Sunday, March 2, 2008

Far Out Films Of The Seventies: T.R. Baskin

This article originally appeared here at Moon In The Gutter.

While she finally received justified acclaim as an actress and comedian, Candice Bergen's early film work was often savaged by critics and several of her films remain virtually unseen by modern audiences. One of the most overlooked is T.R. BASKIN.
I first saw Herbert Ross' 1971 feature T.R. BASKIN in my mid teens the way I saw lots of films, on late night commercial television. Arts and Entertainment used to run this Ross flick quite a bit in the late eighties and it was a film that came to mean a lot to me in that period. Ross has just come off the strange but effective OWL AND THE PUSSYCAT when he directed Bergen in BASKIN, the first script ever ever filmed of Peter Hyams. Hyams would later go onto to be a director himself and T.R. BASKIN does feel like a film made by two budding, and quite different, filmmakers.

T.R. BASKIN is a typical item from the early seventies centering on a young character attempting to find herself. Bergen, really lovely in this period, plays the just arrived in the big city Baskin who falls into the hazardous company of both James Caan and Peter Boyle. The film's Chicago locations is one of its biggest assets and for lovers of Chicago it is quite a treat. Going along with the many great location shots is a fabulous score by Jack Elliott. The film's soundtrack album is a great one to track down and if the film is at times falls a bit short, the marvelous lp companion doesn't.
It is great to see Caan and Boyle together here and their scenes provide many of the films best moments. Caan had been around since the early sixties but 1971 was a big year for him, with his performance in BRIAN'S SONG and getting cast as a guy named Sonny in a little seen film called THE GODFATHER.
The always magnificent Boyle had just achieved notoriety in the effective and disturbing JOE and was well on his way to becoming one of the great character actors of the seventies and eighties. While his role in BASKIN starts out a bit slimy, he later shares some of the tenderest scenes of his career with Bergen.

T.R. BASKIN was one of those films for years that had just remained in my memory, as my VHS copy from tv was accidentally erased in the early nineties. I caught up with it again late last year via Amazon's sometimes suspect downloading program. It remains the only time I have ever watched a film on my computer, and not something I am looking forward to doing again, but at this point it is the only way to see the mostly forgotten T.R. BASKIN.
Watching the film in my mid thirties was a very different experience than seeing it in my teens. Honestly, it didn't seem as meaningful to me...much of it felt too staged and contrived but there is still something about it that really affects me. I think most of that is due to Candice Bergen's performance.
Pauline Kael was particularly cruel to Bergen in her early career and I remember her review of T.R. BASKIN being particularly savage. Roger Ebert however, while not liking the film, saw something as well in Bergen's seemingly emotionless and at times uncomfortable performance. It is perhaps the kind of performance that a more experienced director would have re-shot but I find Bergen's off kilter and at times awkward line readings to be perfect for the confused and isolated Baskin.
Candice Bergen is fascinating in T.R. BASKIN and she exudes the same kind of intelligence in this role that had proved so effective in CARNAL KNOWLEDGE. I think hr performance here is one of her key works as it seemed to foreshadow all the great work that was to come from her in the future.

Perhaps T.R. BASKIN should have remained in my memories as re-watching it took away much its power for me, which isn't to say that I don't recommend it. It's well worth viewing if it ever does find its way to dvd. It is a flawed little film made by a group of really well meaning young artists which gives it a sincerity that is often missing from mainstream American cinema.

4 comments:

soothinginspirations said...

I loved T.R. Baskin when I saw it in 1971 and have been trying to find it to see it again for years. I will have to try Amazon, but I just looked and it wasn't available.

I wonder why with such an excellent cast, this was never re-released in video or DVD.

The Bergen line in the film that reasonated to me was when she asked, "how do you know when you are accepting too little for yourself or expecting too much?" I have been trying to answer that question ever since.

Anonymous said...

I was hired as an "extra" during the filming of this movie. The movie was available for a short time as a download from AOL and I had it until my laptop crashed and now it's not available anywhere. Over the years I've written to Paramount but they just ignore me. If enough people write to Paramount Studios, perhaps we will see it again. sr60627@yahoo.com

Anonymous said...

I'm a little disappointed that there are only 2 comments about T.R. BASKIN. Please write to Paramount Studios and request that they release this movie to a DVD or make it available for download.

Anonymous said...

Hi Michele, I found a copy on "YouTube.com" and "CinemaNow.com". I suggest fans write to TV stations to run this movie. Writing to Paramount is probably a waste of time. sr60627@yahoo.com