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On a Clear Day You Can See Forever

 
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On a Clear Day You Can See Forever

  • Director: Vincente Minnelli
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Musical
  • Movie Type: Romantic Comedy, Musical Comedy
  • Themes: Doctors and Patients, Reincarnation
  • Main Cast: Barbra Streisand, Yves Montand, Bob Newhart, Larry Blyden, Simon Oakland
  • Release Year: 1970
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 129 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: G

Plot

Vincente Minnelli directed, and Alan Jay Lerner adapted the stage musical he had written with Burton Lane, for this this feature film version. Barbra Streisand stars as Daisy Gamble, a chain smoker who, at the urging of her uptight fiance Warren (Larry Blyden), seeks help in kicking the habit from a psychiatrist, Dr. Marc Chabot (Yves Montand). While undergoing hypnosis, however, Daisy and Dr. Chabot discover that she is clairvoyant and can remember a past life as a 19th century heiress named Melinda. As their sessions continue, Dr. Chabot falls in love not with Daisy, but Melinda, while Daisy begins to fall for Chabot and decides she's had enough of Warren. Excised from the final cut of On a Clear Day You Can See Forever (1970) was a musical number performed by Jack Nicholson, who costars as Daisy's stepbrother. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide

Cast

Jack Nicholson - Tad Pringle; John Richardson - Robert Tentrees; Pamela Brown - Mrs. Fitzherbert; Irene Handl - Winnie Wainwhistle; Roy Kinnear - Prince Regent; Peter Crowcroft - Divorce Attorney; Byron Webster - Prosecuting Attorney; Mabel Albertson - Mrs. Hatch; Laurie Main - Lord Percy; Kermit Murdock - Hoyt III; Elaine Giftos - Muriel; John Le Mesurier - Pelham; Angela Pringle - Diana Smallwood; Leon Ames - Clews; Paul Camen - Millard; George Neise - Wytelipt; Tony Colti - Preston; Jeannie Berlin

Credit

Howard Jeffrey - Choreography, Cecil Beaton - Costume Designer, Arnold Scaasi - Costume Designer, Vincente Minnelli - Director, David Bretherton - Editor, Joseph Lilley - Composer (Music Score), Nelson Riddle - Musical Direction/Supervision, Harry Ray - Makeup, John De Cuir - Production Designer, Harry Stradling - Cinematographer, Howard W. Koch - Producer, Alan Jay Lerner - Screenwriter, Burton Lane - From Musical by, Alan Jay Lerner - From Musical by

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Wikipedia: On a Clear Day You Can See Forever (film)
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On a Clear Day You Can See Forever

Original poster
Directed by Vincente Minnelli
Produced by Howard W. Koch
Written by Alan Jay Lerner
Starring Barbra Streisand
Yves Montand
Music by Burton Lane
Cinematography Harry Stradling Sr.
Editing by David Bretherton
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) June 17, 1970
Running time 129 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Gross revenue $14 million [1]

On a Clear Day You Can See Forever is a 1970 American musical/romantic fantasy film directed by Vincente Minnelli. The screenplay by Alan Jay Lerner is adapted from his book for the 1965 stage production of the same name. The songs feature lyrics by Lerner and music by Burton Lane.

Contents

Plot

At the behest of her ultra-conservative fiance Warren, scatter-brained five-pack-a-day chain smoker and clairvoyant Daisy Gamble attends a class taught by psychiatrist Marc Chabot for help in kicking her habit. While undergoing hypnosis, it is discovered she is the reincarnation of Lady Melinda Winifred Waine Tentrees, a seductive 19th century coquette who was born the illegitimate daughter of a kitchen maid. She acquired the paternity records of the children housed in the orphanage where her mother worked and used the information to blackmail their wealthy fathers. She eventually married nobleman Robert Tentrees during the period of the English Regency, then was tried for espionage and treason after he abandoned her.

