|
Trapeze (1956)
In British director Carol Reed's Cinemascopic, extravagant
romantic melodrama (with a buried homosexual theme) - a smash hit
at the time:
- the opening pre-credits sequence: circus trapeze
performer Mike Ribble (Burt Lancaster) fell performing a death-defying
triple somersault on the flying trapeze high bar, resulting in
a career-changing, crippling leg injury and forcing him to become
a net rigger instead - he was a semi-retired, cynical loner limping
around with a cane and possessing a heavy drinking habit; he later
commiserated about how he was the last one, the sixth "legend
in the world" to attempt a triple:
"There'll never be a seventh. When circus was real, flying was
a religion. Now whaddya got? Pink lights, and ballet girls, blue
sawdust. A lot of hoopla"
- the circus environment in Paris at Cirque Bouglione
run by conniving, greedy circus owner Bouglione (Thomas Gomez), who
was only interested in crowd-pleasing acts
- the entrance of brash Brooklynite American Tino Orsini
(Tony Curtis), a talented aspiring flier who arrived to entice Mike
to return to the trapeze act as his trainer and catcher; Tino attempted
to impress Mike with an impromptu acrobatic display on the Parisian
streets (swinging on bars, performing cartwheels and a flip); afterwards,
both walked away 'on their hands'
- the amazing, fluid and uninterrupted takes during
the choreography of dangerous trapeze stunts (performed fairly seamlessly
by stunt doubles) - Mike and Tino's elusive goal was to perform the
very difficult triple somersault and become a headlining duo: "Ribble
and Orsini"
- the scheming of overly-ambitious and driven, curvaceous
Italian trampolinist acrobat Lola (Italian actress Gina Lollobrigida
in her American film debut) to abandon and desert her male circus
tumbling team and join Mike and Tino as a high-wire trio; she auditioned
with a new, low-cut, body-hugging black and white costume, but Mike
(although he tried to seduce her with brandy) ended up unconvinced
to allow her to join them: "But I am afraid. That's why I'm
stickin' to a two act"
- the scenes of Mike's adamant demands that a female
would only destroy the connection between the catcher and flier,
and ruin their "pure trapeze act" - he yelled at Tino for
promoting Lola: ("What's she doing up there?...Get her down...There's
no room for more than two of us up there. Now get her down");
he also tried to convince Bouglione to not change the two-person
act just for money's sake: ("She'll ruin the act, that's all...Improved?
Improved by a dame? I'm tryin' to give you a pure trapeze act...I'm
offering you something unique in circus history - the greatest act
since Leotard invented trapeze here in this circus 100 years ago.
And you talk to me about box office and spangles...We hardly got
the time. We take her on, we lose the triple opening night...You
think they'll pay more to see her in spangles than they want to see
a triple. Well, you're wrong!")
- Mike's developing anger toward Tino when he realized
how manipulative Lola had become: "Now we've lost the triple
opening night...Listen, you idiot. She gave me the treatment before
she ever got around to you. Why do you think I always wanted a two
act? Because one flies and one catches, and no one comes between"
- the further maneuverings of the sexy and flirtatious
Lola, who was forced to seduce Tino to get her way into the spotlight
within their act: (Lola: "Oh, Tino. He saw it from the start.
Right from the start, he saw he might lose the only life he has.
The life you give him. It frightens me to think what he could do
to us, Tino. You are the flier. You make the act. You must make the
decisions")
- the growth of tensions between Lola and Mike: "As
soon as this engagement finishes, Lola, you're out. Do you understand?
Tino and me work alone, just as we planned...No more tricks, Lola,
you're out!...For your own sake, Lola, get out, or one night, these
hands won't be there to catch you"
- the resulting very complex love triangle between Lola,
Tino, and Mike, culminating in serious fall-out between Tino and
Mike:
"She's not interested in you, me or the act. Just Lola, that's
all. The more you give her, the more she'll want. She's ruined good
acts before that way and she'll...I can see you forgetting to check
the rigging, missing parades. Next thing you know, you'll be ducking
practice. In the end, you'll think about her in the middle of a triple
and lose it....Tino, Tino, listen to me. You're the only man living
who can get the triple. But her, Tino. Anybody can get her. Can't you
understand? Anybody can get her!"; Tino shot back, affirming his
love for Lola:
"Shut up! I'll work with ya, Mike. I'll work for the triple until
my hands burn off. But you force me to choose and I'll leave you. I
want Lola most of all, because I love her. And she loves me"
- the striking image of Mike, who had also fallen in
love with Lola, delivering a slow-motion kiss to her while both were
swinging high above the ground - and upside-down
- the trio's climactic return to the circus show where
Mike dared and challenged Tino to perform the triple (to impress
famed circus entrepreneur from NY John Ringling North (Minor Watson)
in the audience) - in the thrilling scene, Tino performed the stunt
without a net
- in the downbeat closing, Tino was urged to take North's
offered contract in NY (with new partner Otto (Jean-Pierre Kerien),
Mike's ex-catcher), while Lola ran after Mike and joined him as he
limped away from the circus
|
|