The Magic Christian (film)
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The Magic Christian | |
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The Magic Christian's movie poster |
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Directed by | Joseph McGrath |
Produced by | Denis O'Dell |
Written by | Terry Southern Joseph McGrath Graham Chapman John Cleese Peter Sellers |
Starring | Peter Sellers Ringo Starr |
Music by | Ken Thorne Paul McCartney Noel Coward |
Cinematography | Geoffrey Unsworth |
Editing by | Kevin Connor |
Distributed by | Commonwealth United |
Release date(s) | 1969 February 12, 1970 |
Running time | film 92 min. video & DVD 101 min. |
Country | U.K. |
Language | English |
All Movie Guide profile | |
IMDb profile |
The Magic Christian is a 1969 film directed by Joseph McGrath and starring Peter Sellers and Ringo Starr. It was loosely adapted from the 1959 comic novel by U.S. author Terry Southern.
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[edit] Overview
McGrath's film adaptation differs considerably in content from Southern's novel. Relocated to London in the 1960s, it introduces an orphan whom Sir Guy Grand picks up in a park and on a whim decides to adopt. The role was written with Ringo Starr (who plays it) in mind. The movie is often remembered for its song "Come And Get It" written by Paul McCartney and performed by Badfinger, a British rock band promoted by McCartney. The lyrics refer to Grand's schemes of bribing people to act according to his whims ('If you want it, here it is, come and get it'). Thunderclap Newman’s Something in the Air is also dominant in the film's soundtrack. Choreography was made by Lionel Blair. A host of British and American actors (see cast) have brief roles in the movie, many playing against type. Episodic in character, The Magic Christian is an unrelenting and often heavy-handed satire on capitalism, greed, racism and other human vanities. Notable are the appearances of (pre-Monty Python) John Cleese and Graham Chapman (uncredited), who had written an earlier version of the film script, of which only the scenes they appear in survived.
[edit] Plot
Sir Guy Grand (Peter Sellers) is an eccentric billionaire who, together with his newly adopted heir (formerly a homeless derelict), Youngman Grand (Ringo Starr), start playing elaborate practical jokes on people. A big spender, Grand doesn't mind handing out large sums of money to various people, bribing them to fulfill his whims, or shocking them by bringing down what they hold dear. Their misadventures are designed as a display of father Grand to his adoptive charge that "everyone has their price" - it just depends on the amount one is prepared to pay. They start from rather minor spoofs, like bribing a traffic warden (Spike Milligan) to take back a parking ticket and eat it (who delighted from the large bribe, eats its plastic cover too) and proceed with increasingly elaborate stunts involving higher social strata and wider audiences. As a father-son conversation reveals, Grand sees his plots as "educational" ("Well, you know, Youngman, sometimes it's not enough merely to teach. One has to punish as well.").
At Sotheby's art auction house, it is proudly claimed that an original Rembrandt portrait might fetch £10,000, yet to director Mr. Dougdale's (John Cleese) astonishment, Grand makes a final offer of £30,000 for it ('Thirty - thousand - pounds? Shit! I beg your pardon, I do beg your pardon!') and having bought it, proceeds, in front of a deeply shocked Dougdale, to cut with his scissors the portrait's nose from the canvas. In a classy restaurant he makes a loud show of wild gluttony, Grand being the restaurant's most prominent customer. In the annual Boat Race sports event, he bribes the Oxford team (where Graham Chapman plays a member of the rowing team) and makes them ram purposely the Cambridge boat, to win a screamingly unjust victory. In a traditional pheasant hunt he uses a howitzer to down the bird.
Grand and Youngman eventually buy tickets for the luxury liner S.S. Magic Christian, along with the richest strata of society. In the beginning everything appears normal and the ship apparently sets off. Yet soon, things start going wrong. A solitary drinker at the bar (Roman Polanski) is approached by a transvestite cabaret singer (Yul Brynner), Dracula (Christopher Lee) poses as a waiter, a cinema show turns out to feature the unfortunately unsuccessful transplant of an African-American's head onto a white body. Eventually passengers start noticing through the ship's CCTV that their Captain (Wilfrid Hyde-White) is in a drunken stupor and finally gets carted off by a gorilla. In a crescendo of panic the guests try to find their way to abandon ship. A group of them, led by the Grands, reach instead the machine-room, which turns out to be powered by hordes of topless rowing slaves, under the Priestess of the Whip's (Raquel Welch) command. As passengers finally find an exit and lords and ladies stumble out in the daylight, we discover that the supposed ship was, in fact, a structure built inside a warehouse, and the passengers had never left London. During the whole misadventure, father and son Grand look perfectly composed and cool.
Towards the end of the film, Guy Grand, wanting to find out how far people can go for money, fills up a huge vat with urine, blood and animal excrement and sprinkles it avidly with paper money. In a somewhat stylized sequence, a crowd of men and women, apparently employed in The City of London, approach the vat and, after some indecision, attempt to recover the cash. The sequence concludes with many members of the crowd submerging in the tank, in order to search for money that had sunk beneath the surface.
The film concludes with Grand and Youngman, having returned to the park where the film opened, bribing the park warden to allow them to sleep there, stating that this was a more direct method of achieving their (mostly unstated) ends.
[edit] Reception
Not surprisingly, most mainstream critics have been quite negative on the film, especially for its extensive use of black humour. Darrel Baxton, in his review for Splitting Image, refers to the film as of "the school of savage sub-Bunuelian satire"[1]. Christopher Null in filmcritic.com states that "it's way too over-the-top to make any profound statement"[2].
Some audiences may find it irritating to watch scenes of a multi-millionaire who has nothing better to do with his wealth than to use it to humiliate people who are much poorer than he is. Sir Guy Grand can easily afford the luxury of wasting his money on bizarre stunts, whereas his victims cannot. The underlying theme of the movie appears to be that people will do anything you request - if you offer them enough money. Of course people were already well aware of this fact back in 1969 when the film was released, which may account for its cool reception.
[edit] Cast
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[edit] Trivia
- In one instance, Grand buys a cosmetics company and launches a big promotional campaign for a new shampoo which, as it turns out in the end, has a very detrimental effect on those who happen to use it.
- In with the style of the movie - and only shown by a close reading of the credits - is the casting of a lookalike pair to John Lennon and Yoko Ono. The "Lennon", with long hair, beard and specs, then serves to distract the viewer's attention from Lennon himself, in short wig, false nose and no specs, playing a member of a hunting party.[citation needed]
- In the posters for Chevy Chase's 1985 movie Fletch, Chase's character shows a fake ID of himself as an afro-wearing basketball player, named "Magic Christian".