Love, Oh Careless,
Love-With Diane Keaton and Woody Allen’s “Annie Hall” In Mind
DVD Review
By Associate Editor
Alden Riley
Annie Hall, starring
Diane Keaton, Woody Allen,
It is funny how some
film assignments I get from my boss,
Sandy Salmon, come into
being. I mentioned in a recent review of the classic female vs. male clash of
wills and style George Cukor’s Adam’s Rib
starring Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy that he wished me to watch such
strong independent lead women’s roles from the 1930s and 1940s to prove out his
thesis that female actors such as Hepburn were able to turn in great
performances with style and panache without appearing to be man-eaters. Or not
too much anyway in contrast to many female-driven leads today where to avoid
such designations the
story-line has to bend
over backwards cutting the heart out of such efforts. I had mentioned that in my
review of the current Wonder Woman as
an example and that one phrase started Sandy’s wheels rolling.
The genesis of the film
under review, Woody Allen’s masterly romantic comedy Annie Hall is very different. It is based on two factors, the first
stemming from a BBC radio news broadcast that Sandy heard on his way to work
one day about a survey that had been done naming the 150 greatest comedy films
of all times. Annie Hall had been
named number three on that list. The second my answer that I had never seen the
film, had no particular interest in Woody Allen’s logjam of films after having
seen a few from his early 2000s production (except Blue Jasmine but that was carried by the performance of Cate
Blanchett more than Woody’s plotline and dialogue), and tended away from
reviewing romantic comedies. Naturally that put fury red in Allen devotee
Sandy’s eyes (that “devotee” status which in turn he had gotten from his film
critic friend Sam Lowell, former film editor here, when they were both at the American Film Gazette).
So here I am grinding it
out on this one. Pleasantly grinding it out on a film that still seems fresh
today some thirty plus years after its premier. As my companion who was
watching the film with me said “it has aged well.” Agreed. I am not sure where
I would put it in the pantheon of cinematic great comedies but it certainly
belongs among the low numbers, no question about that.
Of course as with many
Woody Allen vehicles the art is in the dialogue and wit and not so much the
plotline. At the time of production Woody was well known for his New York
Jewish kid comic routine in many such film efforts. Annie Hall is in line with that persona from the neurotic self-effacing
guy who can’t seem to “get it” about romance after two failed marriages to two
bright star Jewish women and starts out once again on the roady road to love-to
romance. Although this time with a classic WASP woman from Wisconsin Annie Hall
of the title played by then paramour Diane Keaton as an aspiring nightclub
performer (check out her stand-up performance of It Seems Like Old Times which brought a tear to the eye of my
viewing companion). Still Woody can’t seem to get the hang of modern romance
and he loses Annie not only to another man but to another coast-the dreaded
enemy Left Coast-LA. The film is rounded out with every important New York
intellectual referential tidbit from the period. Sandy said he howled when
Woody made a cutting comment to his second wife about two New York-based
high-end intellectual publications of the day- Commentary and Dissent
saying they had merged into a new magazine Dysentery.
Sandy said “ouch” but I was, maybe not being from New York or old enough to
remember those publication was non-plussed by that one although many of the other
references were very funny.
Like I said I can for
once agree with Sandy and also can truthfully say I was not be put off by yet
another “have to do” Sandy assignment this time. This film deserves its low
number on the greatest comedy list.
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