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Cold Turkey
(1971)
Director: Norman Lear
Cast: Dick Van Dyke, Bob Newhart, Pippa Scott
When you hear the name of Norman Lear, most likely you will immediately think
of the famous TV shows he's produced over the year, big hits like All In The
Family, Sanford And Son, and Maude. Least likely what you'll
think of are the motion pictures he's produced during his career; oddly, despite
a couple of exceptions like The Princess Bride and Fried
Green Tomatoes, these movies that he produced remain more or less
"unknown" to this day. One of these movies is Cold Turkey. Made in
1969, it gathered dust on the distributor's shelf for two years before it was
released - coincidently, around the time All In The Family became an
instant hit and it and Lear became a hot Hollywood property.
Looking at the movie today, several possibilities come up when
wondering why the distributor had, well, cold feet about this movie. Possibly it
was because when the movie was made, Van Dyke, who had been concentrating on
movies during this period of his career, was becoming box office
poison. Another
reason might be for the movie's unconventional structure; Lear often pushed for
something different, and the way this movie unfolds is certainly not in any
manner most viewers will have long become accustomed to. Most likely the reason
why the movie remained unreleased for so long was because the distributor was
unsure on how to convince an audience to see it. Though it's indeed a comedy,
Cold Turkey is so cynical and biting in its portrayal of the kind of
people you personally know - and probably you yourself for that matter - it's
easy to see the distributor shivering with the thought of people being outraged
of such a depiction of what they held near and dear. Perhaps the movie was ahead
of its time, and enough time needed to pass before an appropriately cynical age
- like today - came along so that the movie could be more fairly judged. Despite
more than 30 years have passed after it was made, the movie still has an
undercurrent of near-nastiness that raises your eyebrow slightly... though much
of what gets portrayed in the movie has actually come true to a certain degree,
so your eyebrow will actually have not moved that much. Though the movie is by
no means perfect, you can't deny that to a degree it proved to be very
prophetic. Around the time Cold Turkey was made, some serious measures
against the cigarette industry had already been
put into effect. Several years earlier,
manufacturers had been forced to put warning
labels on cigarette packages, and more recently
plans for keeping cigarette advertising away
from radio and television had just started. So
it's no wonder that when the movie begins, the
Valiant Tobacco company is experiencing internal
chaos, knowing that anti-smoking members of the
government and the public will not let it rest
just there. But public relations man Merwin Wren
(Newhart) comes up with a great plan, inspired
by that famous scientist Alfred Nobel. Sure,
Nobel came up with the deadly concoction of
dynamite, but isn't he now better known today
for the money he set aside for all those Nobel
prizes? Wren suggests to Valiant president Hiram
Grayson (Edward Everett Horton) that they make a
similar kind of gesture to show everyone that
Valiant Tobacco has the public's best interest
at heart. Namely, by making the claim that they
are encouraging people not to smoke, giving
proof of this by offering $25 million to any
town that has all its citizens quit smoking for
one month. Of course, they don't
really expect any town to get every citizen to agree to
these conditions, let alone manage to go thirty
days without a cigarette. As its pointed out,
just getting everyone in your typical office to
quit smoking for thirty days would be difficult
enough. But Wren and Grayson haven't heard of
Eagle Rock, Iowa and its 4006 residents. Since
the local military base closed down in Eagle
Rock, the town has been slowly dying, and
everyone from the mayor (Vincent Gardenia,
Fire Sale)
to Reverend Clayton Brooks (Van Dyke), the
community's religious leader, are desperately
trying to get the military to come back and
bring industry - though ironically, the military
won't throw around money in Eagle Rock until the
town goes under serious renovations, which they
don't have the money to do. So when Brooks hears
about the offer Valiant announces, he sees it as
the salvation he's been telling his parishioners
has been on its way. What's equally miraculous
is that Brooks, along with the other town
councilmen and women, manage by hook and crook
to sign every citizen up just before the
deadline - barely. Though even before the
smoke-free month begins, it's clear that a
number of Eagle Rock residents are going to have
a difficult time. And even with that problem
inevitably coming up, the Valiant Tobacco
people, after recovering from their initial
disbelief, are clearly not going to sit back
with the knowledge that there's even a
Virginia-slim chance the Eagle Rock residents
could pull it off. What is surprising to find
in Cold Turkey is how the tobacco
industry ends up being portrayed. Certainly,
it's not a very flattering portrait. The
executives at Valiant are shown to be heartless
money-loving sleazebags who consider the
American public to be made up of a bunch of
rubes. But when you look at the citizens of
Eagle Rock - as well as the various outsiders
who happen into the town during the course of
the movie - you have to wonder if those Valiant
executives have a point. Believe it or not, the
movie is in no way designed to contain any
serious slam against the cigarette industry;
such bashing only takes a couple of minutes of
the running time. Instead, the movie turns out
to be a savage look at every imaginable
all-American society outside of big business,
revealing that even what's considered to be
spotless and dependable Mom & Apple Pie can in
fact be hiding a diseased core, or can be
thoroughly twisted in the worst way by just the
right conditions. This includes sacred
institutions like the government and the church.
