Warren Beatty in All Fall Down, 1962. Author Ellis Amburn used this photo for the cover of biography of Beatty, The Sexiest Man Alive. |
Warren Beatty’s third film, All Fall Down, from 1962, is not that great. The movie boasts an
impressive pedigree, as it was produced by John Houseman, directed by John
Frankenheimer, and also stars Eva Marie Saint, Angela Lansbury, Karl Malden,
and Brandon De Wilde. The script was by playwright William Inge, famous for
plays like Picnic, and Bus Stop. Inge adapted All Fall Down from the novel of the same
name by James Leo Herlihy, who would go on to write the novel Midnight Cowboy. Inge was an important
benefactor in the early career of Warren Beatty, as he had also written
Beatty's first movie, Splendor in the Grass, and Beatty's first and only
Broadway play, A Loss of Roses. All
Fall Down is an offbeat story about a dysfunctional family. If the movie
were made today, it would be a quirky indie movie, and it would probably be
played for more laughs.
Beatty plays a callous ladies’ man with the improbable name
of Berry-Berry Willart. No, really. And by the end of the movie you will be
very sick of hearing other characters say the name “Berry-Berry.” His name is
mentioned about every third line. Lansbury plays another one of her overbearing
mother roles, just as she would play Laurence Harvey’s overbearing mother in
Frankenheimer’s The Manchurian Candidate,
released later in 1962. Like her character in The Manchurian Candidate, Lansbury’s mother in All Fall Down seems to have an unhealthy obsession with her son
Berry-Berry. There’s even a moment in All
Fall Down where it looks like she is about to kiss her son on the lips, but
she just gets very close to Berry-Berry and then runs away. This prefigures a
famous moment in The Manchurian Candidate
when Lansbury’s character kisses her son on the lips. This one moment tells us
all we need to know about their relationship. Another similarity between the
two films is that Lansbury is playing characters much older than herself, as
she was not old enough to be the mother of the men who were playing her
onscreen sons. In real life, Lansbury was just three years older than Laurence
Harvey, eleven years older than Beatty, and nine years older than Elvis Presley-whose
mother she played in Blue Hawaii,
from 1961. (There are no Freudian overtones in Blue Hawaii, however.)
The story of All Fall
Down is told from the point of view of Berry-Berry’s 16-year-old little
brother, Clinton, played very well by Brandon De Wilde, whose most famous role
was the little boy in Shane. De Wilde
played a very similar part the following year in Hud, where he plays little brother to Paul Newman’s amoral Hud.
Both Berry-Berry and Hud are completely selfish people, leaving a trail of
emotional wreckage behind them.
Beatty as Berry-Berry is very much in James Dean mode, as he
was in his first movie, Splendor in the
Grass, which is a much better film than All
Fall Down. Beatty broods, and though Berry-Berry attracts women like flies,
he quickly discards them in very hurtful ways, often using physical violence.
It’s rather ridiculous how easily women are attracted to Beatty in the movie.
All it takes is one look at Beatty for them to suddenly offer to bring him
along on a vacation with them. Of course, Beatty was a stunning physical
specimen in 1962, with his full head of dark hair, piercing blue eyes, and full
lips. But it gets tiring to see women fall all over themselves for him. One
woman even says to him, “If I were a young man as handsome as you are, I would
go to Hollywood and try to get into movies.” Berry-Berry is very similar to the
role that Beatty had just finished playing, the gigolo Paulo in The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone. There’s
nothing redeeming about Berry-Berry’s character, even though his parents hold
him up as the ideal son.
Things start happening in All Fall Down when the daughter of a family friend, Echo, played by
Eva Marie Saint, comes to town to stay with them. The first time she stays with
them, Clinton falls deeply in love with her, even though she’s a much “older
woman” of 31, who has never been married. When Berry-Berry meets Echo the
second time she stays with the family, he literally doesn’t have to say a word
to her, he just takes her hand in the backyard and they go off somewhere to
make out. And Clinton is heartbroken at this turn of events. Karl Malden plays
the ineffectual alcoholic father, and does the most he can with the part. But
he is incapable of offering advice or wisdom to his two sons. (Malden and Marie
Saint famously worked together before in On
the Waterfront.) Berry-Berry and Echo start dating, his mother claims she
is happy for them, Berry-Berry gets Echo pregnant, they have an argument, he
leaves, and she drives off grief-stricken and dies in a car crash. We don’t
really know if the car crash is an act of suicide or not, but my guess is that
it probably was. Side note: given their ridiculous names, what on earth would
Berry-Berry and Echo have named their baby? One shudders to think. Clinton then
almost shoots Berry-Berry, but decides not to, leaving Berry-Berry to deal with
the fact that he’s a jerk who ruins every significant relationship in his life.
The end. Not an especially uplifting movie.
So that’s the movie, an overheated pseudo-Freudian mishmash,
with some teen angst thrown in for good measure. One of the oddest moments in
the movie is the scene where Echo tells Lansbury’s character how her former
boyfriend killed himself-carbon monoxide poisoning, which is the same way that
screenwriter William Inge would kill himself eleven years later. Ugh.
Behind the scenes, Warren Beatty rubbed everybody the wrong
way from day one of rehearsal, and no one except for Karl Malden really liked
him. Beatty’s penchant for Method-y brooding annoyed the other actors and won
him no friends. To be fair to Beatty, at the time he was making All Fall Down in the summer of 1961 he
was getting a lot of media attention as the “Next Big Thing,” but none of his
movies had been released yet. Splendor in
the Grass, Beatty’s very first movie, wasn’t released until October, 1961.
