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The Alec Guinness Collection
What is interesting about these films is that Guinness' performance isn't that far removed from the kinds of performances he gave in dramatic roles. In other words, he knows that what makes these roles funny lies in playing them straight, for the most part. It is the situation that makes the roles funny and the supporting casts, which are usually made up of character actors (often playing caricatures rather than characters). The conceit informing most of the films is the secret life of a quiet, middle-class British man. Generally, the characters Guinness is playing are extremely British and a bit bookish perhaps. They are the sort of man no one would notice, for the most part, or, if noticed, seen as very proper and respectable. But each of these characters has a secret life they are living. Sometimes it's criminal, like the caper in The Lavender Hill Mob; in the case of The Captain's Paradise, it's an adulterous relationship. Also in common is the secret life these small, quiet men dream of. In fact, that is at the core of the films - the fantasies of the domesticated, perhaps even socially emasculated male. The humour comes out of the collision between the reality and the fantasy. It develops out of the character's attempts to hold on to his fantasy. In most of the films, the Guinness character ends up facing a comeuppance, the triumph of reality over fantasy. However, this doesn't always mean the character loses. In fact, even when he does lose there is something in the way the ending is handled that makes us feel he has somehow won. Brevity and excellent pacing also characterize the films. This, combined with Guinness' flawless performances, makes the movies work.
© 2002 Piddleville Inc. |
Collection
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