Tag Archive | "Robert Downey Sr."

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Required Viewing: PUTNEY SWOPE

Posted on 14 May 2010 by Rich Drees

One of the things that has disappointed me in the resurgence of the career Robert Downey Jr. is that a little of that spotlight hasn’t reflected over to his father, director Robert Downey Sr. Having seen some of his early films, I can understand why they have a cult following, but really wish that they were getting wider exposure to and acclaim from film fans.

Yo’ll have a chance to see one of those early films tonight as TCM is airing Downey Sr’s 1969 broad social satire Putney Swope late night at 2 am, Eastern. When the chairman of the board of a big advertising company unexpectedly dies, the one black member of the board, the titular Putney Swope, is elected to replace him. Through a quirk in the company by-laws, no board member is allowed to vote for themselves for the position, so they all separately voted for the person they thought no one else would. Once in charge, Swope fires a majority of the firm’s white employees, changes the name of the company to “Truth and Love, Inc.” and decrees they will no longer create advertisements for alcohol, tobacco and war toys. This leads to t he obvious step of the government declaring Swope a threat to national security.

A stinging shot at black militants, the entrenched rich white elite of the country, advertising and the nature of power to invariably corrupt, Putney Swope is really a neglected gem of it’s time. Although the film is mostly in black and white, the satirical commercials that are scattered through out are in color, as you can see from the sample below.

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POUND: Revisiting A Neglected Cult Classic

Posted on 07 April 2006 by Rich Drees

Although much has been written about the numerous films from early in Hollywood’s history that weren’t preserved, the same neglect can happen to more modern films as well. Case in point- writer/director Robert Downey, Sr.’s 1970 counter culture social satire Pound.

“It’s a miracle that it’s here,” admits Downey to the near capacity crowd that has assembled to see the film at a rare screening during the 2006 Philadelphia Film Festival.

Set in a New York City dog pound, 18 dogs, played by human actors, wait to be adopted. Part existential comedy, part allegory, the dogs include a punch drunk Boxer (Stan Gottlieb), a hyperactive Mexican Hairless (a scene stealing Lawrence Wolf) and a sleek Greyhound (Antonio Fargas). Meanwhile, the city is being terrorized by a serial killer dubbed The Honky Killer (James Green). Pound also features the debut of performance of Downey’s son Robert Jr. as a puppy temporarily held at the pound.

“When I took this film to the studio, and screened it for the head of the studio, he said he thought it was going to be animated,” Downey states, chuckling. “As ‘punishment’ it ended up on a double bill with a Fellini movie, Satyricon. I was in heaven. (The studio) was ashamed of it. It was X rated, for language. And the same studio that had it had Midnight Cowboy two minutes later. So this thing disappeared.”

Following last year’s screening of Downey’s most recent documentary Rittenhouse Square (2005) and his cult classic race relations satire Putney Swope (1969) at the Festival, programmers approached Downey about bringing Pound to Philadelphia. However, the only print of the film that Downey could locate was found in his “cameraman’s ex-wife’s closet,” explains Downey. “It was a 35mm print that was dead.”

Although the print itself was deemed unprojectable, it was able to be digitally scanned and restored.

“So they put the color back in,” says Downey. “They cleaned up the sound a bit too. Technology is great, it’s just the movies aren’t getting any better. It’s only because of digital technology that some of this stuff can be saved, because most of the colors just go. Most of my stuff in color other than Greasers Palace (1972), I hate the color. I love black and white.”

Produced as his follow up to Swope, Downey says that Pound had its origins in a stage play he had authored.

“I had written this play once that was a tiny little play done Off-off-off-off Broadway at a movie house at midnight,” Downey states. “I thought, ‘You know that might make a film,’ so I just started working it and working it.”

“It’s awfully hard to beat something that’s written as a play into a movie,” Downey continues candidly. “That’s what’s wrong with it when it’s wrong, to me anyways. I didn’t mind watching it tonight, though. I dreaded this.”

“The problem with turning plays into movies is that people in a lot of plays don’t move,” Downey explains. “They talk. The best adaptation of a play into a movie for me is a film that Billy Friedkin made called The Boys In The Band (1970). It all takes place in one room and the only thing that hurts it – the film just grinds to a halt – is when there’s a phone call a guy has for like five minutes. You say, ‘Wait a minute.’ You’re just waiting because its not theater. But it’s a brilliant rendition of a play into a movie because he had no space, yet he made it work. I don’t know how he did it.”

The screening of the film sent Downey reminiscing back to its production and the actors he worked with. “Just looking at it and thinking that it’s 35 years gone, I’m struck by how good the actors were,” he says. “I think it goes to show you that there are a lot of people around with gifts who you never hear of.”

For the cast of Pound, Downey reunited with several actors from Putney Swope, including Gottlieb, Wolf and Vargas.

“I try to, I guess because Preston Sturges was my hero, use the same people and give them different things to do every time,” says Downey. “Actors love that.”

And as for Pound being the start of son’s own career?

“My kid didn’t even want to do it,” Downey recalls with a laugh.

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