DINNER AT EIGHT: Blu-ray (MGM, 1933) Warner Archive
MGM, the studio once to boast
"more stars than there are in heaven", then, most recently
proven by putting six of its top-tier talents in a single picture (producer,
Irving Thalberg’s audaciously lavish, Grand Hotel, 1932 and directed by
Edmund Goulding) were off and running with a new formula for making pictures.
Conventional wisdom up until Grand Hotel had dictated the parceling off
of stars – one or maybe two per picture. But in his ingenious mania for
exploring creativity in all of its many facets, and, to celebrate Metro’s
formidable assets, Thalberg had thrown everything he had into Grand Hotel,
the gamble paying off handsomely. Thalberg and his boss, Louis B. Mayer
differed here, Mayer desiring a quota of 52 movies per annum, while Thalberg
suggested more heavy investments on fewer projects, imbued with exceptional
scope and quality – pictures so good and so far above the status quo, audiences
would be compelled to see them. For a while, Mayer remained bitterly silent,
secretly hoping Thalberg would fall flat on his face, thus proving his point
and giving Mayer carte blanche to reign in Thalberg’s extravagances. However,
Thalberg possessed an uncanny knack for picking winners. Within a relative short
period, he had built a reputation within the industry as an untouchable force
of nature – odd, too, since, in life, Thalberg was quiet, introspective and
physically, unprepossessing, the antithesis of what author and playwright,
Vicki Baum had once dubbed, as ‘the little dynamo’.
A clean sweep at the Oscars, in hindsight, Grand
Hotel is the film that launched a new kind of opulence and imitators,
mostly, with the exception of producer, David O. Selznick’s Dinner At Eight
(1933), directed by George Cukor. Interestingly, both movies are producer,
rather than director-driven, designed to show off the studio’s preeminence in
the art of star-making. L.B. Mayer’s edict to his talent scouts – “find me a
personality…I can make a star” – was a testament to this sort of
manufactured glamor, never again to be rivaled. David Selznick had come to MGM
after stints at RKO and Paramount, the very last stop on his way to becoming
Hollywood’s first independent producer. In truth, Selznick maniacal fastidiousness
never quite fit ‘the system’. Despite having wed Mayer’s daughter, Irene
– to have paved the way for the barb ‘the son-in-law also rises’,
Selznick’s greatest ambition apart from Mayer was to sit in his chair, calling
the shots and making the sorts of pictures he wanted to without any outside
intervention. Selznick had guts and greatness coursing through his veins. He could
do marketable pictures, Dinner at Eight being a prime example. In some
ways, Selznick was out to prove it wasn’t only Thalberg who could helm a six-star
smash hit, the proof in Selznick’s personal investment to reshape this George
S. Kaufman/Edna Ferber stage hit into another star-studded showcase, devoted
mostly to his own peerless level of showmanship.
In retrospect, Dinner at Eight is exactly the
right movie for the right moment – an elegantly mounted cliché of the hoi
poloi, rife to be made absurd as they dine on their fine Finnan Haddie, but
especially at the height of the Great Depression – already perceived as the
oxymoron(s) of their generation and proof positive for the impoverished masses
that the country was going to the dogs, as mismanaged by this silly sect of
saucy and slick simpletons, made soft in body, mind and spirit by luxuries as
gauche to best a nation struggling to keep body and soul together. Dinner at
Eight culls together five of Metro’s most distinguished names, and, fattens
out the roster with at least eight more heavyweights who promised, though never
quite deliver the same level of ‘star status.’ Of the heavy hitters, the
picture belongs mostly to Jean Harlow, that sassy platinum Venus, then barely
twenty-two and tragically, with only another four years left to live. By 1933,
Harlow had cut a sinful streak of playing déclassé dames and bawdy broads with
a stinger of innocence muffled under her bee-stung lips and arched, penciled-in
brows, her trademarked persona soon to be reshaped – or rather, refrained – at
the insistence of Hollywood’s self-governing code of censorship. Had she lived,
Harlow would have inevitably been forced to endure a ‘cooling off’ of her white
hot and searing sexpot image. In life, Harlow was hardly that - a
self-professed ‘homebody’ who enjoyed sitting on her father’s lap in-between
takes, and whose most risqué behavior then is rumored to have slept in the raw
– alone. Herein, Harlow is cast as Kitty Packard, a barroom floozy, since
latched onto boorish sugar daddy, Dan (Wallace Beery).
