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Dr. Cook's Garden
(1971)
Director: Ted Post
Cast: Bing Crosby, Frank Converse, Blythe Danner
I'm not that fond of made-for-TV movies made after the early 1980s, for
several reasons. For some reason or another (maybe due to rising costs), more
modern made-for-TV movies have a cheap feel to them, unlike earlier made-for-TV
movies, which often had production values equal to the theatrical movies of the
time. Also, modern made-for-TV movies has an annoying glossy look to them that
looks unreal; glossy can be fine, but give me a little real-life grit in there
to make it look as real life does, just like those older made-for-TV movies. The
third reason is that the range of subject matter found in modern made-for-TV
movies is very limited. If you take a look, for the most part you'll see
dramas based on real-life incidents that everyone is sick about hearing by the
time filming of whatever particular dramatization is completed, and have the
insight of one of those quickie non-fiction paperbacks you keep seeing on
drugstore bookshelves. Or else, sugary
and politically-correct dramas (often set in the past) that are aimed at family
audiences. Compare the made-for-TV movies of today with those of the past.
Sure, you will find the occasional clunker, such
as the goofy Pray For The Wildcats;
you can't really expect a movie that brings
together Andy Griffith, Robert Reed, and William
Shatner (and placing them on motorbikes) to be
of
high quality. But looking beyond such
failures, one will not only see a number of
movies that are genuinely good, but cover a wide
range of genres. There are the serious dramas (Brian's
Song, That Certain Summer), but there
are also the goofy comedies (Evil
Roy Slade, The Girl Most Likely To...),
suspenseful dramas (Duel, Savages),
science fiction (Where Have All The People
Gone?, The Last Dinosaur), and a
surprising amount of horror (Don't Be
Afraid Of The Dark, Dark Night Of The Scarecrow,
Trilogy Of Terror). Clearly, the big 3
networks of the time were, when it came to
made-for-TV movies, more willing to take
chances, to take more risks than they do now. A
lot of these movies, if proposed today, probably
would never get made. One of these would
probably be Dr. Cook's Garden,
despite the fact that several decades after it
was made, its basic premise actually came true
in a notorious criminal case in England. The
networks probably wouldn't like how this premise
is actually treated, showing things not in the
expected (and safe) black-and-white fashion.
They probably would also be afraid that the
public might give out a big outcry over the fact
that a much-beloved actor, so used to playing
lovable and squeaky-clean characters, would be
playing a villainous role. Another difference
that might possibly make network executives
reluctant is that the source of Dr. Cook's
Garden comes not from real life or a
well-known franchise. It's an adaptation of a
stage play originally written by Ira Levin, the
playwright/novelist behind well-known works like
Rosemary's Baby, The Stepford Wives, and
Deathtrap. Its small-town setting and a
central character having a secret murderous agenda
are elements you can find in these and others of
his works. In this
case, the setting is Greenfield, another small
town somewhere in the heartland where life is
perfect for all its citizens, where for the
longest time there has been no crime and even no
overbearing citizens - at least, overbearing
citizens that hung around for a long time.
The most beloved citizen of the small town is
Leonard Cook (Crosby), the hard-working town
doctor who even in his advanced age goes all-out
for the citizens, from making house calls to
help the town council get a new school built for
the children. Former resident of the town Jim
(played by soap opera star Frank Converse), who has recently graduated from
medical school, one day returns to see his
old mentor, and after so many years away he is
especially struck by the town's transformation
into a kind of paradise. However, he is also
struck by some peculiar things the in-heaven
citizens seem blind to - such as the fact that
all Greenfield's "problem" citizens for the past
few years have died from various ailments, and
that the doctor has mysteriously marked all
their files with the letter "R". As well, just
days earlier the one person who did bring up
these mysterious deaths to the doctor happened
to die from a heart attack the subsequent day.
It's pretty easy to figure out what is going on
long before Jim gets some substantial evidence
on his hands. Still, I wish they had at least
tried to throw in even just a little bit of
doubt, so that in the back of our minds we might
be thinking that maybe, just maybe, there will
be something we haven't counted on. However,
the fact that in the first few minutes
Dr. Cook pulls out a sinister-looking syringe
when he is alone with the suddenly ill person
who had noticed the deaths the previous day -
and we then immediately cut to a new scene where
the ill person has been dead for a few minutes -
well, this kind of spoils the game a little for
the audience. It also doesn't help that just
before Dr. Cook gets to the ill patient's house,
we see a short sequences where he grab his chest
in pain, and struggles to take a heart pill;
upon seeing that, I think it's safe to say
almost anyone watching will immediately guess
what, more or less, will happen to Dr. Cook at
the end of the movie. And from that guess, they
will be able to confidently conclude that just
before the expected happens to Dr. Cook, he will be involved in some
kind of big struggle with someone else, one on
such a grand scale that it will involve an extremely
unconvincing stunt double substituting for
Crosby for all the shots involving the doctor
doing all of this rolling around and using
improvisational weapons.
