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Clouds and Scattered Sun Kelly and Donen's It's Always Fair Weather There's a scene in the 1949 musical On the Town when Frank Sinatra and Jules Munshin greet their friend and fellow sailor, Gene Kelly, with such enthusiasm after being separated for a scant few hours that it leads onlooker Ann Miller to comment, "You'd think they hadn't seen each other in twelve years." By 1955, On the Town's writing team Betty Comden and Adolph Green conceived of a sequel of sorts for their upbeat day-in-New-York musical, one that would answer the question of how three military buddies would actually react upon meeting each other after years of separation. The resulting film was the cynical and engaging It's Always Fair Weather, which marked the third and final pairing of co-directors Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen, whose previous efforts (first On the Town and then Singin' in the Rain) have become legend.
Intentionally or no, that malaise carries over into the film itself. Shot in earthbound Eastman color, It's Always Fair Weather doesn't look or feel like the Technicolor froth that preceded it. It lacks any of those big dream ballets that Kelly's films are often building towards, and feels altogether less whimsical, loaded as it is with broken friendships and dashed dreams.
Where On the Town brings to mind perky, inseparable young sailors, each with a bright smile and a lovely lady to dance with, the grownup characters in It's Always Fair Weather are defined by their disappointment and alienation. Ted, Doug, and Angie dance together early on in an impressive bit called "The Binge" that employs trashcan lids, but even the premise of this number has a certain bitterness: the returning soldiers get drunk out of their minds after Ted discovers that his sweetheart didn't wait for him. Upon meeting again, each of the three men individually regrets showing up to meet the others, and mentally improvises insulting lyrics to strains of the "Blue Danube Waltz" instead of singing with his friends (Sample lyric: "Old pals are the bunk/This guy's a cheap punk/And that one's a heel/And I'm a schlemiel"). Later on Kelly and Donen devise a split screen that captures Kelly, Dailey, and Kidd all performing the same dance number in perfect synchronization, each alone, and in different rooms. And while the film offers us one final pairing of Gene Kelly with love interest Cyd Charisse, Dailey and Kidd's wives are only faraway voices on the telephone, and even Kelly and Charisse fail to share a pas-de-deux (their not-overly-romantic duet "Love is Nothing But a Racket" was cut from the final release).
And Kelly gets a solo. Actually, Kelly gets one of his very best solos. With roller-skates strapped to his feet for reasons that don't matter all that much, Kelly's Ted realizes that he is loved, and he is in love, and for that reason, he can stop hating himself. The revelation leads him to sing the infectious Comden and Green/Andre Previn tune "I Like Myself" and dance blissfully. Kelly taps in the skates as if it were the natural thing to do, then he immediately glides for a few feet in one single long take, just to prove that these aren't trick skates, and that there aren't any camera tricks either. It's just grace and athleticism, pure and simple, and it's exactly the type of moment that one watches musicals for. Coming at a time when the genre was on the cusp of extinction (or at least landing a spot on the endangered list), and from a formerly embittered character like Ted, the number feels like a twofold miracle.
August 2006 | Issue
53 Victoria Large is a Massachusetts-based writer and student. When not watching movies from all genres and eras, she finds the time to write about them. ALSO: More reviews |
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