Sporting an immaculate and frilly ensemble of elegant
gowns and nighties, created with adoring perfection by Metro’s resident
couturier, Adrian, Harlow casts a lowbrow luster of tart comedic perfection as
the lowborn Kitty, matching her husband’s brutish verbosity tit for tat,
calling him out on his weakness for hard-working women he can exploit, but
having a soft spot – alas, in the back of his head (as Dan lacks any
understanding he might possess a real human heart) for flashy young things like
Kitty whom he can bounce on his knee. Kitty was once starry-eyed and
fresh-faced. Now, she’s steely-eyed and quite simply fresh, not above telling
her man what’s what with her charming lack of culture, yet, reserving her most
amusing lines for retired Broadway legend, Carlotta Vance (the wickedly funny,
Marie Dressler), “I was reading a book the other day…a nutty kind of a book.
Do you know the man in it says machinery is going to take the place of every
profession today?” Harlow’s Kitty innocently explains, to which Dressler’s
piss-elegant old beef astutely eyes her up and down, casually replying, “Oh
my dear, that’s one thing you need never worry about!”
The moment, captured in a medium travelling shot, is
arguably the highlight of the picture, the result of Selznick’s last-minute
tinkering and conviction his movie needed a lighter moment to cap off what is
essentially a very dark and disturbing prediction for the future. It should be
pointed out that virtually all of the protagonists in Dinner at Eight
are cynical sad sacks of one sort or another, drunk on power, disillusioned by
life, challenged by fate, embittered through time, and, sorely lacking in any
scruples beyond the best that money can buy. The most resourceful of this
enterprising lot is Kitty Packard, perhaps because Harlow – like her character
– straddles this chasm between frivolous wealth and no-nonsense ferocity.
Relying on screenwriter, Donald Ogden Stewart, Marie Dressler remains the
perfect counterpoint to Harlow’s naïvely rancid vixen. In life, Dressler, a
one-time Vaudevillian, reduced to cleaning houses for a living when MGM’s
Irving Thalberg elected to give her a second career, would tower over almost
all of Metro’s most marketable assets – on par with the likes of such luminous
creations as Clark Gable, Joan Crawford and Greta Garbo. Audiences were
immediately drawn to her weather-beaten charm and careworn views on life in
general – and, at least in Dinner at Eight, society expressly,
Dressler’s ability to morph from highborn matrons to dowdy drunkards, and
everything in between, earned her a top place amongst MGM’s most cherished and
fondly recalled icons from the 1930’s.
As Thalberg had done in Grand Hotel, Selznick
could not resist the urge to cast Lionel and John Barrymore in Dinner at
Eight; the Barrymores, Hollywood royalty and legends of the theater
besides. Lionel is shipping magnet, Oliver Jordan, suffering the slings and
arrows of a declining economy and likely to lose control of the once-prosperous
business built from scratch by his late father. Oliver and Carlotta are old
friends, each confessing how hard their seemingly Teflon-coated lives have been
hit by the Depression, each unlikely to survive the crippling deluge yet to
follow. After all, neither is a spring chicken. But Oliver’s life is
complicated further by his marriage to daffy society matron, Millicent (Billie
Burke), narrow-mindedly immersed in her fastidious plans to pull off an elegant
soirée, and, whose greatest concern is that the aspic will melt before dinner
is over. Also in attendance are aging has-been actor, Larry Renault (John
Barrymore), Kitty and Dan, Carlotta, Oliver’s personal physician, Dr. Wayne
Talbot (Edmund Lowe) and his wife, Lucy (Karen Morley). The wrinkle, soon to be
exposed, is that some of these seemingly unrelated party guests already know
one another much too well. Wayne knows Oliver is gravely ill. Kitty is having
an extramarital affair with Wayne. Larry is caught in a May/December romance,
desperately pursued by the Jordan’s impetuous daughter, Paula (Madge
Evans). Larry thinks he can make it
work, if only he can regain something of the reputation he once had as a
distinguished star of stage and screen.
