The Real Peter Sellers?

Actor Peter Sellers was famous for saying he had no personality of his own.  Somehow, he stepped into his vast array of characters like a chameleon.  That’s what he wanted us to think.

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Based on the novel “I Want to Eat You” by Ernest Gebler.

The motion picture “Hoffman” (1970) may come closest to the real Peter Sellers, if there was one.

PLOT.  “Hoffman” is the story of a 40ish man who blackmails a 20ish girl into living him with him for a week.  Sellers as Hoffman has obsessed over “Miss Smith” (Sinead Cusak) for some time.  In a telling scene, he mentions how he once asked her out, after which she told the other girls in the office who laughed at him in the elevator.  Hoffman has agreed to respect her during their forced time together in exchange for an “erotic encounter”.  Miss Smith is aghast at the prospect of living with a strange man.  But then, why does she?  To save her boyfriend/fiancé who isn’t worth saving?

Will they or won’t they?

In Peter Sellers real life, he self-obsessed about his image, grew weary of playing the bumbling fool and wanted to be taken seriously as an actor.  It didn’t help that he was suffering, most likely from manic-depression.

He would rise to the heights of fame, then plummet to a long string of box-office failures.

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The multi-dimensional Peter Sellers played three roles in “Dr. Strangelove: Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb” (1964)

“The Bobo” (1967.) A commercial and artistic flop.

In “Hoffman”, we see the melancholy Sellers who tries to convince the girl (and us) of who he really is.  It’s surprising he would take such a role and not surprising he would ignore it, later on, not wanting to talk about it.  It’s simply too close to the truth, too close to finding out who the real Peter Sellers was and he didn’t want it.  Consequently, he attempted to buy the original negative and destroy it.  Fortunately, EMI’s contract forced it to be released.

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The tragedy of the lonely man.

Audiences didn’t respond well to “Hoffman”.  They weren’t ready for an “unfunny” sad comedy.  It is barely known of except by Sellers fans.

Throughout Peter Sellers career, comedy remained foremost – the safe choice.  In the end, there was a comeback with “Being There” (1979), a deserved Best Actor Oscar nomination, which he should have won.  Death came from a heart attack in the following year.

Peter Sellers as Chance the gardener “Chauncey Gardiner” in “Being There”

“Hoffman” is available on a new 2022 Blu-ray disc, (and as a DVD) on “The Peter Sellers Collection.”

Hoffman (Limited Edition)Hoffman [DVD]

Text ©2022 – EricReports

Last Movie Roles – Part 1

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Clark Gable and Marilyn Monroe

The Misfits (1961.)  A group of “losers” discover the meaning of life near Reno, NV.  Troubled production.  Monroe and husband/screenwriter Arthur Miller divorced immediately after.  Clark Gable died from a heart attack before it hit theaters; M.M. died in ’62 from a drug overdose; possible suicide.

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Elvis Presley

Elvis on Tour (1972.)  Rock star Elvis Presley finally found his niche doing documentaries, this being his follow-up  to “Elvis – That’s the Way It Is” (1970.)  Amazing use of split screens; well edited by then newcomer Martin Scorsese.  Won a Golden Globe for “Best Documentary”.  Elvis died five years later in Graceland.

James Dean

Giant (1956.)  James Dean was the hottest new star in Hollywood when his aluminum sports car smashed itself into oblivion on 9/30/55.  He received his second Oscar nomination for Best Actor as Jett Rink, Rock Hudson’s nemesis in “Giant”.

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Jayne Mansfield

The Wild, Wild World of Jayne Mansfield (1968.)  1950’s blonde bombshell Jayne Mansfield still managed to earn a living doing nightclub appearances and independent films.  This “mondo”-style documentary (filmed shortly before her death) is narrated by a female impersonator and ends with her car accident.

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Picture taken in “death car”.

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June 29, 1967

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Sharon Tate

12 + 1 (aka The 13 Chairs, 1969.)  Nearly unknown European comedy starring Vittorio Gassman and Sharon Tate.  Not particularily funny and the two lead actors didn’t like each other.  Miss Tate was murdered on Aug. 9, 1969 by the Manson “family”.  (Written about in “Helter-Skelter” – 1971.)