When Eagle Rock's struggle becomes national
news, the army comes knocking again suggesting a
factory could be built there - though would the
town be open to the President dropping by for a
televised appearance? Not that long earlier, the
church suddenly happened to be in the
neighborhood, telling the now-famous Reverend
Brooks that they wanted him to accept a
high-profile post, which would give him that
transfer he had asked for earlier. Though when
Reverend Brooks had asked for that transfer not
long after the movie begun, it was right after
he delivered a sermon for the destitute
townsfolk that told them that God was
"preparing" them for salvation, so they needed
to hang on. When he subsequently learned of the
Valiant tobacco offer, he suddenly seemed more
than happy to stay - possibly
because he was
also one of the members of the town council, and
could help decide how and where the money should
be spent. Brooks is understandably so determined
to get everyone signed up that he'll not only
end up threatening someone with physical
violence if they don't sign the pledge, he
convinces reluctant smokers who think he won't
understand their pain by purposely taking up
smoking and getting addicted just before the
pledge starts. His actions aren't the only ones
of the townspeople that provide hilarity. The
local John Birch-like society eagerly volunteers
to be search-and-seizure guards at the entrance
of town ("Can we wear armbands?"), a
nicotine-withdrawn Jean Stapleton (All In The
Family) goes into an insane rant at the
breakfast table when she's interrupted while
stuffing her face, and a dog gets kicked six
feet into the air by a frustrated passerby. When
word starts to spread across the country about
Eagle Rock, it results in the townspeople
getting into even more funny experiences, from
Zen Buddhists and a female "massage"
professional offering the citizens various
methods to curb their obsession with cigarettes.
Later on, with the numerous television crews
hovering around and freely manipulating the
eager-to-be-famous residents, various consumer
businesses figure out Eagle Rock will be just as
eager to make some extra money with advertising,
which adds even more funny situations. There
are plenty of crazy moments like these
throughout Cold Turkey that make
the movie funny enough to make watching it
worthwhile. Yet at the same time, you'll get the
feeling that the movie is nowhere as funny as it
could have been. Although the movie has what
seems to be a dream cast consisting of top comic
talent, none of these actors are at their prime
here. Among the well-known cast members is the
famous duo of Bob (Elliott) & Ray (Goulding),
each of whom appears in multiple roles. But not
only do these popular comedians never appear
together in any scene, none of their roles turn
out to be more than slightly amusing - ironic,
because they are playing reporters and
television commentators, and you would think
their particular style of humor would be put
into great effect here. Van Dyke manages to
deliver a few laughs with his performance,
though often he doesn't seem to be performing
with the appropriate comic note. It doesn't seem
to be enough for him to come across as absurd by
his character doing all these crazy activities;
he apparently thought that he had to act
absurd while doing these things. So whenever Van
Dyke blusters in an over-the-top manner, it
seems unnatural and forced, and his comic
contribution is muted as a result of this. As
for Newhart, his first appearance is very
promising, with his relishing the nastiness of
his character and providing some good laughs.
Then all of a sudden, he stops his snarling and
retreats to his familiar and bland technique...
of... talking like... this. That's not the
only problem that I had with Newhart's
character. You would think Merwin Wren would be
a frequently appearing adversary for the Eagle
Rock residents, but not long after Eagle Rock
starts its smoke-free month, he suddenly
disappears
and does not reappear until near the end of the
movie. Pippa Scott has another similarly
underused character as the Reverend's wife. She
is seemingly set up to sometime become a major
player in the scheme, but she never does. Until
near the end of the movie she hardly says a
word, and then spouts an out-of-the-blue rant
about Eagle Rock losing its soul. Afterwards,
she and her concerns are forgotten about and
never brought up again. Previously, there had
been a scene of youths protesting about the same
thing, and they also ended up getting forgotten
after their scene ended. There are plenty of
other things brought into the movie that are
forgotten about or are utterly wasted, such as
when Wren ships in a truckload of volunteer
observers (who end up doing nothing.) It
shouldn't come as a surprise then that the
ending is an utter mess, using a cheap device to
put the major players out of the way so that the
movie can bring up the resolution it decided on,
though it in no way fills the holes left by
those major characters being denied a part of
it. With all these problems, it's a miracle that
Cold Turkey still can be
considered a fairly funny movie - though barely.
It succeeds, but I could help but think it
succeeds like a recovering nicotine addict who
got through the mighty struggle of his first
week without cigarettes.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
See also: Get
Crazy, Preacherman,
Rustlers' Rhapsody
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