Vincente Minnelli

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Drucker
Your Future our Drucker
Joined: Wed May 18, 2011 9:37 am

Re: Vincente Minnelli

#26 Post by Drucker » Thu Jan 31, 2019 3:48 pm

I just watched it the other day as well, coincidentally, and got it because of the Minnelli praise around here. An absolutely superb film that uses all two and a half hours perfectly.

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Red Screamer
Joined: Tue Jul 16, 2013 12:34 pm
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Re: Vincente Minnelli

#27 Post by Red Screamer » Mon Oct 25, 2021 5:00 pm

From “Triplets” to The Pirate, it’s clear that Vincente Minnelli has a bizarre sense of humor. Even in this company, his approach to The Long, Long Trailer is unusual, twisting its insipid premise into something grotesque and bleak. It’s one of the few times that Minnelli seems to be actively working against his material. If I were psychoanalytically inclined, I’d suggest that this approach might come from Minnelli’s agonized feelings about his own troubled marriages, but I have something more important to get to: A defense.

It opens like a film noir, with Desi Arnaz running through a heavy downpour, searching a trailer park for his wife. When she’s nowhere to be found, he seeks refuge inside and starts venting to a stranger in the tenor of tragedy. Knowing this film was a comedy, I assumed that when the flashback started, there would be a joke in how his heavy introduction is contrasted with the goofiness of what’s to come. But it turns out that his despairing tone sets the mood appropriately.

There’s a lot of discussion around 50s satires of television, but The Long, Long Trailer goes further than all of them by becoming, in effect, I Love Lucy’s evil doppelgänger. Minnelli, Goodrich, and Hackett bring the cynical undercurrent of Father of the Bride to the forefront here, in that film’s thematic and spiritual sequel. Father of the Bride has affection for its characters and a sweetness that hangs around the edges as money and social obligations get in everybody’s way, bringing them frustration and sadness. But The Long, Long Trailer’s characters have practically nothing else outside of those irritations. Ricky and Lucy become Nicky and Tacy, as the beloved sitcom characters are hollowed out into charmless voids. There’s no warmth between them and their relationship is fueled solely by anger, emotional pressure, and economic transactions. Their world is unescapable and unpopulated as well, as they rarely interact with characters other than each other, and never on a human level.

Minnelli regularly uses wide lenses, emphasizing the space between the characters and their ungainly body language. His mise-en-scène is unexpectedly ambitious, perhaps out of a disdain for the material. Father of the Bride’s famously cluttered long takes are reprised in The Long, Long Trailer’s first half, but they become even busier and more prolonged, with the inkling of violence amped way up. Later, when the trailer gets stuck in the mud, the scene is shot in canted angles, chiaroscuro Technicolor, and slapstick that feels like it’s playing out in slow motion. It’s as if Minnelli took Father of the Bride’s expressionistic nightmare segment and its waking world of gentle social embarrassment and fused them together into a Frankenstein’s monster of horror-burlesque. For those who think this discomfort is unintentional, I offer the scene of the couple driving up mountain as evidence to the contrary. It’s glacially paced, with stunning diagonal compositions. There’s no music, just the whine of the car as Lucy and Desi trade empty, looping small talk. I guess the joke is supposed to be that they’re both scared of the car crashing down the side of the mountain and neither of them will acknowledge it. But Ball and Arnaz deliver their lines so flatly, with long, strained pauses that render their dialogue nearly incoherent, that the scene bears less resemblance to a screwball comedy than to a numbing exchange in a Harold Pinter play. It’s a masterful sequence—and completely unwatchable.

Throughout The Long, Long Trailer, what passes for jokes on paper are subverted into escalations of humiliation and pain, with few of them actually seeming to be played for laughs. In some ways, it’s a precursor to The Heartbreak Kid and cringe comedy, but the film has its own weird, mortifying effects. Minnelli turns sitcoms inside out by making their cheerful cynicism and materialism the outlook of its characters while the world of the film, in contrast, has the weight, exasperation, and emptiness of a cruel existential joke. Some kind of essential viewing.

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Matt
Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 12:58 pm

Re: Vincente Minnelli

#28 Post by Matt » Mon Oct 25, 2021 8:44 pm

Fantastic post! I’ve always hated this film but am still somehow always drawn into it when it’s on, and now I understand why.

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otis
Joined: Mon Aug 08, 2005 11:43 am

Re: Vincente Minnelli

#29 Post by otis » Mon Apr 17, 2023 4:06 am

Does anyone know if the transfers of The Cobweb, Tea and Sympathy and The Reluctant Debutante on the French Trésors Warner DVDs are the same as on the US Warner Archive discs? Are the French discs pressed?

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Ann Harding
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Re: Vincente Minnelli

#30 Post by Ann Harding » Mon Apr 17, 2023 10:44 am

otis wrote:
Mon Apr 17, 2023 4:06 am
Does anyone know if the transfers of The Cobweb, Tea and Sympathy and The Reluctant Debutante on the French Trésors Warner DVDs are the same as on the US Warner Archive discs? Are the French discs pressed?
As I borrowed those from a local library, I can tell you the discs are pressed. But I cannot compare them with the WA. I guess they use the same master + French subs.

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otis
Joined: Mon Aug 08, 2005 11:43 am

Re: Vincente Minnelli

#31 Post by otis » Mon Apr 17, 2023 1:16 pm

Thanks, Ann/Christine - I'll give them a try!

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domino harvey
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Re: Vincente Minnelli

#32 Post by domino harvey » Mon Dec 11, 2023 12:11 pm

From Sight and Sound (Summer 1962):

Image

Image

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Maltic
Joined: Sat Oct 10, 2020 1:36 am

Re: Vincente Minnelli

#33 Post by Maltic » Mon Dec 11, 2023 1:54 pm

"Well, I met them a long time ago, before they had all started directing"

I've been wondering when it was, exactly, that various people got word in Hollywood. Hawks also talked about meeting the French, who knew his films frame-by-frame and so on, and of course there was Hitchcock-Truffaut in 1962, but it might be that Minnelli was out early.

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FrauBlucher
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Re: Vincente Minnelli

#34 Post by FrauBlucher » Wed Jan 10, 2024 7:56 pm

With WAC releasing Cabin in the Sky at the end of the month, do folks on here think this is a throwaway Minnelli or much more than that?

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domino harvey
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Re: Vincente Minnelli

#35 Post by domino harvey » Wed Jan 10, 2024 9:28 pm

It’s good— better than other similar films, and Rochester is fun (and has the best musical number). But I’d wait for it to be $8

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