Ha ha and mop dogs, it’s Burl, here to
review a truly unusual picture! Yes, it’s William Peter Blatty’s The Ninth Configuration, and it’s truly
one of those movies that you ponder on - as the name of that movie podcast
goes, How Did This Get Made?
Of course, the glib answer to that question is: The
Exorcist! Even though he wasn’t the director, Blatty got himself some
credit in the Hollywood bank with that one; or maybe the executives got
confused because his name also was William! At any rate, six or so years after
the big devil hit, he got to take a terrific all-dude cast to Hungary or
somewhere, put them in a castle and get them to act all crazy! And then he
called the result The Ninth Configuration,
or sometimes Twinkle, Twinkle ‘Killer’
Kane! Ha ha!
Though later Blatty would make the strangely terrific
Exorcist III, this was his first
adventure behind the camera! He had the presence of mind to hire the great cinematographer
Gerry Fisher, a favourite of mine (he also shot Malpertuis, which this movie resembles in some ways), but the
Blattster was not what I would call an accomplished and elegant filmmaker! The
picture comes off a bit stagy, which is perhaps not a surprise as much screen
time is given over to one character’s attempt to adapt Shakespeare’s plays for
dogs!
There’s not so much a plot as there is a
bunch of fine actors doing crazy things and riffing on the usual teleological
arguments for the existence of God! The setting is a castle, ostensibly in the
Pacific Northwest, repurposed as a treatment center for servicemen who’ve gone
bats, or possibly are only pretending to have gone bats! New psychologist
Colonel Hudson Kane, played by Stacy Keach from Escape From L.A., arrives on the scene, and seems to fit in all too
well with the inmates! Scott Wilson from Blue City and Malone plays Cutshaw, an
astronaut who panicked during the countdown (he’s the astronaut Regan warned in
The Exorcist, ha ha!); Jason Miller
hams it up as the Shakespeare-for-canines point man, with Joe Spinell from The First Deadly Sin helping him out;
Moses Gunn wears a Superman outfit and George Di Cenzo tries to walk through
walls; Robert Loggia from Innocent Blood
and Alejandro Rey from Mr. Majestyk
play other patients; Ed Flanders from ‘Salem’s Lot is the physician in charge, though he's hard to differentiate from the other
patients; Neville Brand from Without Warning and Tom Atkins from Halloween III play some of the guards! Whew! So you can see what I mean about that
cast, ha ha!
Of course there’s the question of, first,
whether the men are mad or merely pretending to be, or else, like Hamlet,
fervently pretending to be in order to stave off true madness; and the old
problem of whether the doctor is crazier than the patients is also raised! Ha
ha, with Keach’s intensely somnolent performance, how could it not be! But even
with these colourful characters and pressing problems, the grey cloud and
constant rain outside this castle, and the clammy atmosphere within, become oppressive, and we’re grateful for a
change of location in the third act! Yes, this new location is a biker bar, where
first Cutshaw and then Kane are turned into living beach balls, and beaten and
humiliated by a gang led by Stryker
himself, Steve Sandor, and also Richard Lynch from The Premonition, both of them dolled up in eyeliner for some reason! But
when Kane reveals his true nature, there comes one of the most cathartic bar
fights ever committed to film, and the eyeliner gang is left lying in puddles of blood and beer! Ha ha!
As teenagers my friends and I were very
much into this movie, ha ha! We had not one but two book versions of it, one
called The Ninth Configuration and
the other Twinkle, Twinkle ‘Killer’ Kane,
which we traded around and quoted lines from! We were not so much into the
theological arguments made throughout the picture and its literary companions,
which seemed very Intro Philosophy even then! No, I think the appeal came more from
how funny it all was! This was so at odds with what we expected from the guy
who wrote The Exorcist that it seemed
a string of delightful surprises from beginning to end!
It seems less so now, though it’s still frequently
funny! Blatty’s dedicated Catholicism now feels overwrought, and Cutshaw, the
chief doubter in the company, a little more like a straw man than he used to! I
still feel fondly toward this unique motion picture, because where else are you
going to see something like this! Ha ha, it’s a true meli-melo, and I’m going
to give The Ninth Configuration two
and a half moplike dogs!
It's worth remembering Blatty wrote the funniest Peter Sellers Clouseau movie, so maybe it's not too surprising comedy would be the strongest suit of The Ninth Configuration. Mind you, some stuff is just bizarre, like the crucifixion on the Moon, and the bar fight has a case for being one of the best ever.
ReplyDeleteYes, and I watched A Shot in the Dark quite recently, and enjoyed it! Didn't Blatty write The Night They Raided Minsky's as well? I've never seen that one, but I know it's at least supposed to be funny!
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