Alas, Larry’s own worst enemy is his ego – topped only
by the malicious pride of his one-time agent, Max Kane (Lee Tracy), who
instructs him to take a good hard look in the mirror at what he has become. “You
sag like an old woman!” In some ways, Dinner at Eight is rather
cruel to John Barrymore’s reputation - once considered, ‘the great profile’
but largely taken on by MGM for the cache of his name alone and succumbing to
fits of depression, teeter-tottered with bouts of hellish alcoholism that did
much to wreck his good looks and reputation as a leading man. Barrymore isn’t
quite so far gone to seed in Dinner at Eight, and yet his reincarnation
as Larry Renault invites parallels between art and life, particularly in the
moment where he performs a most un-glamorous middle-aged and self-pitying
sprawl, tripping on a foot stool in his fashionable penthouse before turning on
the gas jets in his fireplace to commit suicide. Oh, how the mighty have
fallen. Unlike his alter ego, Barrymore would continue to stagger through life
and the movies for another seven years, his subsequent roles elevating this
self-parody. Only in hindsight does he veer into grotesqueness and caricature,
painful revelations of a more self-destructive nature. In Dinner at Eight,
Barrymore gives us a terribly tragic glimpse into his own future forecast,
Renault, blowing every opportunity to regain a bit of his own back
professionally, but nobly sacrificing his last great chance at ever-lasting happiness
by giving up the woman who adores him whom he frees in death from the tyranny
of his own self-appalling downward spiral.
From top to bottom, Dinner at Eight is an
A-list production – a Selznick picture, despite being made at MGM and by no
less an éminence grise than George Cukor. The picture is imbued with Metro’s
superficial sheen and verve for surface glamor audiences of the thirties simply
could not resist. But it also retains an air of distinct sophistication, a
hallmark of Cukor’s urbane early masterpieces, and apart from Selznick’s
chronic tinkering. “I did Dinner at Eight in twenty-eight days,”
Cukor would later muse, “It’s haunted me my entire career. People say,
‘Well…if you can do all that so quickly…’ I suppose it all went so smoothly
because of all those expert actors. George Kaufman was quite an astringent
writer…not terribly profound, but with the saving grace of being very funny…and
Harlow…was suddenly marvelous in comedy; tough and yet feminine – like Mae
West, wise-crackers, but vulnerable. It made them attractive. There was
something quite soft about Harlow’s toughness. (Dressler) was the biggest star
of her time in low comedy…she knew how to make an entrance with great aplomb –
great effect. And Jack…although he was playing a second-rate actor, he had
absolutely no vanity as such and even put things in to make himself hammier,
more ignorant. I’ve always found that if first-rate actors respect you, they’ll
try anything.”
During filming, cast and crew were treated to a much-publicized
visit by noted playwright, George Bernard Shaw – who remained mildly amused and
equally as fascinated by the craft of film-making, a ploy to promote Dinner
at Eight, orchestrated to perfection by MGM publicity man, Barrett
Kiesling. Another of Kiesling’s coups was in securing a now famous endorsement,
showing the entire cast, decked out in their finery, together with George
Cukor, enjoying Coca-Cola in between takes, a means, not only to sell the
picture, but advance Coke’s stature as the beverage of choice among the moneyed
sect as “a way to snap back to normal and be alert.” With an unusually
short shooting schedule (Cukor had the whole affair wrapped up and in the can
in only 28 days), Dinner at Eight was one of MGM’s cheapest all-star
movies to make, coming in at barely $387,000. At the picture’s August premiere
at Grauman’s Chinese Theater, Selznick could barely contain his enthusiasm as
he gloated, “We have, I think, achieved the ideal of Cavalcade, one of the
finest pictures ever made…in that Dinner at Eight is adult, intelligent,
and, at the same time, has an extremely wide mass and down to earth appeal!” Indeed, audiences and critics were almost
unanimous in their praise, embracing Selznick’s three-course meal as a
soap-opera-ish feast of lavishly appointed escapism. $3 million dollars later,
and Mayer was adjusting to the fact he now had two great producers under his
wing - Thalberg, already his VP in Charge of Production, and Selznick, who
would not be as contented to merely remain a subsidiary unit under Thalberg’s
scrutiny within the studio’s hierarchy.
