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Modesty Blaise (1966 film)

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Modesty Blaise
Original film poster by Bob Peak
Directed byJoseph Losey
Screenplay byEvan Jones
Harold Pinter (uncredited)
Story byPeter O'Donnell
Stanley Dubens
Based onModesty Blaise
by Peter O'Donnell
Jim Holdaway
Produced byJoseph Janni
StarringMonica Vitti
Terence Stamp
Dirk Bogarde
Harry Andrews
Clive Revill
CinematographyJack Hildyard
Edited byReginald Beck
Music byJohnny Dankworth
Production
company
Modesty Blaise Ltd.
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release dates
  • 5 May 1966 (1966-05-05) (London premiere)
  • 7 May 1966 (1966-05-07) (Cannes)
Running time
119 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget£1 million[1] or $3 million[2]
Box office$2.2 million (est. US/ Canada rentals)[3] or $3 million[4]

Modesty Blaise is a 1966 British spy-fi comedy film directed by Joseph Losey, produced by Joseph Janni, and loosely based on the popular comic strip Modesty Blaise by Peter O'Donnell, who co-wrote the original story upon which Evan Jones and Harold Pinter based their screenplay. It stars Monica Vitti as "Modesty", opposite Terence Stamp as Willie Garvin and Dirk Bogarde as her nemesis Gabriel. The cast also includes Harry Andrews, Michael Craig, Alexander Knox, Rossella Falk, Clive Revill (in a dual role), and Tina Aumont. The film's music was composed by Johnny Dankworth and the theme song, Modesty, sung by pop duo David and Jonathan. It was Vitti's first English-speaking role.[5][6]

The film's production saw creative clashes between director Losey and Blaise creator O'Donnell over the vision of the final film, Losey wanting to create a "pop art"-inspired spoof of the spy movie craze prevalent at the time, in contrast to the relatively serious and grounded tone of the source material. As a result, the film heavily diverged from O'Donnell's comics and story outline in many ways, and includes a number of non sequitur elements including avant garde-inspired editing and production design, musical numbers, and deliberate continuity errors.

Modesty Blaise was entered into the Cannes Film Festival, where it was nominated for a Palme d'Or.[7] General critical reception was far more muted, with critics praising the visual style and off-beat tone, but criticizing the divergences from the source material, convoluted plot, and perceived "style over substance" direction.[8] Critical reception continues to be mixed decades after release,[9] but the film has gained a cult following.[10]

Plot

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Monica Vitti at the set in Amsterdam, 1966
Interview with Terence Stamp, Monica Vitti and director Joseph Losey

After the assassination of one of their agents in Amsterdam, British Secret Service chief Sir Gerald Tarrant recruits former criminal mastermind Modesty Blaise to protect a shipment of diamonds en route to Abu Tahir, the Sheikh of a small Middle Eastern kingdom. The shipment has also attracted Gabriel, the head of a criminal organization that includes his accountant McWhirter and bodyguard Mrs. Fothergill. Modesty believes that Gabriel, who maintains a compound in the Mediterranean, is dead, but he reveals himself to her.

In exchange for an exclusive discount on the kingdom's oil exports, the British government delivers periodic diamond shipments to the Sheikh. Blaise, who enjoys an ongoing love-hate relationship with law enforcement, is recruited not only for her competence, but because she is the Sheikh's adopted daughter and thus trusted by him implicitly. Modesty agrees to the arrangement, on the condition that she is given total immunity by the British government and complete freedom to deliver the diamonds how she sees fit.

With Sir Gerald monitoring her from afar, Modesty travels to Amsterdam, where she reunites with her former lover Paul Hagen, a Secret Service agent and aide to Sir Gerald. She calls upon her longtime partner, Willie Garvin, who is reuniting with an old flame, Nicole, who may have information on Gabriel through her employer, an illusionist associated with him. Modesty narrowly survives several attempts on her life by Gabriel's assassins, whose failure leads to their swift execution by the ruthless Mrs. Fothergill. Modesty continually toys with Hagen, first seducing him before stealing his gun and disappearing.

