asked
 broader theological and philosophical questions. And without losing
 one iota of entertainment value. I'm with Kael on this one anyway--she
 called it "a valentine to the New Testament."
 
- Grey Zone 1:
- 
 My God--I'd forgotten entirely about JOHN THE JAZZMAN BAPTIST.
 There are treasures here.