Interestingly, Thalberg, who had been convalescing
from a mild heart attack, bore Selznick no earthly malice upon his return to
the studio – unlike a good many of Mayer’s other – lesser –producers, who had
allowed their loyalty to Thalberg to muddle their thinking. Viewed from their
vantage as Thalberg’s ‘replacement’, Selznick entered the lion’s den with a
burgeoning animosity directed squarely at him, baited by this brain trust with
incessant criticisms and a general contempt for what was then perceived as
Mayer’s rather transparent nepotism. In truth, the executives had more of a
beef with Mayer than Selznick – although, they likely took their cue from the
old adage about never biting the hand that feeds. Nevertheless, Selznick was
viewed as the interloper at MGM, a very low opinion that would remain
subliminally steadfast and weigh heavily upon Selznick’s confidence until the
premiere of Dinner at Eight. The
picture’s irrefutable success added stature to Selznick’s reputation on the
back lot, now begrudgingly viewed with an uneasy respect. Selznick, like
Thalberg, seemed to have his finger on the pulse of the public. Aware what
Selznick had gone through in his absence, Thalberg now arranged a quiet
‘social’ meeting in his office – a chance for the two to get to know one
another – after which Thalberg went out of his way to promote and stand behind
Selznick’s other pending projects, a professional courtesy backed by Thalberg’s
genuine empathy and appreciation for Selznick’s creative talents.
Immediately following a positively ‘delicious’ main
title sequence, in which each of the leading players is given their moment,
reflected in an elegant place setting, we meet the Jordans - slightly careworn
and exhausted Oliver and his addlepated and nattering wife, Millicent, who has
decided to give an elegant party in honor of visiting dignitaries, Lord and
Lady Ferncliff. Oliver finds such social gatherings a bore. But his mood is
considerably improved when Millicent informs him that against her better
judgement, she has decided to invite Carlotta Vance to the party - a relic of
the stage, well past her prime, but one of Oliver’s old acquaintances. Oliver
is slightly concerned over his daughter, Paula’s mildly despondent behavior,
all but ignored by her mother. The news
is even more grim at the office, Oliver, informing his ever-devoted secretary,
Miss Copeland (Elizabeth Patterson) and his managing accountant, Mr. Stengel
(Jean Hersholt) the steamer, Castilian has not enough cargo aboard to make the
transatlantic crossing feasible. This direness is diluted by an unexpected
visit from Carlotta, a breath of fresh air from the Delmonico period both she
and Oliver remember all too well, or perhaps continue to admire through
rose-colored glasses. Oliver quickly discovers Carlotta has fallen on hard
times, asked to explain her six fur coats to U.S. Customs and struggling to
gain control over her liquid assets - oil, railroads, cotton, etc. But beyond
these, she is all but penniless and miserable, thanks to an extravagant
lifestyle that has bankrupted her.
Miss Copeland attempts to ingratiate herself to
Carlotta, but instead ruffles the old bird’s feathers by suggesting she was
only a little girl when she first saw Carlotta on the stage. “How
extraordinary,” Carlotta replies with a stern glare, “You and I must
have a talk someday…about the Civil War!” To ease her financial burdens,
Carlotta proposes to Oliver she sell her Jordan stock back to him, a move he
wishes she would not consider just now, particularly as something is in the
wind – perhaps, even a hostile corporate takeover. To stave off the sharks already smelling
blood in the water, Oliver has invited Dan Packard for a little businessmen’s
tête-à -tête. Dan has parlayed a miner’s pay into one of the most successful
strikes in the nation and long since diversified his business holdings as one
of the richest men in America. Alas, money has been unable to wipe clean the pall
of uncouth, boorish and bullying tactics Dan has used to get along in the
world, acquiring people and places like things to be bent in service to his
beckoned call. Presumably to help Oliver
out, Dan instructs him to get together a portfolio of the company’s assets to
present to his board with the possible caveat of extending the Jordan line credit
to temporarily see them through the Depression. Meanwhile, Millicent keeps her
cousin, Hattie Loomis (Louise Closser Hale) and her husband, Ed (Grant
Mitchell) at bay - poor relations she has little use for… a mutual feeling to
be sure.
