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Ahoy, squirts! Quint here with today’s installment of A Movie A Day.
[For those now joining us, A Movie A Day is my attempt at filling in gaps in my film knowledge. My DVD collection is thousands strong, many of them films I haven’t seen yet, but picked up as I scoured used DVD stores. Each day I’ll pull a previously unseen film from my collection or from my DVR and discuss it here. Each movie will have some sort of connection to the one before it, be it cast or crew member.]
Everything that I loved about IRMA LA DOUCE, the whimsy, the lightheartedness and the optimistic outlook is missing from today’s PRISONER OF SECOND AVENUE, based on a play by Neil Simon and starring Jack Lemmon and Anne Bancroft.
I won’t say it’s a bad movie because of it, though. There is a certain optimism to the film, but it’s not the main focus.

Basically you have a man reaching his breaking point. Lemmon plays Mel, a long-suffering corporate man in New York. He can’t stand his apartment (which always seems to be in some form of disrepair… cracks in the walls, water not working, elevator not working, noisy sexpot German stewardesses living next door, etc), he is in constant fear of losing his job, he’s not close to his family… the only thing that keeps him grounded is his wife, Edna (Bancroft).
When Lemmon loses his job something snaps and he goes from Grumpy Bastard to Almost Insane Fucker. That balance is tipped when, after weeks of job hunting while his wife gets a job to support them, their place is robbed and he gets a faceful of water from an upstairs neighbor sick of him screaming obscenities out on his balcony.
That takes Lemmon from still being the likable, but grumpier version of the actor we all love to love to a wild-eyed conspiracy theory-spewing madman.
I don’t like that guy. I like my Lemmon nice and sane!

I can’t hold that against him, though. He is an actor afterall and I did enjoy his “I’m Mad As Hell And I’m Not Gonna Take It Anymore!” performance to a degree. I think I was a little let down in just how stage-bound it felt. IRMA LA DOUCE doesn’t really take place in many outdoor spaces, but they successfully made that movie feel cinematic whereas Melvin Frank directed a movie that felt like it could have been made for TV.
The film does feel like a PBS special in some degrees, minus a great scene in Central Park where Jack Lemmon chases down a youth he thinks stole his wallet (played by a very young Sylvester Stallone) that is a lot of fun and genuinely funny.
Bancroft is the real winner her. She has so much to play with and doesn’t always make the easy decision in scenes. She gets angry at her husband, but never loses the love. She’s trying to so hard to bring him back from the brink of insanity, always wearing her love for him like a mask. She gets pissed, she gets fed-up, she gets scared, but never makes the exact choices you expect someone to make in those situations. There are always layers and depth to her dialogue and delivery.

Simon’s play just might not be my favorite of his works. I love how he plays with sanity vs. insanity and how he parallels Lemmon’s recovery with Bancroft’s slow descent, but something just didn’t click for me in the story. It could just be Frank’s visual decisions that kept me from completely enjoying this movie, but I think the overall story isn’t one that I’m attracted to. I much prefer his more crazy satires like MURDER BY DEATH.
I mentioned earlier that Sly makes an early appearance in this film and it’s great. He plays a victim, essentially, and it’s really fun to see him before he was the quiet tough badass or even the lovable lug from Rocky. This film has many early appearances by known people, including F. Murray Abraham early on in the flick as a cabbie and M. Emmet Walsh, one of my favorite character actors, as the snarky doorman at the apartment complex where Lemmon and Bancroft live.
Final Thoughts: I’d definitely say this film is better than mediocre, but I could never engage with the characters on the screen. I always felt like I was watching a screen, not looking through a window into another world. Some of that might be the cinematography, the angles, the long takes and some of it might be the overall story being told. As an actor’s showcase, this is strong stuff, but I think it’s a tale more suitable for the stage than the big screen.

Here are the final run of A Movie A Day titles:
Saturday, January 3rd: THE GOODBYE GIRL (1977)

Sunday, January 4th: LOST IN YONKERS (1993)

Monday, January 5th: THE SUNSHINE BOYS (1975)

Tuesday, January 6th: CALIFORNIA SUITE (1978)

Wednesday, January 7th: A BRIDGE TOO FAR (1977)