When Gabriel learns that Nicole is working with Modesty and Willie, he orders her assassinated. The illusionist sends thugs to have her killed, and they succeed when Modesty and Willie fail to intervene in time. Modesty and Willie set themselves up as live bait to draw Gabriel out, but find themselves pursued by Tarrant and a jilted Hagen, being briefly arrested before quickly escaping with the help of some smoke bombs. When Modesty attempts to identify and infiltrate the boat being used by Gabriel for the planned diamond theft, she is lured into a trap and captured. Gabriel reveals his true plan, to use Modesty as leverage to force Willie to steal the diamonds for him.

Willie reluctantly agrees to the arrangement, successfully stealing the diamonds from under Tarrant and Hagen's noses. He and Modesty are subsequently taken to Gabriel's island fortress, where they are promptly thrown into prison cells. Gabriel offers Modesty to join forces, but she refuses. Willie and Modesty manage to escape and kill Mrs. Fothergill, and signal their location to the Sheikh's forces. The Sheikh leads his army to the island, leading to an all-out battle with Gabriel's forces and ending in his capture and the diamonds reaching their intended owner.

In his desert camp, the Sheikh leaves Gabriel tied up outside to dehydrate. McWhirter suddenly appears in Highland dress to free his employer, though no one seems to notice or care. When the Sheikh asks Modesty what he can do for her, she asks for the diamonds. He responds by laughing boisterously and she seems to go along with it, but suddenly breaks the fourth wall by looking directly at the camera as the film ends in a freeze-frame shot.[11]

Cast

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Production

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In 1965, Mim Scala of the Scala Browne Agency saw O'Donnell's strip and acquired the film rights to the character. Scala had the idea of casting Barbara Steele as Modesty with Michael Caine as Willie and Sidney Gilliat directing, but he sold the production rights to Joseph Janni, who had Monica Vitti and Joseph Losey as his clients.[12] Caine would ultimately star in Alfie, a role intended for his friend and former flatmate Terence Stamp, who wound up playing Willie.

Modesty Blaise was released at the height of two cinematic trends: The popularity of James Bond had spawned a number of similarly themed films. Some were intended as serious spy adventures, others as parodies or pastiches of Bond and his genre. Director Joseph Losey and the screenwriters chose to follow the latter approach, by making Modesty Blaise a campy, sometimes surrealistic comedy-adventure. Playwright Harold Pinter made uncredited contributions to the final script.[13]

The film was shot on location in London, Amsterdam, and Naples. Interiors were filmed at Shepperton Studios. Gabriel's island fortress was filmed at Castello di Sant'Alessio Siculo in Sicily.

Joseph Losey found it difficult to work with Monica Vitti, as she would invariably be accompanied on the set by director Michelangelo Antonioni, in whose movies she had become famous. Antonioni would often whisper suggestions to her, and she would take direction from him rather than Losey. Eventually, Losey asked Antonioni, whom he greatly admired, to keep away from the studios during filming. Antonioni complied. Dirk Bogarde likewise disliked working with her, saying in a radio interview years later that she was the only one of his leading ladies whom he had actively disliked.[citation needed]

Modesty Blaise includes a metafictional element during one sequence where Blaise, while visiting a friend's apartment, comes across several newspapers with the Modesty Blaise comic strip, which are shown in close-up; artist Jim Holdaway's work is prominently shown, as is Peter O'Donnell's name. During the sequence, Vitti briefly dons a brunette wig and dresses up in a close approximation of how Holdaway depicted Modesty in the comic strips (images from this scene are often used to represent the film, including the cover of the first Pan Books paperback edition of O'Donnell's novelization). Supporters of the film suggest this indicates that the film is not intended to take place in the same "universe" as the comic strip.

Comparison to source material

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O'Donnell's original screenplay went through a large number of rewrites by other people, and he often later complained that the finished movie retained only one line of his original dialogue. O'Donnell states this in some of his introductions to reprints of his comic strip by Titan Books. As a result, although the basic plotline and characters are based on the comic strip, such as Willie killing a thug in an alley, many changes were made.[citation needed]

Some are cosmetic — Vitti appears as a blonde for most of the film, except for one sequence in which, as noted above, she actually dresses up like a real-life version of the comic strip character. The film also prominently focuses on a large leg tattoo the film version of the character sports; no such tattoo is ever referenced in the comic strip or later novels. Also, while the comic strip established early on that Modesty considered herself to be English, her actual ethnic background was left ambiguous beyond her being vaguely from the Middle East region; no attempt was made to disguise Vitti's strong Italian accent, making it apparent that her version of Blaise was from Italy.