Millicent begins to telephone her invitations, starting
with the most unpleasant of the lot – Kitty Packard - Dan’s second trophy wife,
grown impatient of the good life. Kitty feigns culture, a raucous mix of
piss-elegance and Brooklyn spank that leaves even her bad-mannered and
cigarette smoking lady’s maid, Tina (Hilda Vaughn) stifled. Kitty cannot wait
to attend Millicent’s dinner party. At first, Dan resists. After all, his
intentions toward Oliver are nothing less than ruthless and enterprising –
plotting a takeover of the Jordan line by buying up controlling stock using a
bunch of dummy corporations to keep his name out of it until Oliver has sunk
everything and lost the shirt off his back. But when Kitty explains the party
is being given in Lord and Lady Ferncliff’s honor, Dan jumps at the
opportunity. After all, he has been trying to meet the richest man in England
for nearly two years, but to no avail. Departing for Washington with renewed
vigor, Dan remains unaware Kitty is having an affair with her physician, Dr.
Wayne Talbot, who pays a house call after Kitty fakes illness. Even before he
has entered the room, Talbot is regretting this visit. After all, he cannot
help but see how this extramarital affair has cost him plenty – a personal
sacrifice to start, as his own wife Lucy is, as ever, utterly devoted to him.
Kitty’s overtures of love are overheard by Tina who, afterward, successfully
bribes Kitty with keeping her secret for the price of a diamond bracelet –
arguably, only the first bauble to fall prey to Tina’s greed.
Returning to his office, Dr. Talbot is forced to take
another ‘emergency’ phone call from Kitty. Believing he is in the comfort of
his private office, Wayne speaks plainly to Kitty as lovers do, suddenly
becoming aware his own wife, Lucy, has slipped into the room unnoticed. He
attempts to do damage control but it’s no use. Lucy quietly confides she has
been aware of his raging infidelities for quite some time, having kept secret
the first affair that nearly tore her to pieces inside, Lucy has since found it
less painful to suffer through Wayne’s various indiscretions, including Kitty,
whom she regards as just another passing fancy. Karen Morely’s acting in this
moment is quite remarkable - something deeply heartfelt and caught in the
faraway ‘lost’ look she gives the camera - a woman scorned, yet quite unable to
purge herself of the love barrier still very much chaining her emotional
happiness to this man who would deign step upon her good graces at every
possible chance, idiotically believing he has gotten away with anything and
everything to satisfy his own shameless sexual appetites. She sincerely wounds
him without perhaps even knowing how much, his embarrassment translated into a
sort of apropos contrition, doomed not to last.
Not long thereafter, Dr. Talbot informs Oliver Jordan
he is gravely ill and will likely die. The news is not nearly as devastating as
Talbot had supposed, Oliver intuitively knowing the end is near. Nevertheless,
he is staunchly determined to keep his undisclosed illness a secret from his
wife – as though, in her present micromanagement of the dinner party she would
even presume to care what is happening to her husband. In the meantime, we meet
Larry Renault – a has-been one-time big Broadway star attempting his great
comeback with the help of agent, Max Kane. Kane tries to soften the latest blow.
The backers who planned to star Larry in their theatrical show have since taken
their money elsewhere. Kane informs Larry it isn’t the end. After all, he has
managed to get Larry an interview with two new backers. But this opportunity
Larry badly bungles when he learns how small the part is, incurring Kane’s
rage. Kane is cruel in his admonishments, realistically telling his client, “Just
wait till you start peddling yourself around to office boys who’ve never even
heard of you. You’re a corpse and you don’t even know it. Go and get yourself
buried.” Earlier, Larry had accepted Millicent’s invitation to dine, the
family unknowing Paula has been carrying on a notorious affair with Larry,
despite the fact she is engaged to a nice boy, Ernest (whom we never see) and
flying in the face of all decency as Larry is still married to his third wife,
whom he has cheated on numerous times. But now, Larry cannot help but see the
end of his days and lifestyle fast approaching. Without Kane he will never make
a comeback. It’s over. And without Paula’s love he can never be a real man.
