Summertree
Summertree | |
---|---|
Directed by | Anthony Newley |
Screenplay by | Edward Hume Stephen Yafa |
Produced by | Kirk Douglas |
Starring | Michael Douglas Jack Warden |
Cinematography | Richard C. Glouner |
Edited by | Maury Winetrobe |
Music by | David Shire |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date | 6 June 1971 |
Running time | 88 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Summertree is a 1971 film directed by Anthony Newley. The screenplay was written by Edward Hume and Stephen Yafa, based on the 1967 play of the same name by Ron Cowen.[1]
Plot
In 1970 twenty-year-old Jerry (Michael Douglas) returns to his parents Herb (Jack Warden) and Ruth (Barbara Bel Geddes) to let them know that he has dropped out of university to find himself. His parents are worried not only because they have wasted expensive tuition on Jerry, but the Vietnam War is raging and Jerry has lost his draft deferral. Jerry has plans to enter a Conservatorium of Music as he is confident in his self-taught guitar playing.
Inspired by a television advertisement, Jerry becomes a Big Brother to a black child named Marvis. When Jerry is slightly injured in a fall, they visit a hospital where Jerry meets a nurse named Vanetta (Brenda Vaccaro). They soon fall in love despite Vanetta being older than Jerry and begin living with each other.
Jerry accidentally discovers an autographed photo of Vanetta declaring her love to a man named Tony (Bill Vint). Vanetta explains that Tony is her husband and they separated two years ago but are not divorced. Tony pops in for a visit wearing his Marine uniform with Vietnam decorations. Tony tells Jerry that Vanetta promised to wait for him with Jerry leaving for Vanetta and Tony to clear their personal issues.
Jerry's streak of luck continues when Marvis's brother is killed in Vietnam with Marvis taking his anger out on Jerry ending his relationship. Despite an impressive performance at his audition for the Conservatorium he is rejected for entry because he has had no formal musical education. Three times lucky, Herb visits Jerry to bring him his draft notice.
Jerry buys an old Ford Fairlane and intends on going to Canada. After a family argument his father agrees with Jerry but urges him to have his car inspected at the local gas station for safety prior to his departure. On the day he is supposed to take his induction physical Herb buys Jerry a set of new tyres. When Jerry looks at some road maps he overhears Herb attempting to bribe the petrol station attendant to fix Jerry's car so it can not run for a few days.
Jerry bursts into tears and drives his old heap out of the petrol station into another junk car being towed by a tow truck.
The final scene is in Herb and Ruth's bedroom where the television news of Vietnam shows a dying Jerry being carried away.
Production
Michael Douglas had been cast in the original play on Broadway but was fired from his role and replaced with David Birney. His father Kirk Douglas bought the rights to the play and filmed it with his son in the lead he lost.[2]
The title refers to a tree house that Jerry returns to sit in.
During the low-budget production, Brenda Vaccaro and Michael Douglas initially shared the same trailer, then began a six-year relationship.[3]
Principal cast
Actor | Role |
---|---|
Michael Douglas | Jerry |
Jack Warden | Herb |
Rob Reiner | Don |
Brenda Vaccaro | Vanetta |
Barbara Bel Geddes | Ruth |
Critical reception
Roger Greenspun of The New York Times did not care for the film:
Summertree is a bad movie, but its badness proceeds not from its intentions, which seem honorable, or from its stylistic analogies to past modes, which in different hands could have been interesting. The badness exists, rather, moment by moment, in the insufficiency of each acted scene, in the niggling insecurity of Newley's camera, in the improverishment of each evocation of a quality of life—from the boy's dull guitar playing, which is supposed to be great, to the father's love of hunting, which should recreate the landscape, but only signifies a thoughtless and cruel pastime.[4]
See also
References
- ^ "Ron Cowen - complete guide to the Playwright, Plays, Theatres, Agent". Doollee.com. Retrieved 2010-08-16.
- ^ p.53 Douglas, Kirk Let's Face It: 90 years of Living, Loving, and Learning 2007 John Wiley and Sons
- ^ "Michael Douglas & Brenda Vaccaro: Is Out-of-Wedlock No Longer In?". People.com. 1974-09-02. Retrieved 2010-08-16.
- ^ Greenspun, Roger (1971-06-17). "Newley's 'Summertree' Opens:Hume and Yafa Work Revisits the 40's Death of a Serviceman Fixes the Action". The New York Times.
External links
- Summertree at IMDb
- Summertree at AllMovie