Likewise, Stamp initially appears in a blond wig (giving him a similar appearance to the comic strip character) and subsequently reverts to his natural dark hair; in the film Modesty and Willie acknowledge the hair color change with each other. Other changes are more profound. For example, as the film progresses, Willie and Modesty fall in love and decide to get married, proclaiming the same during a sudden musical production number that pops up during a lull in the action. Even though the comic strip was only a few years old at this time and no novels had yet been published, this plot point nonetheless breaks a cardinal rule set out by O'Donnell when he created the characters: They would never have a romantic relationship in the traditional sense; the writer stayed true to this right up to the end of the comic strip in 2001.[citation needed]

The character of Sheikh Abu Tahir fills the function of Lob, Modesty's adoptee father and mentor, who gives her the name "Modesty Blaise". The Sheikh is otherwise an original character with no equivalent character in the source material. Other original characters include Paul Hagen, Mrs. Fothergill, McWhirter, and Nicole, though O'Donnell would later incorporate several of these into later original novels.

Novelization

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Prior to the release of the film, O'Donnell novelised his version of the screenplay as a novel titled Modesty Blaise. This book was a critical and sales success, resulting in O'Donnell alternating between writing novels and writing the comic strip for the next 30 years. O'Donnell's version of the screenplay was also used as the basis for a late-1990s Modesty Blaise graphic novel published by DC Comics.[citation needed]

Release

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According to Fox records, the film needed to earn $5,800,000 in rentals to break even and made $4,825,000, meaning it lost money.[14]

Critical reception

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Modesty Blaise was a moderate success at the time of its original release,[15] Bosley Crowther, writing in The New York Times, characterised the film as "a weird film, all right. Maybe, if the whole thing were on a par with some of its flashier and wittier moments, or were up to its pictorial design, which is dazzling, it might be applauded as a first-rate satiric job." According to Crowther: "The scenery, a few pop-art settings and a gay, nonchalant musical score are indeed, about the only consistently amusing things about this whacky color film."[15]

Modesty Blaise was entered into the 1966 Cannes Film Festival, where it was nominated for the Palme d'Or, but lost to A Man and a Woman and The Birds, the Bees and the Italians.[7]

Two more serious attempts at adapting the comic strip for the screen occurred in 1982 with a Modesty Blaise starring Ann Turkel as an apparently American version of Blaise, and again in 2003 with My Name Is Modesty, a prequel starring Alexandra Staden in the title role and omitting the Willie Garvin character entirely.

Retrospective appraisal

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The film was conceived as a burlesque of the emerging James Bond sagas “with their male-chauvinistic ethic, their infatuation with gadgetry, their depersonalization, their evident and self-glorifying delight in violence, and their complicated story lines."[16]

Rather than emulating this formula, Losey creates "outlandish and bizarre settings" in a savage satire of the Bond movies. The "lurid Op art designs" are so excessive they approach the surreal and, as such, indict the "shallowness of the characters".[17][18][19] Modesty Blaise has none of the self-effacing irony of the Bond pictures. Rather, Losey offers a "visually sophisticated and bitter" social satire incorporating "violence, government hypocrisy, heroism," yet is "strangely asexual".[20][21]

Twentieth Century-Fox provided Losey with the largest budget of his career: $6 million.[22]

The studio sought to capitalize on the James Bond film phenomena, but with a female protagonist. Losey failed to satisfy studio box office expectations, though the film became a cult phenomenon on college campuses.[23] Film critic Foster Hirsch comments on the casting choices:

The characters in the film are antisex, and their essential heavy-heartedness is reinforced by the casting of Monica Vitti and Terence Stamp. Vitti carries her existential despair into this film, and makes the most plodding of superspies…she is disastrously miscast…[24]

Hirsch asks rhetorically: "[D]id Losey use her deliberately, to undercut the pop thrust of the material...by offering us this most dour and accommodating of high thriller heroines?"[25]

