Since the passing of Robert Osborne in 2017, Turner Classic Movies has taken on a new dynamic, diversifying its features via the showcasing of its chief host - the intrepid, amiable Ben Mankiewicz, who brings brio to every new addition to TCM's line-up and achieves it with an easy-going mastery.
These days, everything seems essential on Turner, not the least of which is a new feature titled Pets on Sets, which examines the role of animals in film and how their participation is manipulated and achieved. The segment works largely because of Mankiewicz who brings it off effortlessly with a concern for the animals being exploited that seems genuine and heartfelt.
Is Ben an animal advocate? I have a hunch that he is. Me? Count me in. But my love of animals is equaled by my dislike of movies
about them. I don't want to see any movie that's
about a dog, cat, horse or lion. Have you noticed that movies about animals are always -
always
- sad and disturbing? Awful things traditionally happen to the animal
star.
Movies about animals have become my dreaded genre.
The MGM/Lassie films are the worst. "Old Yeller" is the pits.
(Blasphemy, I know!) I do like Asta in the "Thin Man" series and Pyewacket in
"Bell, Book and Candle," but those films really aren't about them, are
they?
David Frankel's
“Marley and Me” is the one rare exception - for
me. And it remains a great film in general because it is about a life - in this case, the life of a dog
from puppyhood to death - and also because of its complete, unapologetic
empathy for the animal. All of this occurred to me
belatedly after I wrote a previous essay on a potential remake of
”Born Free.”
Sorry, Elsa.
Throughout this
December,
Mankiewicz has been hosting Pets on Sets in tandem with Carol Tresan, who with her husband Greg, is owner and operator of
Animal Casting Atlanta, which trains animal actors.
And
while their Wednesday evening get togethers are dominated largely by discussions
of animal performances in finished films, Ben, Carol and Greg do not hesitate
to consider what it took to achieve those performances. Was it done with ease? Or - and I hate to ask - was cruelty a factor in the process?
Ben asks all the right questions. No surprise here. And Carol and Greg provide invaluable insight, as well as an inside look into the system. Neither pulls any punches. They educate us. We learn a lot about a movie subject that has never been addressed openly - or, if so, only rarely.
No, this trio does not skirt the tough questions. So, again, is cruelty indeed an occasional factor?
This subject came up back in 1995 when I interviewed the late
Pat Derby and her husband and partner Ed Stewart at their
PAWS
facility
(Performing Animal Welfare Society) in Galt, Ca.
Pat had worked for
almost her entire adult life as an animal trainer (specializing in
elephants, bears and tigers). but
had a change of heart - as well as a carer change - becaming an outspoken crusader for animal rights on movie sets. Pat had a
lot to say. Her story about the orangutan
that worked in the 1978 Clint Eastwood film, "Every Which Way but Loose"
was particularly disturbing. It precipitated her about-face enlighetnment.
A personal case in point: My
wife adores George Stevens' "Giant." Yes, it's a
great movie in every way. But for me, I can't get past the sequence in
which Mercedes McCambridge abuses Elizabeth Taylor's beloved horse by
driving her spurs into its sides. It's an ugly scene and the horse
is clearly in agony. But was the horse "acting"? Later, after the
horse throws McCambridge, killing her (justice served), it limps back to
the ranch - shot in silhouette, against a nighttime sky. An evocative,
haunting moment.
But wait!
For
decades, I've wondered exactly how the filmmakers got that horse to limp on
cue. Was it "acting" or real? It's important to remember that "Giant"
was made in less enlightened times when it was routine to trip horses
(often crippling or even killing them) for action scenes. My guess is that the horse
being bludgeoned with spurs and later limping wasn't "acting." Making that particular
moment in "Giant' even more deplorable to contemplate (let alone watch) is that, once the men in the film realize that McCambridge died after
the horse threw her, they shoot the poor animal (justice
not served).
Finally, I
always wanted to interview Doris Day, something that evaded me during my career. One subject that I specifically wanted to address was about a film she made in
1962 - "Billy Rose's Jumbo," a musical named after its elephant star. The animal is forced
to do silly routines that are humiliating for a creature as magnificent
and sentient as an elephant. What did it take? Again, was there any cruelty involved? Doris, of course, was a vocal animal
activist and this is one area of her career I would have loved to discuss with
her.
That said, thanks Ben and Carol for the observation.
Note in Passing: Getting back to Frankel's "Marley & Me"... The film works beautifully as an intelligent,
acute depiction of what's like to have a relationship with an animal and
how the sudden absence of an animal companion can make one feel so
terribly desolate because, well, the animal is always, reliably there - a
point driven in the scene where stars Jennifer Aniston and Owen
Wilson watch videos after Marley's passing.
In one
of the videos, Aniston is standing at a kitchen counter talking to a
friend. She has a baby on her hip and eating food off the counter.
Marley is behind her and, almost absent-mindedly, without thinking, she
gives Marley some of the food - because she just
knew he would be there.
But, now, he isn't. No longer.
"Marley & Me." A truly under-appreciated film, the only "animal movie" I can tolerate.
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~images~
(from top)
~Ben Mankiewicz
~photography: Turner Classic Movies 2019©
~Marley, as a pup in "Marley & Me"
~photography: Twentieth Century-Fox 2008©
~Animal trainer Carol Tresan who works in tandem with her husband and partner Greg
~photography: Animal Casting Atlanta 2019©
~Animal trainer Pat Derby and friend
~photography:PAWS 1995©
~Opening title card for the film "Giant"
~photography: Warner Bros.1956©
~Doris Day and Jimmy Durante in "Billy Rose's Jumbo"
~photography: MGM 1962©
~Marley, as a young adult in "Marley & Me"
~photography: Twentieth Century-Fox 2008©