I've mentioned before that I often go to the Museum of the Moving
Image looking for hidden gems, films I've never heard of but which
turn out to be something really special, and Claudine is one of
those for me.
Halfway through Please Turn Over, safely ensconced in
framing devices, the actors get to do some Unfaithfully
Yours-style acting and play the polar opposites of the milquetoast
characters they established outside of the framing devices. This is
the most fun part of the film... except, I would argue, the
ending. That's where Jo's parents tell her that although she has
slandered them and her entire town, ruining everyone's reputation,
they're proud of her for getting her novel published. Now that's
supportive!
I saw What's Up, Doc? at the museum and it was pretty much
nonstop laughs from the audience. It includes a car chase that's so
funny it took a good three minutes before I noticed "this is a car
chase in a 20th-century Hollywood comedy, those are boring" and
another two minutes until I actually got bored. Unfortunately, it kept
going for like three minutes after that. Apart from that, a stellar
movie that accomplishes something normally thought
impossible—recapturing a dead genre of film without emplying
revisionism, nostalgia, or ironic distance. This isn't even a
period piece: it's a real screwball comedy set in 1972. It's great
stuff. Barbra Streisand really elevates the comedy, a phenomenon I've
dubbed "the Streisand Effect."
I did find one part of the movie hard to read initially: I didn't get why Judy is so cruel to
Eunice. The movie itself isn't cruel to Eunice—she and Howard
achieve a Billy Wilder-esque mutual cheating arrangement and she ends
up with Max from The Muppet Movie. Then it clicked: Judy is
Bugs Bunny, and Eunice is her Elmer Fudd. I spent the whole
movie thinking Howard was Elmer Fudd, but he's actually... a really
big carrot, I guess?
Tue Dec 02 2025 21:42 November Film Roundup:
