| Barbra Streisand, Ryan O'Neal , Kenneth
Mars, Austin Pendleton, Sorrell Booke , Stefan Gierasch , Bob Harris,
Dean Jeffries
With Howard Hawks's Bringing Up Baby (1938)
as his blueprint, Peter Bogdanovich resurrected and payed homage
to 1930s screwball comedy in What's Up, Doc? (1972). When wacky
co-ed Judy Maxwell (Barbra Streisand, in the Katharine Hepburn part)
spies nebbishy musicologist Howard Bannister (Ryan O'Neal in bespectacled
Cary Grant mode) in a San Francisco hotel lobby, she decides that
Howard and his precious igneous rocks are right up her alley. Too
bad Howard already has a fiancée, the propriety-fixated Eunice (Madeline
Kahn in her film debut). Using all her arcane knowledge from brief
stays at numerous colleges, Judy tries to charm her way to a $20,000
grant for Howard, and Howard himself, at a banquet with grantor
Frederick Larrabee (Austin Pendleton). Things get even more complicated
the next day when Judy's underwear-filled overnight bag gets mixed
up with Howard's rock bag, which gets mixed up with Mrs. Van Hoskins'
bag of jewels, which gets mixed up with Mr. Smith's bag of top secret
government papers. All sides converge at Larrabee's mod townhouse
and the chase begins. Retaining Hawks' machine-gun pace (as well
as the sly pop culture referentiality of Billy Wilder), Bogdanovich
and writers Buck Henry, David Newman, and Robert Benton updated
the opposites-attract screwball convention for contemporary times.
O'Neal gently parodied not only Grant but also his own Love Story
(1970) preppy, while Kahn represents stiff-wigged 1950s manners
as opposed to Streisand's long-haired, pants-wearing free spirit.
The happy ending, in which Cole Porter-belting youth wins out over
old manners, found favor with audiences, as What's Up, Doc? became
one of the most popular films of 1972, and the second hit in a row
for Bogdanovich after 1971's The
Last Picture Show. |