Beatty may have been feeling a lot of pressure to live up to his publicity
hype. And his fellow actors had not had a chance to see him act on screen, so
they had no idea who this guy was. Beatty might also have been intimidated by
the success of his fellow actors, who had all been in the business for a long
time. At the time Beatty was making All
Fall Down, he was a man who was famous, but not because of anything he had
actually accomplished. He was famous because he was Shirley MacLaine’s kid
brother, and because he was having very public romances with Joan Collins and
Natalie Wood. (Beatty was accused of breaking up Wood’s first marriage to
Robert Wagner.) Beatty was famous because of his personal life, not because of
any talent he showed as an actor. This must have annoyed Beatty considerably,
since he is ironically a very private man who doesn’t like discussing his
personal life. This mistake early in his career of letting his private life
become so public perhaps set the tone for the rest of his career. Also, Beatty
had a tendency to date women at the absolute peak of their fame. Had he wanted
less publicity about his private life, he should have started dating women who
were not in show business.
After an amazing start in movies in Splendor in the Grass, Beatty appeared in two duds in quick
succession, The Roman Spring of Mrs.
Stone, which was released in December, 1961, and All Fall Down, which was released in April, 1962. Beatty then took
a long break from movies; turning down everything he was offered, including the
part of a young John F. Kennedy in PT 109.
(Cliff Robertson ending up playing Kennedy.) Given all that we now know about
Kennedy’s sexual life, Beatty probably would have been an ideal choice. After All Fall Down, Beatty didn’t appear onscreen
again until Lilith, released two and
a half years later. Beatty didn’t make another hit movie until 1967’s Bonnie and Clyde, which finally
confirmed his talent as an actor and producer.
9 comments:
This movie sounds TERRIBLE. I'm so thankful I didn't have to watch Berry-Berry abuse all these women. Thank you from saving me from watching a terrible movie.
All fall down was a metaphor about life that is backed up by the bible. All have sinned and come short of the glory of God.
The parents were high strung emotional zombie types, while the 2 sons were both handsome and lustful. The beautiful lady tried to capitalize on her obvious sex appeal, from the youngest to the oldest brother.
Which demonstrates the sad vanity of life being lived , in search of meaning apart from the grace and will of God.
Which always ends in sorrow and death.
I believe in retrospect that "All Fall Down,'has actually gotten better w/ time. All the cast gave solid,strong performances. Eva Marie Saint gives the best performance of all in the film. Her character becomes a heartbreaker, who gamble's on love only to be shot down by it's own arrows. I always felt Beatty played his best roles as the cad,w/no emotional responsibility.We understand to some degree why, when we meet his Mother, played brilliantly by Lansbury. Berry-Berry (Beatty) may be a ladies man,but because of his hate for his Mother, he can never find true love or respect for any of them. Malden is perfectly cast. Brandon De Wilde is so likable,you forget what a good performance he gives.His character is the glue that holds it all together.His character, Clinton is the only one we see grow, as his idolization of his brother Berry-Berry becomes a disappointment.He's able to throw out 'the rose colored glasses & face the reality that his brother is a very sad example of a man.
I believe in retrospect that "All Fall Down,'has actually gotten better w/ time. All the cast gave solid,strong performances. Eva Marie Saint gives the best performance of all in the film. Her character becomes a heartbreaker, who gamble's on love only to be shot down by it's own arrows. I always felt Beatty played his best roles as the cad,w/no emotional responsibility.We understand to some degree why, when we meet his Mother, played brilliantly by Lansbury. Berry-Berry (Beatty) may be a ladies man,but because of his hate for his Mother, he can never find true love or respect for any of them. Malden is perfectly cast. Brandon De Wilde is so likable,you forget what a good performance he gives.His character is the glue that holds it all together.His character, Clinton is the only one we see grow, as his idolization of his brother Berry-Berry becomes a disappointment.He's able to throw out 'the rose colored glasses & face the reality that his brother is a very sad example of a man.
I appreciate the fine analysis and comments. I 2as just watching this film on TCM and had turned it on past mid-way in the story. It looked grim. I could not decipher what it was about. And I found the constant repetition of Berry-Berry quite annoying. However, thanks to this blog, I will be able to view the film in the future with better appreciation. Was it a comment on American families? I felt a Tennessee Williams vibe.
Typo above. "I was just watching ..."
Berry-Berry as a Stanley Kowalski? Particularly ugly scene when Beatty shoves around disheveled young woman. I could not figure out if this was a brothel, a roadhouse, someone's residence, a bar? Stark photography that suggests film noir and British kitchen sink films.
I watched this movie for the first time a few nights ago on TCM. I am an avid TCM fan and especially enjoy watching stars in their earlier films. I agree with the previous posts: I got tired of hearing the name "Berry-Berry" throughout the film and considered that the name may have a deeper meaning. I also noticed that the mother's relationship to her older son was a foreshadowing of that of the mother in The Manchurian Candidate. I may need to see this movie again because I kept getting the feeling that I was missing a larger symbolic message. Does anyone else feel that way?
Karen Carson
Does anyone remember the joke Malden tells in the kitchen?
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