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Sharon as “Pat”.

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Dorothy Stratten

They All Laughed (1981.)  Model/actress Dorothy Stratten was just starting out – this being her third picture after “Autumn Born” and “Galaxina”.  1980 seemed like her year – she was chosen as “Playboy’s Playmate of the Year,” until she got caught up in a love triangle with director Peter Bogdanovich and her husnand/manager Paul Snider.  Snider killed her and himself on Aug. 14, 1980, probably while they were discussing their impending divorce.  Cause of death:  a shotgun blast to the face.

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Dorothy with Peter Bogdanovich

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Paul Snider

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Mame (1974.)  Based on the famous Broadway musical, starring Lucille Ball, who most know can’t sing.  ’74 was also the year “Here’s Lucy” (1968-1974) was cancelled.  A bad luck year for that “wacky redhead”.  Lucy died on 4/26/89 from a torn artery.

The Fiendish Plot of Dr. Fu Manchu (1980.)  Actor Peter Sellers had finally found fortune again in the mid-to-late 1970’s.  (In the “Pink Panther” film series and as Chauncey Gardiner in “Being There” (1979.)  He completed his life’s work with this strange, obscure comedy which ends with him doing an Elvis impersonation.  Mr. Sellers died from a heart attack on July 24, 1980.

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Laurel & Hardy in “Utopia” (1950.)  Weird French comedy, badly dubbed, starring that great comedy team Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy.  Language barrier further complicated this misunderstood venture.  A few scenes shine through.  Mr. Laurel died from a heart attack on 2/23/65.  Mr. Hardy died from cerebral thrombosis on 8/7/57.

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Larry Fine, Moe Howard, and Joe DeRita

Kook’s Tour (1970.)  Rarely seen “3 Stooges” pilot of them touring the countryside.  Unique travelogue could’ve worked, except the “middle stooge” Larry Fine suffered from a stroke and was placed in a retirement home.

VIVIEN LEIGH B&W SHIP OF FOOLS PHOTO OR POSTER | Vivien ...  Vivian Leigh in “Ship of Fools” (1965.)  Former Academy award winner for “Gone with the Wind” and “A Streetcar Named Desire”.  Her final award was the “L’Etoile de Cristal for “Ship of Fools”.  (lead performance)  Leigh died from tuberculosis on July 8, 1967.

 

Article’s Text © 2016 – ERN – All Rights Reserved.

Hollywood Fails: Unreleased or Unfinished Films You Will Never See

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tumblr_m3yqqpQQPy1rve0ppo1_500 THE DAY THE CLOWN CRIED – (1971-1974)  Jerry Lewis debacle, some of it funded with his own money, based on the true story of a Jewish Holocaust clown allowed to live if he lures children to their deaths in the Nazi gas chambers.  Never completed.  Lewis has disowned it.  The master negative is still being held in a Swedish vault.

9781250007087  THE OTHER SIDE OF THE WIND – (1970’s)  Nearly completed by master director Orson Welles, until Iranian funding was withdrawn.  (Iran fell to the Ayatollah in 1979.)  Costar and biographer Peter Bogdanovich offered to complete it, but was blocked by Welles’ heir.  Previewed during the 1975 AFI awards.

7394020_3 SOMETHING’S GOT TO GIVE – (1962)  Troubled production plagued by the unraveling mental and physical health of its star, Marilyn Monroe.  Studio fired MM midway, then tried to replace her with Lee Remick.  Costar Dean Martin refused to go on.  MM rehired on August 1; died on August 5 from a drug overdose.  Directed by George Cukor.

default_ce_kubrick_napoleon_poster_0911061347_id_308650 NAPOLEON – (1969-70)  Famed director Stanley Kubrick spent a year in pre-production for this epic…until it was cancelled by MGM.  The fading studio had decided to cut back on big-budget films and rebuild itself as a Vegas casino-resort.

thEYZI6TWM  ARYAN PAPERS – (early 1990’s)  Another Kubrick cancellation.  Steven Spielberg’s “Schindler’s List” happened to come out during this same time period.  It was felt that too many Holocaust films could not succeed financially.  Based on the novel “Wartime Lies” by Louis Begley.

thUJ7IUHI3  ALFRED HITCHCOCK’S KALEIDISCOPE – (1967)  Director Alfred Hitchcock, intrigued by the French New Wave and Antionini’s “Blow-Up” (1966), began work on this avant-guarde, cinema-verite movie until Universal replaced it with the cold-war spy drama “Topaz” (1969.)

