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Best Picture
| THE WINNER:
The battle of wills heads off with a competition between the officers over the construction of a railroad bridge and the American's attempt to sabotage it. The story is compelling but, truthfully, not for three hours. I think I got the point in two and I didn't need a lot of extra material to drive the point home. |
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Best Actor
THE WINNER:
Colonel Nicholson was not one of Alec Guinness' more well-rounded characters, especially when you've seen his earlier works like Kind Hearts and Coronets in which he played eight members of the same family. This character seems strikingly one-dimensional. Still, the performance would bring him international fame if not better roles. I am glad he got some appreciation in his lifetime for his work though I wish that my generation would discover the films that best displayed his gifts. He failed to break up the relationship of Susan and Steve and has fallen out of favor with J.J. – a very bad place to be. When he meets J.J. at a restaurant, he doesn’t go to his table right away but calls him a payphone on the other side of the room. When he approaches, J.J. asks the waiter to remove him. At that moment, J.J. is having a conversation with a senator and Sidney dutifully takes a seat behind him. The cost to Sidney for having failed on his mission is that it means he can’t get items into Hunsecker's column. He detests Sidney but he knows then this pitiless rat has a ruthless streak. He'll do anything to further his career, and J.J. is happy to keep dangling it just above his head. Hunsecker is an interesting study. He is one of the most powerful men in New York, a man who has the muscle to make and break the careers of anyone he chooses (We are told “He’s told Presidents where to go and what to do”) but, oddly enough, he seems to have no social life. He lives in a large house with his sister but seems to have no other relationships. His life is his work and there are no social connections. His personal struggle is a strange hold that he has over Susan, whom he is determined to keep in check. We sense a pseudo-incestuous feeling that comes from him and that is probably true, but I think he’s more interested in exerting his muscle even into his own household. He is also ruthless. When Sidney breaks up the relationship by planting drugs on Steve and getting the kid arrested, J.J. turns the tables on him. He takes the favor that he has asked Sidney to perform and then pulls a double-switch that leaves his press agent lying on the sidewalk covered in his own blood. Why does he do this? Because he can. Casting Burt Lancaster in this role was a masterstroke, he has the physical stature to play a man with this kind of power. He was a large actor, with the broad shoulders of a linebacker and the hard chin of a man who is not to be toyed with. When he speaks, his bottom teeth were bared. His towering build served him well, playing both heroes and villains, and there are scenes in Sweet Smell of Success where he towers over those around him, especially Tony Curtis, and it makes him a Goliath. He also puts his trademark voice to good use. When speaking to Sidney, he speaks in quick bursts, he talks fast, reminding his underling that, “With a simple flick of a switch, I could shut out the greedy murmur of little men.” Yet later when he speaks to his sister, trying to reason with her about Steve, his speech pattern is curt, more parental. The plot of Sweet Smell of Success is beside the point. The details aren't as important as the relationship between J.J. and Sidney. These are two personality types, the overlord and the underling and how one man uses his power over the other to do his bidding. The story could have been about anything but they are so sharply drawn that we would have followed them anywhere. Neither can reasonably be called noble, but it is interesting watching the dogfight as it unfolds. It is fascinating the way J.J. is able to jerk at Sidney's chain and elicit any mood he wants, the way he keeps him around despite the fact that he could easy dismiss him and his career just by batting an eyelash. Yet, he keeps Sidney frantically spinning because he sees that there is a ruthless, immoral streak in him. "I'd hate to take a bite out of you,” J.J. tells him, ”You're a cookie full of arsenic." |
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Best Actress
THE WINNER:
While questioning Eve, a hidden personality emerges. Suddenly he isn't talking to the same person. This woman claims to be Eve Black who is open, flirtatious and mischievous. She says she does not like Eve White and that she's been getting her into trouble since she was a kid, doing things and then letting her take the blame. Dr. Luther is stunned and, in consulting a fellow doctor about this new development, tries to ascertain whether this could be a multiple personality disorder or whether she is faking. He and his colleague run a battery of interviews and come to the conclusion that this case is genuine. Meanwhile, Ralph becomes frustrated because he is convinced that she is playing a sick game and takes a job in Florida to get away from her. |
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