Hirsch questions the choice of Terence Stamp to play opposite of Vitti, an actor praised for his work in Billy Budd (1962) and Teorema (1968):

Stamp is trained in an entirely different kind of film. When Vitti and Stamp, both so serious and downbeat, are made to sing and dance, the results are embarrassing rather than comic….[26]

Footnotes

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  1. ^ Walker 1974, p. 302.
  2. ^ Caute, David (1994). Joseph Losey. Oxford University Press. p. 207. ISBN 978-0-19-506410-0.
  3. ^ "Big Rental Pictures of 1966." Variety, 4 January 1967, p. 8.
  4. ^ Caute p 212
  5. ^ Palmer and Riley, 1993 p. 161-162: Filmography
  6. ^ Hirsch, 1980 p. 239: Filmography
  7. ^ a b "Modesty Blaise." Festival de Cannes. Retrieved: 8 March 2009.
  8. ^ Modesty Blaise (1966), retrieved 10 March 2020
  9. ^ "Modesty Blaise (1966) Movie Review from Eye for Film". www.eyeforfilm.co.uk. Retrieved 10 March 2020.
  10. ^ Hirsch, 1980 p. 82: “The film became a cult classic among college students…”
  11. ^ Hirsch, 1980 p. 81
  12. ^ Scala 2009, pp. 75–76.
  13. ^ "Modesty Blaise". Torino Film Fest. Retrieved 10 February 2022.
  14. ^ Silverman, Stephen M (1988). The Fox that got away : the last days of the Zanuck dynasty at Twentieth Century-Fox. L. Stuart. p. 325. ISBN 9780818404856.
  15. ^ a b Crowther, Bosley. "Modesty Blaise (1966); Screen: Gaudy 'Modesty Blaise,' girl secret agent: Monica Vitti co-stars with Dirk Bogarde, imported Farrago has flashes of humor," The New York Times, 11 August 1966.
  16. ^ Hirsch, 1980 p. 80–81: "Modesty Blaise is designed from first to last as a send-up of a popular genre of its period, the James Bond films…"
  17. ^ Hirsch, 1980 p. 81–82: "Losey burlesques his own reputation as a 'baroque' director."
  18. ^ Palmer and Riley, 1993 p. 1: Modesty Blaise "a misbegotten effort..."
  19. ^ Callahan, 2003: "Modesty Blaise (1966) is a shockingly stupid spy spoof, the only Losey film that feels like a commercial necessity."
  20. ^ Hirsch, 1980 p. 83: "Losey turned the Bond fantasy…into a visually sophisticated and bitter satire of itself…The film is cold, strangely asexual."
  21. ^ Callahan 2003: "Adding insult to injury is a pair of films that must count as two of the worst movies of all time: Modesty Blaise (1966) and Steaming (1985)."
  22. ^ Brandum, 2017: "Losey's foray into big-budget commercial filmmaking with the pop-camp messiness of Modesty Blaise."
  23. ^ Hirsch, 1980 p. 82: "The film became a cult classic among college students…" And: "...it never received the wide popular success that the studio had envisioned." And p. 83: "...not a successful on any level…"
  24. ^ Hirsch, 1980 p. 83: Ellipsis after "superspies" reads: "With her downcast features, her heavy, lidded eyes, and her thick Italian-accented English…".
  25. ^ Hirsch, 1980 p. 83: Ellipsis reads: "to play against its naturally light-hearted texture…".
  26. ^ Hirsch, 1980 p. 83: Ellipsis reads: "the dissonance between actors and roles works against the material."

Sources

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https://www.sensesofcinema.com/2003/great-directors/losey/#:~:text=The%20dominant%20themes%20of%20Losey's,love%20story%20in%20his%20films. Accessed 12 October, 2024.

Bibliography

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  • Scala, Mim. Diary of a Teddy Boy: A Memoir of the Long Sixties. Surrey, UK: Goblin Press, 2009. ISBN 978-0-95614-970-1.
  • Walker, Alexander. Hollywood UK: The British Film Industry in the Sixties. London: Stein and Day, 1994. ISBN 978-0-8128-1549-8.
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