As their sessions progress, complications arise when Chabot begins to fall in love with Daisy's exotic former self and Daisy begins to fall for him, and his university colleagues demand he either give up his reincarnation research or resign his position with the school. Daisy surreptitiosly hears a tape recording of one of her sessions, and when she discovers Chabot's interest is limited to Melinda she storms out of his office. When she finally returns for a final meeting with him, she describes fourteen additional lives, including her forthcoming birth as Laura and subsequent marriage to the therapist in the year 2038.

Production

Alan Jay Lerner made a number of changes in adapting his stage play for the screen. The character of Frenchman Marc Chabot originally was Austrian Mark Bruckner. The period of Melinda's life was shifted ahead by a decade or two, her family background is different, and the cause of her death was changed from drowning at sea to unjust execution. In the stage play, the question of whether Daisy really was a reincarnation of Melinda went unresolved, but the film script made it clear she was. The character of Daisy's stepbrother Tad Pringle was added, although most of his scenes and his song "Who Is There Among Us Who Knows?" ended up on the cutting room floor. Additionally, the future of Daisy and Marc's relationship was altered, and several ensemble musical numbers were excluded from the film.

New York City locations include Central Park, Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, the Pan Am Building, the Upper West Side, and Lexington and Park Avenues. Scenes set in the UK were filmed at the Royal Pavilion in Brighton, Kemp Town, and East Sussex.

Nelson Riddle served as the film's music supervisor, arranger, and conductor.

Cecil Beaton designed the period costumes. It proved to be his final project.

Paramount Pictures originally intended the film to be a nearly three-hour-long roadshow theatrical release, but executives ultimately had Vincente Minnelli cut nearly an hour from the running time [2]. Along with Tad's song, the deleted material included "Wait Till We're Sixty-Five," a duet between Daisy and Warren, and "She Isn't You," Marc's response to Daisy's "He Isn't You."

Principal cast

Soundtrack listing

  • "Hurry! It's Lovely Up Here" ..... Barbra Streisand
  • "On a Clear Day" ..... Orchestra and Chorus
  • "Love with All the Trimmings" ..... Barbra Streisand
  • "Melinda" ..... Yves Montand
  • "Go to Sleep" ..... Barbra Streisand
  • "He Isn't You" ..... Barbra Streisand
  • "What Did I Have That I Don't Have" ..... Barbra Streisand
  • "Come Back to Me" ..... Yves Montand
  • "On a Clear Day" ..... Yves Montand
  • "On a Clear Day" (Reprise) ..... Barbra Streisand

Critical reception

In his review in the New York Times, Vincent Canby called it "a movie of fits and starts" and added, "because the fits are occasionally so lovely, and the starts somewhat more frequent than Fifth Avenue buses, I was eventually hypnotized into a state of benign though not-quite-abject permissiveness . . . The movie is quite ordinary and Broadway-bland in most of its contemporary sequences. Miss Streisand, as a 22-year-old New Yorker whose Yiddish intonations are so thick they sound like a speech defect, defines innocence by sitting with her knees knocked together and her feet spread far apart, a mannerism she may have picked up from Mary Pickford. Minnelli's camera also is hard-pressed to find interesting things to look at in the humdrum settings . . . and a lot of the time it just records exits and entrances, as if it all were taking place on a stage. However, the movie, Minnelli and Miss Streisand burst into life in the regression sequences, filmed at the Royal Pavilion at Brighton. Minnelli's love of décor transforms the movie into very real fantasy, and the star into a stunning looking and funny character who mouths her arch, pseudo-Terence Rattigan lines as if she were parodying Margaret Leighton. She is so fine, in fact, that if I didn't know she was not terribly good at lip-sync, I would suspect someone else was reading her." [3]

TV Guide rates the film 2½ out of a possible four stars and comments, "[It] boasts great sets and costumes, but its script leaves much to be desired, and even the usually reliable Vincente Minnelli is unable to inject much life into the proceedings." [4]

Time Out London says, "Minnelli is able to decorate his material with beguiling visual conceits - the opening time-lapse photography, the colour contrasts between past and present. But he can do nothing to combat the script's length and shallowness, and there are some thumb-twiddling moments in between Burton Lane's delightful songs. The two star performers make an odd team, with their varying kinds of professionalism and vowel sounds." [5]

References

External links


 
 

 

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