Dark-Blood_River-Phoenix  DARK BLOOD – (1993/2012)  Briefly released in an unfinished form in 2012.  Production stopped when star River Phoenix died from a drug overdose in 1993.  Phoenix plays a desert survivalist.

8d747f271efccaba23a53fb8fe333074 THE RAVAGERS – (1970)  Fifth of the Matt Helm film series was cancelled due to the waning popularity of spy films and the murder of its costar Sharon Tate (who was scheduled to reprise her role as Freya Carlson from “The Wrecking Crew.”)

 thLORGMAP1 ROMANCE OF THE PINK PANTHER – (1981)  Meant to be the sixth Peter Sellers-Inspector Clouseau comedy.  Partially written by Sellers himself.  Never filmed; Sellers died on July 24, 1980.  The “Pink Panther” film series continued on with different actors including Ted Wass, Roberto Benini and Steve Martin.  (Dudley Moore wisely turned it down.)

Text © 2016 – EricReports

EricReports Looks at the Movies

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Blow Out  (1981)

Sound man (John Travolta) accidently records a political assassination.  Can he prove it?  Loosely based on the Ted Kennedy-Chappaquiddick “accident” and other political deaths (John Kennedy, Nelson Rockefeller.)  Costars Nancy Allen as a witness who’s in too deep for her own good.  John Lithgow is the loose-cannon hit-man.  Topical Brain De Palma thriller that was ignored by the public.

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Nancy Allen

 

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Being There  (1979)

Political fable on how a mentally-challenged man takes Washington, D.C. by storm, when his simple-minded quips on gardening are mistaken for profound thought.  Superb performance by Peter Sellers as “Chance” aka Chauncey Gardiner.  He should’ve won the Oscar that year.  Based on the book by Jerzy Kosinski.  Directed by Hal Ashby.

Peter Sellers

Peter Sellers

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Willard  (1971)

Lonely young man is befriended by rats.  Willard uses them to exact revenge on his enemies.  Cult film spawned a sequel and a remake; however, the original is still the best.  Stars Bruce Davison, Sondra Locke and Ernest Borgnine.  Based on “Ratman’s Notebooks” by Stephen Gilbert.

Ben the rat

Ben the rat

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Be careful what you wish for.

Wishing Stairs  (2003)

Best of the Korean-Asian horror genre.  An outside stairway, leading to a girl’s school for ballet, has an invisible stair on top.  If it appears, your wish will be granted – but, with unexpected results.  Mostly a cast of young Korean actresses, all impressive, especially Park Han-byul as Kim So-hee.

Park Han-byul as Kim So-hee

Park Han-byul as Kim So-hee

Directed by Jan-yeon Yun.  Written by Soyoung Lee.  Outstanding in every sense of the word.

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The Love God?  (1969)

Don Knotts stars as Abner Peacock IV, owner/editor of a bird magazine, which is taken over by gangsters and turned into a porno magazine.  Unwittingly, he is transformed into the next Hugh Hefner.  Almost surreal; the courtroom scene where Don Knotts is called “a filthy and perverted little degenerate” will permanently blow your mind.  Flopped when it opened – director Nat Hiken died of a heart attack.

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The Comic  (1969)

Touching look at the rise and fall of Billy Bright (Dick Van Dyke), a silent-film star who fades into obscurity.  Films about losers seldom connect with the public.  Stay with this one until the conclusion.  You won’t forget it.  Costars Michelle Lee and Mickey Rooney.  Directed by Carl Reiner.

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Night and Fog (Nuit et brouillard)  (1955)

French documentary on the Holocaust.  Focuses on Hitler’s final solution and his WWII concentration camps.  Masterful narration, although the film speaks for itself.  Unbearable for some to watch.  What have we learned since then?  Not a damn thing.

Directed by Alain Resnais.  Written by Jean Cayrol.

Holocaust victims

Holocaust victims

Reviews – Text Copyright 2015 – EricReports