It is disappointing that Dr. Cook's Garden
leads not only to such a predictable
conclusion, but one that is so drastically
different in tone from what lead up to it,
suddenly switching from a deep dark mystery feel
to something that's almost right out of a
brainless Steven Seagal actioner. Even if the
eventual and inevitable fate of the doctor had been the same, I wouldn't
have minded so much had they at least lead up to
this in a more cerebral and realistic manner. If
you, however, are willing to forgive the movie
for letting out those spoilers so early in the
game, it's likely that you will find what's
between the opening and the closing reasonably
engaging. The big mystery that's hiding in this
town is undeniably not a surprise (considering
that syringe is shown), but though the story may
be lacking in real surprises, it is otherwise
told with enough professionalism to make it
still worth a look. For starters,
the movie (without commercials) only runs for 75
minutes. While that may seem like a short
running time, for this particular story the
compact length is actually an advantage. Except
for a few minutes of sappiness concerning Jim
making a few sparks when he's reunited with Jane
(Danner, seen recently in Meet The Parents), his hometown sweetie (a beginning
subplot which is fortunately dropped for the
rest of the movie), there is absolutely no waste
of time. Every scene has a purpose, and advances
the story as much as it should do, and no more -
and no less, for that matter. It goes to show
that you don't always get more for your money
with a longer running time.
Though it is not a big surprise just what is
secretly happening in Greenfield, what Dr. Cook
has been working on all of these years still
manages to have some impact, and doesn't lose
its disturbing trait despite that we figure the
big mystery early on. For one thing, Dr. Cook
actions are extremely believable, something that
could happen (and has happened) many places in
the real world - the big mystery does not
involve something outlandish like
androids or
Nazi cloners that take the story into the realms
of science fiction. To further the believability
of Dr. Cook's plans, the movie manages to
cleverly sneak into the narrative a number of
plausible explanations as to why Dr. Cook has
gotten away with his evil deeds for so long (for
example, it's revealed there are no coroners in
small towns like Greenfield.) Another way that
the movie holds a feeling of uneasiness over its
viewers is that it refuses to present what Dr.
Cook is doing in a typical black-and-white
viewpoint - it won't ease the viewer by
portraying Dr. Cook's deeds as completely evil
and wrong. Every so often, something related to
what Dr. Cook did comes across in a positive
light, something that forces us to think, "Is
what Dr. Cook doing completely bad - or so bad
at all?" There are no easy answers or viewpoints
on display here, so much so that even when Jim
finally confronts Dr. Cook with all the evidence
he's gathered two-thirds into the movie, Dr.
Cook manages to come up with a strong
counterpoint to everything Jim says - so much
so, that at the end of the confrontation, Jim
himself just doesn't know what to do next - if
anything.
It's the best scene in the movie, though it
should be pointed out that its success is not
completely due to the script. The key element
that makes the sequence work as well as it does,
as well as adding an extra element of
believability to the entire premise of the
movie, is with Crosby cast as the doctor. While
it may seem at first a bizarre choice to cast an
actor who played such a lovable crooner for much
of his career as someone with a murderous
agenda, this unconventional casting actually
ends up working for the movie in its favor. When
we see Dr. Cook interacting with Greenfield's
citizens in his office, or in church and
picnics, he is so sweet, so kindly to everyone,
that it's an effective shock to realize that
this man can be so caring while actively
committing countless felonies. It would be less
of an impact had someone like Vincent Price
played the role - you can sense evil by just
looking at Price, and it would make you wonder
why no one else in the town could sense it as
well. Crosby is not just a good choice to
playing the warm-hearted senior citizen side of
Dr. Cook, he also does well when Cook cannot
help but talk about his crimes. Crosby doesn't
play it for camp, instead portraying Dr. Cook's
darkness with a twisted logic, one that the
character has had a lot of time to think about,
and even admits troubles him at times. His
relative calmness about what he's done - and is
determined to continue doing - is more creepily
convincing that how it would sound coming out of
a raving lunatic.
The production values are solid, making
Dr. Cook's Garden look strong enough to
be considered a movie and not simply as a
made-for-TV movie. Though its story may be
painfully predictable, the issues involved are
handled with enough insight and intelligence
that the script could be considered a
screenplay and not the looked-down-upon term
"teleplay". It's odd that Dr. Cook's
Garden, plus other equally worthy
made-for-TV movies made during the "golden age",
are seldom aired anywhere anymore, even on
channels that will freely show theatrical movies
from the same era, while the more recent
made-for-TV movies get more exposure despite
their generally horrendous quality. It makes me
wish at times that TV and cable networks had
doctors of their own.
Check for availability on Amazon.
Check for availability of the original stage
play on Amazon
Check for availability of Bing Crosby's
memoirs "Call Me Lucky"See also: An
Enemy Of The People,
Psychopath,
Sunday In The Country
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