Once Again On Howard Hughes-Warren
Beatty’s Rules Don’t Apply (2016)- A Film Review
DVD Review
By Sam Lowell
Rules Don’t Apply, starring Warren
Beatty, Lily Collins, Alden Ehrenreich, and a cast of many familiar faces from
by-gone days, 2016
Billionaires these days are a dime a
dozen, well maybe not that cheap but they are relatively more common than fifty
or sixty years ago when a billion dollars was more than just walking around
money. And like today most of the serious billionaires kept a low profile. But
a guy like Howard Hughes (and today a guy President-elect Trump) liked to keep
his name before the public if not his face. That simply premise is what drives
this Warren Beatty-directed and written story line in the film under review, Rules Don’t Apply, although one could
argue that the presence of the huge figure of Hughes was just a cover for a
classic romantic comedy about the on and off again romance of a couple of
underlings in his organization with a little bit of drama about Hughes’ various
financial doings and exploits thrown in. (By the way it had been a while since
Beatty strutted his stuff in front of and behind the camera making himself
AARP-worthy in the meantime-including the cover of their monthly magazine.)
Let’s run out the string. In 1964 (who
knows maybe earlier as well) there were serious rumors about Howard Hughes’
mental stability and his physical whereabouts (and of course if the former were
true the fate of his companies whose stock prices would be seriously affected would
come into play). The then notorious recluse was nowhere to be found and there
was all kinds of speculation centered on a tell-all book published about Hughes,
played by Warren Beatty himself here, and his condition. That is merely
backdrop though to a flashback to 1958 and the start of his relationship with
two underlings Frank (Alden Ehrenreich) who started out as a driver for his
various “starlets” and who eventually became a trusted advisor and Maria (Lily
Collins) a farm fresh beauty looking to make it in the bright lights of
Hollywood and who had caught Hughes’ attention.
Naturally Maria is bound and determined
to meet Mister Hughes and become a star-if she had the metal. Of course Howard
is mostly unavailable and hiding from something (maybe the ghost of his father
who left him the original fortune that he built on). But Frank as driver and
Maria as passenger are thrown together and everything point to some satin sheet
time. Except the Hughes rule which did apply that no employees were to mingle
with his “starlets.” Except that Frank was “married” to some hometown sweetie
he grew up with. Except as well that Maria was a virgin incarnate. So for a
while they played cat and mouse and finally when they do try to consummate
their love there was some interference.
That virgin status didn’t stop Maria
from driving for the main chance-old Howard who really was at least in the film
going off the deep end. The long and short of it was she and Howard had a one
night stand- a one night stand that had Maria getting pregnant. And had her
tearfully leaving Hollywood to go back to her normal life, maybe back to
college. Meanwhile Frank, having brushed off his hometown sweetie also had been
brushed off by Maria, and so he dedicated himself to moving up the food chain
in the Hughes organization (an organization where you never knew from one
moment to the next where you stood and so not for the faint-hearted dealing
with the fickle Hughes). And trying to get Hughes interested in a middle income
housing project he had dreams of putting together to make his own fortune.
Then we flip back to 1964 and the
mystery of where Hughes was and what his mental capacity was. He would pass that
test with flying colors. But here is where the real deal comes in, the old boy
meets girl story that had been thwarted for a while. Maria shows up, son in
tow, to confront Howard with his progeny. But really to take up with Frank
again if you ask me. Warren, nice use of the Howard Hughes legend to make your
little romantic comedy. Yeah, he was a big figure and you were right to glide
off of his charisma and mystery all boxed in a classic Hollywood boy meets girl
go round. Worth watching-no question.
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