Alas, Paula is too good for him and this, even Larry recognizes – to his own
detriment as he prepares to make the ultimate sacrifice to preserve her dignity
and put a period to all his self-loathing and degradations.
Not surprisingly, Cukor has based his cinematic oeuvre
on the rigidly structured Broadway show, things reaching a fevered crescendo in
act three as, after having established all of his main characters and their
perplexed lives, Cukor now tightens the yoke on at least some of these
meandering variables to bring about the penultimate tragedy – Larry’s suicide.
Carlotta spies Paula leaving Larry Renault’s suite and puts two and two together.
Promising to meet Paula at her parents for dinner at eight, Larry instead
satisfies his yen for stiff drink, dons his best robe and prepares to end his
life by igniting the gas jets in his fireplace. At the last possible moment, he
takes a tumble on a misplaced stool, crawling with whimpering despair to a
nearby easy chair into which he pathetically slumps, succumbing to the fumes at
last. News of his death reaches Paula as the party guests begins to assemble.
Millicent is unresponsive. But Paula is understandably inconsolable. Only
Carlotta sees through her pain, pulling Paula aside to learn the true depth of
her lost affections for Larry Renault, encouraging the girl to keep these
closely guarded. She must forget Larry, as confessing their affair now would
only wound her mother and father and create a desperate family scandal. Best to
reconsider the pain, and instead focus on the young man who otherwise might
squire her heart – Ernest, whom Millicent and Oliver expect Paula to marry
anyway.
Alas, Millicent’s grand party coup is all for not –
the Ferncliffs having elected to go to Florida instead – a social snub for
which the frantic Millicent almost suffers a nervous breakdown. At the Packard
homestead, Dan discovers Kitty has been unfaithful to him. Although he has yet
to learn the identity of her seducer, Dan vows to divorce Kitty at once. But
now Kitty plays her trump card, threatening Dan with exposure of his
dishonorable business practices, the sly corporate flimflams to have made him a
very rich man while subsequently having destroyed the lives of some honest
businessmen along the way. Divorce Kitty? Not without burning his own carefully
constructed bridges in the political arena. No, Dan will have to endure Kitty a
while long – perhaps indefinitely – if he so desires to step up his game in
Washington as the President’s most trusted advisor. As a last-ditch replacement
couple for the party, Millicent invites Hattie and Ed as substitutes for the
Ferncliffs, thereby foiling Dan Packard’s whole purpose for attending. While
preparing for dinner, Oliver suffers yet another collapse. Dr. Talbot informs
Millicent of her husband’s serious condition and, at last, she is shaken from
her insular complacency, taking charge of more prescient matters and placing Oliver’s
care at the forefront as her only concern. Oliver agrees to carry on with the
party. Dan Packard lies to him about one of his colleagues, Baldridge, having
made a sneaky stab to take over the Jordan line. As per Kitty’s conditions for
keeping her mouth shut about her husband’s spurious business practices, Dan
promises to save Oliver’s company, rather than buy it up lock, stock and
barrel. As the guests file into the dining room, Kitty confides in Carlotta the
business about machinery taking the place of every profession today, allowing
Carlotta the very last word, “My dear, that’s one thing you need never worry
about!”
Dinner at Eight is a tautly
scripted, slightly wordy tragi-comedy with A-list production values and an even
more absorbing cast of Metro’s best players to pull it off without a hitch.
Cukor’s direction is mostly satisfying, although his periodic usage of split
screen dissolves to illustrate action taking place simultaneously in two
different locations seems strained at best. The central performances still hold
up remarkably well – particularly, Jean Harlow, Lionel and John Barrymore, and,
Marie Dressler. To a lesser extent, Billie Burke proves her mettle, especially
in the final reels as she suffers through a miraculous transformation from
scatterbrained socialite, arguably, the movie’s whacky figure of fun, into a
suddenly – and equally as convincing – spouse, devoted to her ailing husband’s
care (thin shades of Joan Crawford’s redemptive scene at the end of Grand
Hotel where, ironically, her stenographer too promises to nurse and restore
the health of the man she has taken to heart, also played by Lionel Barrymore!)