-Quint
quint@aintitcool.com

Previous Movies:
June 2nd: Harper June 3rd: The Drowning Pool June 4th: Papillon June 5th: Gun Crazy June 6th: Never So Few June 7th: A Hole In The Head June 8th: Some Came Running June 9th: Rio Bravo June 10th: Point Blank June 11th: Pocket Money June 12th: Cool Hand Luke June 13th: The Asphalt Jungle June 14th: Clash By Night June 15th: Scarlet Street June 16th: Killer Bait (aka Too Late For Tears) June 17th: Robinson Crusoe On Mars June 18th: City For Conquest June 19th: San Quentin June 20th: 42nd Street June 21st: Dames June 22nd: Gold Diggers of 1935 June 23rd: Murder, My Sweet June 24th: Born To Kill June 25th: The Sound of Music June 26th: Torn Curtain June 27th: The Left Handed Gun June 28th: Caligula June 29th: The Elephant Man June 30th: The Good Father July 1st: Shock Treatment July 2nd: Flashback July 3rd: Klute July 4th: On Golden Pond July 5th: The Cowboys July 6th: The Alamo July 7th: Sands of Iwo Jima July 8th: Wake of the Red Witch July 9th: D.O.A. July 10th: Shadow of A Doubt July 11th: The Matchmaker July 12th: The Black Hole July 13th: Vengeance Is Mine July 14th: Strange Invaders July 15th: Sleuth July 16th: Frenzy July 17th: Kingdom of Heaven: The Director’s Cut July 18th: Cadillac Man July 19th: The Sure Thing July 20th: Moving Violations July 21st: Meatballs July 22nd: Cast a Giant Shadow July 23rd: Out of the Past July 24th: The Big Steal July 25th: Where Danger Lives July 26th: Crossfire July 27th: Ricco, The Mean Machine July 28th: In Harm’s Way July 29th: Firecreek July 30th: The Cheyenne Social Club July 31st: The Man Who Knew Too Much August 1st: The Spirit of St. Louis August 2nd: Von Ryan’s Express August 3rd: Can-Can August 4th: Desperate Characters August 5th: The Possession of Joel Delaney August 6th: Quackser Fortune Has A Cousin In The Bronx August 7th: Start the Revolution Without Me August 8th: Hell Is A City August 9th: The Pied Piper August 10th: Partners August 11th: Barry Lyndon August 12th: The Skull August 13th: The Hellfire Club August 14th: Blood of the Vampire August 15th: Terror of the Tongs August 16th: Pirates of Blood River August 17th: The Devil-Ship Pirates August 18th: Jess Franco’s Count Dracula August 19th: Dracula A.D. 1972 August 20th: The Stranglers of Bombay August 21st: Man, Woman & Child August 22nd: The Little Girl Who Lives Down The Lane August 23rd: The Young Philadelphians August 24th: The Rack August 25th: Until They Sail August 26th: Somebody Up There Likes Me August 27th: The Set-Up August 28th: The Devil & Daniel Webster August 29th: Cat People August 30th: The Curse of the Cat People August 31st: The 7th Victim September 1st: The Ghost Ship September 2nd: Isle of the Dead September 3rd: Bedlam September 4th: Black Sabbath September 5th: Black Sunday September 6th: Twitch of the Death Nerve September 7th: Tragic Ceremony September 8th: Lisa & The Devil September 9th: Baron Blood September 10th: A Shot In The Dark September 11th: The Pink Panther September 12th: The Return of the Pink Panther September 13th: The Pink Panther Strikes Again September 14th: Revenge of the Pink Panther September 15th: Trail of the Pink Panther September 16th: The Real Glory September 17th: The Winning of Barbara Worth September 18th: The Cowboy and the Lady September 19th: Dakota September 20th: Red River September 21st: Terminal Station September 22nd: The Search September 23rd: Act of Violence September 24th: Houdini September 25th: Money From Home September 26th: Papa’s Delicate Condition September 27th: Dillinger September 28th: Battle of the Bulge September 29th: Daisy Kenyon September 30th: Laura October 1st: The Dunwich Horror October 2nd: Experiment In Terror October 3rd: The Devil’s Rain October 4th: Race With The Devil October 5th: Salo, Or The 120 Days of Sodom October 6th: Bad Dreams October 7th: The House Where Evil Dwells October 8th: Memories of Murder October 9th: The Hunger October 10th: I Saw What You Did October 11th: I Spit On Your Grave October 12th: Naked You Die October 13th: The Wraith October 14th: Silent Night, Bloody Night October 15th: I Bury The Living October 16th: The Beast Must Die October 17th: Hellgate October 18th: He Knows You’re Alone October 19th: The Thing From Another World October 20th: The Fall of the House of Usher October 21st: Audrey Rose October 22nd: Who Slew Auntie Roo? October 23rd: Wait Until Dark October 24th: Dead & Buried October 25th: A Bucket of Blood October 26th: The Bloodstained Shadow October 27th: I, Madman October 28th: Return to Horror High October 29th: Die, Monster, Die October 30th: Epidemic October 31st: Student Bodies November 1st: Black Widow November 2nd: The Ghost & Mrs. Muir November 3rd: Flying Tigers November 4th: Executive Action November 5th: The Busy Body November 6th: It’s A Mad Mad Mad Mad World November 7th: Libeled Lady November 8th: Up The River November 9th: Doctor Bull November 10th: Judge Priest November 11th: Ten Little Indians November 12th: Murder On The Orient Express November 13th: Daniel November 14th: El Dorado November 15th: The Gambler November 16th: Once Upon A Time In America November 17th: Salvador November 18th: Best Seller November 19th: The Holcroft Covenant November 20th: Birdman of Alcatraz November 21st: The Train November 22nd: Gunfight At The O.K. Corral November 23rd: Mystery Street November 24th: Border Incident November 25th: The Tin Star November 26th: On The Beach November 27th: Twelve O’Clock High November 28th: Gentleman’s Agreement November 29th: Panic In The Streets November 30th: The Hot Rock December 1st: Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? December 2nd: The Day of the Dolphin December 3rd: Carnal Knowledge December 4th: The Cincinnati Kid December 5th: Pocketful of Miracles December 6th: Mikey & Nicky December 7th: Two-Minute Warning December 8th: The Sentinel December 9th: How To Steal A Million December 10th: What’s New Pussycat? December 11th: Being There December 17th: The Party December 18th: Casino Royale December 19th: The Stranger December 20th: Brother Orchid December 21st: The Petrified Forest December 22nd: Moontide December 23rd: Notorious December 24th: The Inn of the Sixth Happiness December 25th: The High Commissioner December 26th: The Silent Partner December 27th: Payday December 28th: A Stranger Is Watching December 29th: The New Kids December 30th: Serial December 31st: The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes January 1st: Irma La Douce
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