In case you’ve been hanging out in a cave without any media
access and only just now woke up to check the blogosphere, let me
point out that today is Saint Valentine’s Day, the
“you-vill-be-romantic-und-you-vill-enchoy-it” vortex of chocolate,
jewelry and other forms of conspicuous consumption.
For something a little off the beaten rose-path, you could settle
in with a bottle of bubbly and an elegant, witty romantic comedy.
To get a film with those two particular modifiers, you’re going to
have to go back several decades, either chronologically or stylistically. Films
like Friends with Benefits and To All the Boys I’ve Loved
Before may have some persons who are quite a treat to the eye, but
it’s hard to really give a toss about them and their predicaments.
Go back to My Man Godfrey (1936; although the
1957 version with David Niven is acceptable), with William Powell and Carole
Lombard. The premise may be far-fetched, but you just can’t get enough of the
dialogue. (The underlying premise of the absurdly wealthy living cheek-by-jowl
with the "forgotten men" laid low by the (last) Big Depression lends
some bite to the fluff.)
Ditto The Thin Man (1934); Powell again and Myrna
Loy. Plus—Nick and Nora drink like they just got out of Prohibition. Oh, wait...
Still on a Powell-Loy roll, Libeled Lady (1936)
also includes Spencer Tracy and a very young and extremely funny Jean Harlow.
Powell trying to bluff his way through fly-fishing is a
treat; and the chemistry between him and Loy is
electric.
Then there’s His Girl Friday (1940), in which
Rosalind Russell shoots out some of the best and fastest dialogue in film
history as she tries to fend off Cary Grant and get a scoop on an
escaped death-row prisoner.
Ninotchka (1940)
sees Greta Garbo, a dour Russian functionary sent to Paris to bring some
discipline to the sale of tsarist jewels on behalf of the Soviet government,
come under the spell of the City of Light (and that sly Melvyn Douglas).
Garbo laughs.
Perhaps slightly off the rom-com beat is Topper (1937).
I’m not talking the part about Cary Grant and Constance Bennett being
a sexy and witty couple. It’s how they help the middle-aged Mr. and Mrs.
Topper (Roland Young and a delicious Billie Burke) recapture romance
in their marriage. Or—more likely—capture it for the first time.
And, here’s the thing: anyone can make a romance about
20-somethings who are drop-dead gorgeous and wear $850 designer
shirts. (You can make a romance, but it’s not necessarily engaging.) But
building a film around a woman d’un âge certain (not just a
middle aged guy; because how many movies have we seen where Mel Gibson or
Harrison Ford get it on with chicks 30 years their junior, in between cortisone
shots or DUI arrests?), who has more history and more riding on
the outcome of the romance… Now, there’s a story.
That’s the attraction of any Katharine Hepburn movie—Philadelphia
Story, Pat and Mike, and my personal favorite: Desk
Set. The scene where Hepburn gets looped at the office Christmas
party and riffs on Spencer Tracy’s logic questions and then
faces down the mainframe computer he’s installed in her research department is
worth the price of admission on its own.
Everyone knows An Affair to Remember (1958)—largely
because of the homage in Sleepless in Seattle (cute, but no
cigar). Deborah Kerr and Cary Grant are the embodiment of class and style
in the story of two people who’ve set themselves up with wealthy partners
because they’ve been around the block a few times and opted for
security over love. They meet on an ocean liner (courtesy of their partners’
money) and decide to take a chance—wagering everything they have
against the possibility of love.
Now that’s romance. Really: the crapshoot of
love.
Indiscreet (1958)
pairs Grant with Ingrid Bergman, a combination it’s hard to top. The premise—Grant
claims to be a married man unable to get a divorce as a defense against any
woman’s aspirations to matrimony. When he falls for Bergman, a leading lady in
all senses of the term, there’s a series of farcical events. Frankly, the
plot’s a bit hard to swallow, but you don’t really care because the packaging
is super.
Within the past 30 years, I rate Truly, Madly, Deeply (1990)
very high on the truly romantic scale. First of all: Alan Rickman. You don’t
really need more, but the story is about a deceased cellist (Rickman) returning
from beyond to ease his lover (Juliet Stevenson) through her overpowering
grief. The scene where he appears, playing his cello while she’s playing the
piano, and she sobs—that’s one of the most affecting lovers’ reunions
ever filmed.
Enchanted April (1992) has a fantastical (as in “imbued with fantasy”) air
to it. Four Englishwomen (strangers to one another—already an anomaly in
English society) pool resources to rent a villa in Italy for the month of
April. The setting is the 1920s, not my favorite era, but it turns out to fit
together absolutely perfectly. The magic of Italy takes hold, healing the
wounds of each of the women. The ending is a bit pat—but not out of order in a
romance.
Not a comedy, The Last of the Mohicans (1992) is
still one of the best love stories going. Lyrically shot by Michael Mann (of
all directors), it’s visually stunning and emotionally
compelling. When Daniel Day-Lewis abjures Madeleine Stowe (Hawkeye/Cora
Munro), about to be taken by the Huron, to “No matter whatever happens, stay
alive. I will find you no matter what”—well, it’s utterly heart-melting. There
can’t be a woman alive who wouldn’t want her man to give that sort of
adoration.
Playing against the trend of no witty and engaging rom-coms
in recent years is 2008’s Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day. It’s
charming and blessed with superior characters and dialogue.
(Okay, Frances McDormand can do no wrong; simply by a narrowing or widening of
an eye she can communicate utter despair or puppy-wriggling pleasure.) Again,
it’s that last-chance-at-love hook that I find much more appealing than the
usual ho-hum Drew Barrymore-Matthew McConaughey fluff.
I think my all-time favorite romance, however, is I Know
Where I’m Going (1945). Yes, it’s a bit contrived, and you
know what the “twist” is going to be. But Wendy Hiller and Roger
Livesey have such chemistry in their clash of wits, it just knocks you out.
Hiller is the strong-willed city girl on her way to marry her wealthy, older
industrialist fiancé (see the money-security options in An Affair to
Remember), who has rented an island off the Scottish coast. The weather
intervenes and puts her in the path of Torquil McNeil, who (it turns
out) actually owns that island, but is land-rich and cash-poor.
Well, you know what’s going to happen, but getting there is just
charming and well worth the time.
Any of these is worlds better than what any of the Lifetime/Hallmark
channels are running for Valentine’s Day—which are all the same exact plot,
many times with the same exact actors, filmed on the cheap in Vancouver
simulating various US locales. Every once in a while I catch part of one of
these; they are to the classics as Cold Duck is to Cordon Rouge.