Showing posts with label Truman Capote. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Truman Capote. Show all posts

Sunday, July 1, 2012

16. "Capote" (2005)


"It's the book I was always meant to write." 
(Philip Seymour Hoffman as Truman Capote)

This film is about Truman Capote's journey as he wrote the novel, "In Cold Blood." It was based on the true story of a murder in Kansas. Two men were charged with murdering an entire family in 1959, when Capote caught wind of the story. He went to Kansas from New York City, originally intending to write an article for The New Yorker, where he was a popular journalist. However, after meeting the accused murderers, especially Perry Smith, he decides that he needs to write an entire novel.

The film is about more than just murder - which is the center-stage event - but about small-town justice and prejudice, and the needs of people to find similarity even in the most uncommon of places. Capote finds that he is very similar to Smith. He forms a bond of friendship with Smith, paying for his attorneys for his many appeals, in exchange for information for his book. In the end, he realizes that Smith is only stringing him along, in hopes that Capote's popularity and prestige could save him from the electric chair.

In the end, the film was a curious look into 1960s culture and its effect on justice and fairness. Smith, like Capote, was a homosexual, and the small town of Holcomb, KS, did not care for that in their town. In some ways, he was condemned from the beginning, regardless of whether he was guilty of the murder itself. Capote is treated with disrespect and contempt, especially as it's viewed that he is protecting a known murderer. The two accused murderers are also condemned to death, thus the inevitable discussion of the death penalty makes an appearance. Even Capote's good friend, Harper Lee (of "To Kill a Mockingbird" fame) is a key character of the film.

I would recommend the film, especially as it is a look at the human aspect to think the best of people and search for the truth.

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

12. "Murder by Death" (1976)


"Locked from the inside. That can only mean one thing. And I don't know what it is." 
(Peter Falk as Sam Diamond)

In a tribute to Peter Falk, who died earlier this week, I thought I'd find one of his movies to put on here. Since "The Princess Bride" is hardly a crime movie, I found this gem instead. "Murder by Death" is a comedy murder mystery romp with twists and turns you never see coming. It was penned by the legendary Neil Simon, famous for having finished the script of "The Odd Couple (1968) after his brother, Danny Simon, was unable to finish it. "Murder by Death" was nominated for a Writers' Guild of America award (Best Comedy Written Directly for the Screen - Neil Simon) and a Golden Globe award (Best Acting Debut - Truman Capote), though it won neither.

The Plot: "Murder by Death" begins with Lionel Twain (Truman Capote) inviting the five greatest living criminologists to have dinner at his home. These individuals are intended to be famous detectives from novels, all of whom have a perfect record (no case has gone unsolved or has been solved incorrectly). They are Milo Perrier (James Coco), Sam Diamond (Peter Falk), Jessica Marbles (Elsa Lanchester), Dick Charleston (David Niven), and Sidney Wang (Peter Sellers). Each of them come with someone else: Perrier comes with his chauffeur, Marcel (James Cromwell); Diamond comes with his secretary, Tess Skeffington (Eileen Brennan); Charleston comes with his wife, Dora (Maggie Smith); Marbles comes with her nurse, Mrs. Withers (Estelle Winwood); and Wang comes with his adopted son, Willie (Richard Narita).

The ten of them are seated for dinner, where their host finally reveals himself and outlines the plan for the weekend: He wagers $1 million against their reputations that he can stump them with a murder mystery. One of the people seated at the table will be killed - he or she will be stabbed 12 times with a butcher knife. This is to happen at midnight.

At midnight, they learn that the one who dies is in fact their host. He is stabbed, 12 times, just as he said. The ensuing investigation involves disappearing blind butlers (Alec Guinness), disguises on top of disguises, and an ending you don't ever see coming!

The Relevance: This is another film that centers on the idea of private detectives, though in this case, they are detectives and criminologists from popular novels. It's hard not to see the correlation of Jessica Marbles to Miss Marple or Jessica Fletcher; Sam Diamond is similar to Sam Spade of "The Maltese Falcon" (even the voice and language used by Peter Falk in portraying Sam Diamond is similar to the mannerisms and demeanor of Humphrey Bogart in the film adaptation). Dick Charleston seems to be a connection to all "gentlemen detectives" in the novel world, encompassing names like C. Auguste Dupin (Edgar Allan Poe), Sherlock Holmes (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle), and Lord Peter Wimsey (Dorothy Sayers). Unlike other gentlemen detectives (e.g. Roderick Alleyn and Inspector Morse), these gentlemen detectives are amateur civilians rather than actual police officers. Perrier is an obvious duplicate of Hercule Poirot (Agatha Christie) and Sidney Wang is clearly Charlie Chan (Earl Derr Biggers).

In terms of murder mystery as a genre, "Murder by Death" is much-duplicated in several respects. The idea of a mystery dinner party in which guests must solve crimes is obviously connected to the later film "Clue" (1986), and the use of various aspects (e.g. dinner party, many different detectives in one room, and murder mystery "whodunnits") are found in countless films.

"Murder by Death" is witty in an old-school fashion, often relying on situational or verbal comedy rather than slapstick. It's a more refined comedy that sets it apart from newer comedies that rely on stupidity to make people laugh.