Take A Walk
On The Wild Side- The Film Adaptation Of John O’Hara’s “Butterfield 8”(1960)-A
Film Review
DVD Review
By Sam Lowell
Butterfield 8,
starring Elizabeth Taylor, Laurence Harvey, based on the novel by John O’Hara,
1960
No question
in his day, the time from the late 1920s with the acclaimed Appointment At Samarra until the 1950s
anyway, the novelist John O’Hara had the fun, foibles, loves, and craziness of
the upper classes of the day down pat. Not the high-end Rockefeller clannish types
but that level just below, the strivers of Wall Street and industry. Since that
time though his star has been eclipsed as literary fashions have changed and he
has been relegated to the “dead white guy” pile. But for a slice of life about
how the other half lived (the other half not born on the “wrong side of the tracks”),
what made them tick and how they tumbled down the hill in the middle third of
the 20th century you could find no better interpreter. Not bad for a
kid from Pottsville, Pa.
Which brings
us to the film adaptation of his 1934 novel Butterfield
8 updated to the late 1950s from the look of the automobiles on the streets.
But updated or not the story line is the same. The strivings of a “from hunger”
woman, Gloria played by then I think the reigning Hollywood beauty queen
Elizabeth Taylor, to get out from under the best way she could using her beauty
to match up with well-funded gentleman callers. In the argot of the time she was
a “party girl”, a call girl for whoever paid the freight through the escort service
Butterfield 8 which gives the book and film its title.
Of course
those who can pay the freight and who are feeling frisky or lonesome for a serious
sexy companion are guys who are married and feeling trapped. That is the case
with the main gentleman caller here, Wes, played by Laurence Harvey. He is a from
“hunger guy” who landed on his feet by marrying a factory owner’s daughter. And
like most “from hunger” guys was made to go through hoops just to keep up appearances
without any real power (or much to do except hit the bars and chase Gloria). So
we witness what started out as a short-haul tryst complete with cash left on the
mantle which moved onto a steamed up romance between the two. Gloria finally decides
that despite her great sexual appeal, her flirty “life of the party” ways, and
her ability to make guys come hither with a look (or go into deep freeze when she
is done with a guy) she has found love.
Like a lot
of O’Hara’s many novels there is a tragic ending here not long after Gloria has
her epiphany. The couple had a serious spat over Gloria’s continued flirting.
Wes crosses some line that could never be taken back despite his willingness to
divorce his rich wife and take his chances out on the streets. In the end
although Wes would not give her up Gloria flees and he followed in a high speed
chase-she is fatally injured and he heads back to “find himself” and see if he
can salvage his marriage. This melodrama is done is typical early 1960s style
where Gloria “profession” is left unstated and only revealed by innuendo unlike
today where the whole thing would be more openly stated. A fair film and period
piece.
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