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Walk on the Wild Side

 
Movies:

Walk on the Wild Side

  • Director: Edward Dmytryk
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Melodrama, Period Film
  • Themes: Prostitutes, Innocence Lost
  • Main Cast: Laurence Harvey, Capucine, Jane Fonda, Anne Baxter, Barbara Stanwyck
  • Release Year: 1962
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 114 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: NR

Plot

This moody and controversial drama takes place in Depression-era New Orleans. Dove (Laurence Harvey) has traveled by bus from Texas to find his wayward lover Hallie (Capucine). He meets young Kitty Twist (Jane Fonda) as the two get off in the crescent city. Teresina (Anne Baxter) gives him a job at her small cafe. In his free time, Dove searches for Hallie and finds her at work as a prostitute in the Doll's House. Dove implores Hallie to return to him but she refuses. When the lecherous lesbian madame Jo (Barbara Stanwyck) discovers Dove's intentions towards Hallie, she has him beaten to a bloody pulp by her hired goons. He is found by Kitty, now a happy hooker at the Doll House, and is taken back to the cafe where the compassionate Teresina heals his physical and emotional wounds. The film taken from the novel by Nelson Algren is much tamer than the original text. The title track, sung by Brook Benton, was nominated for an Academy Award. The "black-cat stalking" opening and closing sequences (by designer Saul Bass) is a perfect little "film-within-a-film." This footage, with its superb lighting, framing, panning, and editing, should be appreciated by anyone who wants to know more about the art of cinematography. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

Cast

Joanna Moore - Miss Precious; Richard Rust - Oliver; Karl Swenson - Schmidt; Don "Red" Barry - Dockery; Juanita Moore - Mama; John Anderson - Preacher; Todd Armstrong - Lt. Omar Stroud; Lillian Bronson - Amy Gerard; Adrienne Marden - Eva Gerard; Sherry O'Neil - Reba; Kathryn Card - Landlady; Murray Alper - Simon; Todd Anderson - Lieutenant Omar Stroud; Steve Benton - Van Driver; Nesdon Booth; John Bryant - Spence; Cordy Clark - Fat Woman; Graham Denton; Barbara Hines - Prostitute; Ted Jacques - Sheriff; Chester Jones - Black Waiter; Alexander Lockwood - Doctor; Ken Lynch - Frank Bonito; Edward Mallory - Sidekick; Paul Maxey - Auctioneer; Bill Walker - Black Man; Ray Walker - Salesman; Willard Waterman

Credit

Richard Sylbert - Art Director, Charles LeMaire - Costume Designer, Edward Dmytryk - Director, Harry Gerstad - Editor, Elmer Bernstein - Composer (Music Score), Mack David - Songwriter, Joe MacDonald - Cinematographer, Brook Benton - Cinematographer, Charles K. Feldman - Producer, William Kiernan - Set Designer, John Fante - Screenwriter, Edmund Morris - Screenwriter, Nelson Algren - Book Author

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Wikipedia: Walk on the Wild Side (film)
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Walk on the Wild Side (film)

film poster by Saul Bass
Directed by Edward Dmytryk
Produced by Charles K. Feldman
Written by John Fante
Edmund Morris
Ben Hecht (uncredited)
Starring Laurence Harvey
Capucine
Jane Fonda
Anne Baxter
Barbara Stanwyck.
Cinematography Joseph MacDonald
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release date(s) 1962
Running time 114 minutes

Walk on the Wild Side is a 1962 film directed by Edward Dmytryk, adapted from the 1956 novel A Walk on the Wild Side by Nelson Algren. The film had a star-studded cast, including Laurence Harvey, Capucine, Jane Fonda (in one of her first roles, age 24), Anne Baxter, and Barbara Stanwyck, and was scripted by John Fante. Nonetheless, it was not well-received at the time. When it premiered, Bosley Crowther of the New York Times called it a "lurid, tawdry, and sleazy melodrama."

It is said neither Harvey nor Capucine found the other at all appealing. IMDB reports that "Capucine objected to filming kissing scenes with Laurence Harvey, feeling that he was not manly enough for her. Harvey reportedly replied, 'Perhaps if you were more of a woman, I would be more of a man. Honey, kissing you is like kissing the side of a beer bottle.'"[citation needed]

The film's plot is quite different from the book. It starts with Dove and Kitty leaving Texas for New Orleans. Dove is hoping to find his lost love Hallie. After Kitty steals from the café, Dove makes things right with the owner, who lets him stay while he searches for Hallie. He finds Hallie at the Doll House, a 1930's New Orleans bordello, where Jo is the madam. We learn later that Jo's husband had lost his legs in an accident, after which Jo lost interest in him. It is subtly implied that there is a lesbian relationship between Jo and Hallie, because Hallie enjoys the support of Jo to pursue her interest in sculpting, but it is clear that Hallie works for Jo as a prostitute like the others. The relationship is not loving, more possessive. Annoyed with Dove, and using the accusation that he brought underage Kitty across state lines and raped her, Jo tries to force him to leave without Hallie. In the end, in a struggle at the café, an accidental gunshot kills Hallie.

An interesting portion of the film, occurs during the opening and closing segments of the credits, where a black tom cat, shown at shoulder length, picks a cat fight with another tom. Also, the same black tom cat walks over the headline of a newspaper, stating that the people, who ran the bordello were arrested and sentenced to many years in prison.

Despite Walk on the Wild Side's scandalous story, the film adaptation's title song has become something of a gospel standard.

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