In retrospect, one can see why Madge Evans and Edmund Lowe were quick to
disappear from Metro’s top-tier roster shortly after the release of Dinner
at Eight. Alas, Lee Tracy’s fall from grace had more to do with his ego
than his talent. But Lowe and Evans really are a second-rate coupling, compared
to the aforementioned glitterati. They never rise above a sort of homogenized
mediocrity for which no amount of studio training or glamor can obscure. At its most delightfully obtuse and/or
heartrending moments, Dinner at Eight remains an effervescent bauble
from Hollywood’s golden age, a blistering example of the sort of highly
polished and expertly executed glam-bam the dream factories made en masse, and,
seemingly without even an afterthought, though undeniably, with a great deal of
effort put forth by all involved. In hindsight, L.B. Mayer’s insistence on
finding ‘personalities’ he could mold into rarefied creations of the silver
screen was a very sound logic. Mayer’s MGM set an industry standard for many
good years yet to follow.
No one can ‘make’ a star today – the process by
which a diamond in the rough ascends beyond and into the surreal bonds of a
life apart from we mere mortals to become a ‘presence’ and yes, even a
legend in their own time, impossible to achieve in our present age and our
ravenous thirst for instant – if pre-processed – celebrities who are infinitely
more famous (and, in some cases, infamous) for their private lives than any performance
committed to the screen. Dinner at
Eight reminds us of that other time and otherworldly realm devoted to the
bona fide movie star – a creation not to be discovered in nature, but carefully
crafted and exploited for the sole purpose of bringing joy and beauty into the
world. In some ways, I would have this time again. It says a great deal about
film - any film - as art that movies like Dinner at Eight continue
to resonate and appeal to audiences, despite changing tastes and times.
Nostalgia is one thing. But Dinner at Eight is not about reliving or
reviving an era as much as it manages to cling, linger and reincarnate a
timeless passion for movies as art – commercially viable, slickly packaged and
marvelously cast – but ultimately, more art than commerce and likely to remain
untainted in perpetuity as all great works of art do – both timely and
timeless.
The Warner Archive (WAC) at long last provides us with
a stunningly handsome Blu-ray...for the most part... of Dinner at Eight, culled from a new 4K
master from the best surviving elements. The DVD was passable. The Blu-ray, a
minor revelation with one minor caveat. The first several reels exhibit some minute gate weave and - worse - edge effects to distort fine detail during the initial scene between Carlotta and Oliver in his shipping offices. Not sure why this latter mentioned and digitally imposed anomaly was NOT corrected during the remastering process. It ought to have been as it is not indigenous to the film source. Otherwise, what plays out after this great moment, marginally marred by the aforementioned, is an exquisite offering, virtually free of its return, and, in which film grain, at last,
appears indigenous to its source, allowing the subtle beauty in William H.
Daniel’s cinematography to shine. There is a satin veneer to this silver screen
image, cleansed of virtually all age-related artifacts, and sparkling in
glorious black and white. So, prepare to be dazzled by what’s here. The
tonality in the gray scale of this movie has always been suspect, with no
genuine blacks. Herein, we do get the occasionally deep and velvety black in
some of Oliver’s suits. But shadow delineation still tends to veer into deep,
and slightly murky, tonal gray. Not a deal breaker, in my opinion. The DTS 2.0
mono has been cleaned up and only in totally acquiescent moments hints at a
slight background hiss. Oh well, there is only so much to be done within the
limitations of original Westrex sound recording. Extras include a bio on Harlow
hosted Sharon Stone. It’s frankly brief and not terribly inspired, more of a
travelogue through Harlow’s career without any real exploration of the woman behind
the image. We also get a short parody: Come to Dinner and the original
trailer. Bottom line: Dinner at Eight is a fabulous classic from the MGM
stables, finally available in a quality befitting its legend. Buy today, and
treasure forever.
FILM RATING (out of 5 - 5 being the
best)
4.5
VIDEO/AUDIO
4.5
EXTRAS
2
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