Foul Play
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Foul Play | |
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Directed by | Colin Higgins |
Produced by | Edward K. Milkis, Thomas L. Miller |
Written by | Colin Higgins |
Starring | Goldie Hawn Chevy Chase |
Music by | Charles Fox |
Cinematography | David M. Walsh |
Editing by | Pembroke J. Herring |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date(s) | 14 July 1978 |
Running time | 116 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
IMDb profile |
Foul Play is a 1978 film by Colin Higgins starring Goldie Hawn and Chevy Chase. They are supported by Burgess Meredith, Brian Dennehy, Billy Barty and Dudley Moore in one of his first American feature film appearances. The movie, which aimed for romantic comedy mixed with Hitchcockian thriller elements, turned out to be a successful vehicle for both Chevy Chase and Goldie Hawn. It also resulted in a short-lived television series starring Barry Bostwick and Deborah Raffin.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
The film opens with a knife attack upon the Archbishop of San Francisco (Eugene Roche), perpetrated by a man identical to the Archbishop in looks and dress.
We are then introduced to Gloria Mundy (Goldie Hawn), who is recovering from a recent divorce. She decides to pick up an attractive man (Bruce Solomon) whose car has broken down and the two agree to go to the movies in the evening. As the man leaves the car, he is chased by two men getting out of a limousine, one of them an albino. Later at the cinema, the hitchhiker warns Gloria to "beware of the dwarf" and dies from a gun shot wound (apparently received in the earlier chase). As Gloria runs out, the dead body strangely disappears, and hence nobody believes her.
The next day, Gloria is attacked at the library she works at by the Albino but manages to escape with the help of Stanley (Dudley Moore) whom she picked up at a bar and who thinks she is interested in having sex with him. Finally arriving at her home, she is surprised by a man with a scar (Don Calfa) who demands the cigarette packet the hitch hiker gave her.(The audience sees that it contains a roll of film but also that it drops into a shrub.) Scarface tries to kill her but is stopped by the sudden appearance of the Albino, who kills Scarface. Gloria fades out and as she wakes up, all traces of these events, including the dead body of Scarface are gone. She incoherently tries to explain what happened to the two police officers, Fergy (Brian Dennehy) and Tony (Chevy Chase), and her landlord, Mr Hennessy (Burgess Meredith, and again, none of them believes her.
The next day, Gloria is abducted by the limousine's chauffeur and the Albino but later manages to escape and is taken home by Tony, who is clearly romantically interested in her. In his inquiries. Tony comes across a contract killer nicknamed the Dwarf (Marc Lawrence) and finds out that a recently murdered detective, the hitch-hiker, was on his trail. He is then assigned to protect Gloria from her would-be assassins.
Finding out that the limousine is registered by Archdiocese of San Francisco, the detectives and Gloria pay a visit to the Archbishop (actually his replacement seen in the first scene), who informs them that the car has been stolen by the chauffeur called Turk. After the detectives have left, we see the Albino, Turk and the Dwarf all assembled together with the Archbishop and his housekeeper (Rachel Roberts).
Gloria and Tony spend the night together. The next day, the Dwarf kidnaps Fergy (who is assigned to protect Gloria) and uses him to lure her into a trap. At first, she manages to hide in a massage parlor, where she runs into Stanley again, but then is found and abducted by the Albino and the Dwarf.
As Turk belonged to a group called Tax the churches league, Gloria had her library friends do research on them; the group had tried to kidnap Billy Graham in the 1960s and a photo shows its leader Delia Darrow, who looks just like the Archbishop's housekeeper.
Tony and Mr Hennessy go to the Archbishop's residence again. Tony finds Fergy, who informs him that the Dwarf is hired to assassinate the visiting Pope Pius XIII at this night's opera performance. Tony is attacked by the Dwarf and kills him in self-defence, but is forced to surrender to Delia Darrow. She and the fake Archbishop (actually the bishop's estranged twin brother) lecture them on their motives and inform them that the plan would go ahead, with the Albino replacing the Dwarf. They are surprised by Mr Hennessy, who knocks out the fake Archbishop and defeats Delia Darrow in a pseudo-martial arts duel.
In a typical San Francisco car chase, Gloria and Tony rush to the opera house, where Gloria runs into the Albino. He takes her back stage and kills a pursuing policeman but is himself shot by Tony. Both dead bodies, entangled in the one of the props from a production of HMS Pinafore, are lowered unto the stage, causing momentary shock and embarrassment. This is broken up by the Pope's applause into which all join in. The curtain falls and Gloria and Tony are united in a kiss, not noticing as the curtains are lifted again. Finally, they and the opera cast bow to the applauding audience.
[edit] Cast
- Goldie Hawn as Gloria Mundy
- Chevy Chase as Detective Tony Carlson
- Burgess Meredith as Mr Hennessey
- Brian Dennehy as Detective Ferguson ("Fergy")
- Dudley Moore as Stanley Tibbets
- Rachel Roberts as Gerda Casswell/Delia Darrow
- Eugene Roche as Archbishop Thorncrest/Charlie Thorncrest
- William Frankfather as Whitey Jackson ("the Albino")
- Ion Teodorescu as Turk
- Don Calfa as Scarface
- Marc Lawrence as Rupert Stiltskin ("the Dwarf")
- Marilyn Sokol as Stella
- Chuck McCann as Theatre manager
- Billy Barty as J.J. MacKuen
- Bruce Solomon as Bob Scott
- Cyril Magnin as Pope Pius XIII
[edit] Music
The musical score was composed by Charles Fox, who also wrote the main theme Ready to take a chance again, sung by Barry Manilow. This song was nominated for the 1978 Oscar for best original song[1]. The film also contains other Manilow recordings and other songs from the Disco era including Stayin Alive.
The film culminates in a performance of the comic opera The Mikado by Gilbert and Sullivan, themes of which are also referenced in the musical score.
[edit] Controversy
The film has aroused some controversy in the albino community, for contributing to the filmic cliché of albinos as villains.[2][3]
[edit] Trivia
Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- Gloria Mundy is a reference to the phrase, Sic transit gloria mundi ("Thus passes the glory of the world."), which is used to be part of Papal coronations to illustrate the ultimate vanity to worldly glory.
- The role of the fictional Pope Pius XIII was played by Cyril Magnin, a well known Jewish financier and philanthropist from San Francisco, who also appeared in the film Maxie.
- Farah Fawcett was considered to play Gloria but turned it down.
[edit] References
- ^ Barry Manilow - The Man - Honors and Awards. The Barry Manilow International Fan Club.
- ^ Albinism in Film. Albinism in Popular Culture.
- ^ Hollywood's unwritten rules for characters with albinism. Skinema.
[edit] External links
- Foul Play at the Internet Movie Database