2020-08-26

Breakdown and review of Magic (1978)

 Magic was written by William Goldman (based on his own novel of the same name) and directed by Richard Attenborough. It starred a young Anthony Hopkins and Ann-Margret. 

Warning: Spoilers below!

The first part of this 1978 film takes place in Hollywood, California, the rest is mostly in a few cabins on a lake in the Catskills.

Breakdown:

* We pan around the room of Merlin Jr, an old, sick magician. All kinds of magician's nik-naks are scattered around the small room (including an old ventriloquist doll). Merlin Jr is wheezing away, alone, laying on a couch, covered by a blanket.

* Corky Withers (young, bright, shy) enters. Merlin asks how his act went. Corky lies: he knocked them dead. Flashbacks to his act intercut with their conversation indicates the audience was bored and Corky was very nervous. Merlin Jr doesn't buy the story that Corky was successful. Indeed, onstage, Corky eventually cracks and calls the audience names. Merlin says Corky needs to "find himself some charm."

* Some months later, talent agent Ben Greene, who is handling Corky, is entertaining George, a CBS entertainment executive at a Hollywood Lounge. They talk about Corky and his act: magic combined with comedy using his ventriloquist dummy Fats. Both Ben and George are impressed with Corky.

* Corky's dressing room has a photo of Merlin Jr and a photo of a teenage girl (Peg, as we'll learn later). Ben enters and they talk about his act. Ben sees great things in Corky. Corky wants to know when he'll make it big. Ben says when they eat at the Four Seasons Restaurant he'll know.

* A scene of Corky on the Dinah Shore Show was cut in the movie.

* Corky and Ben meet at the Four Seasons restaurant in NYC. Ben says George wants Corky to star in a pilot for a new show on CBS. One thing: they need Corky to take a physical. Corky refuses "on principle" and walks out.

* Corky goes to his hotel room and packs up. He has a conversation with Fats, but there's no indication that Fats knows things that Corky doesn't. It doesn't appear Fats is a supernatural presence. Fats complains by Corky packs him into a special carrying case. Then Corky checks out and takes a cab out of NYC. 

* Corky and the cabbie talk about Corky's career as they drive up to a lake in the Catskills. After they arrive Corky pays the cabbie an extra amount to not tell anyone where he was driven.

* Corky rents a cabin on a lake from Peg, a lady his age. After they are alone in his cabin, Fats reveals an aggressive, creepier personality.

* Corky gets settled in and goes to Pegs house and flirts as he gets soap and towels for his cabin. She thinks Fats is cute and invites Corky over later for some wine. On the walk back to the cabin, Fats and Corky have a strange sexual conversation about Peg.

* Over wine, they talk about Corky's career. He says he's afraid of success. It's a long scene. He confesses he had a crush on her in HS. She knows. She tells him she's married (her husband's out of town) but the marriage is rocky.

* Corky returns to his cabin. Fats wants to know how it went with Peg.

* The next day, Corky and Peg walk in the woods. Peg asks about Merlin and what tricks Corky has in his act. He shows her a simple magic trick with an acorn.

* Back in the cabin, Corky shows Peg a complicated card trick (requiring her to think of a card and he guesses it). It doesn't work and Corky gets very upset. Corky confesses he's loved her all his life and that he never expected to find her here. He forces Peg to try it with him again. She's uncomfortable and worried about his reaction but they do it again. This time it works and Corky says "I didn't fail".

* That night she spends the night in his cabin and they have sex. Fats listens in the next room. He wants her to leave her husband Duke. She says that's impossible.

* He walks her to her house. He says he's serious about running away. She says she wants to think about his offer some more.

* Corky goes back to his cabin and talks to Fats. He leaves the front door open. Fats wants to go back to NYC. Corky says he doesn't want to discuss it. Fats insults Peg. Corky starts to strangle fats. Ben Greene shows up on his doorstep.

* Corky makes up a lie: he and Fats are practicing a new routine. Ben doesn't buy it. He now knows Corky's crazy. He asks if this is why he refused a physical exam. Corky lies and says he's just afraid of success. Ben says he knows good doctors who can help him. Fats keeps interrupting, tells Corky that Ben is against him, thinks he's crazy, wants him to see a shrink. Corky tells Fats to shut up repeatedly. Ben starts to leave. Corky asks him to stay, to see the new acts. ben says, he'll stay if Corky can make Fats shut up for 5 minutes. If he can't Corky has to agree to see a doctor. Corky agrees. Ben starts a watch. Corky breaks down and Fats belts out a long nonsensical speech. Ben gets up and leaves. Corky and fats argue. Fats tells Corky he's going to get locked up in an asylum if he doesn't stop Ben. Fats tells him to use "MEE-MEE- MEEEEE!" to stop him.

* Ben chases after Ben and repeatedly hits him over the head with Fats until Ben collapses in the woods, unconscious.

* Interrupting, Peg yells a question about dinner from her porch. He yells back an answer. She goes back in. Fats complains his head is broken.

* Corky and fats are in his cabin, Corky taping up Fats' head. Fats tells Corky to empty Ben's pockets, replace them by lots of stones, and swim Ben's body out into the middle of the lake.

* Corky does that, but when he gets to the middle Ben wakes up. They fight in the water and Corky drowns him. Corky swims back. The ripples in the lake fade from moon-lit dark to morning light.

* Corky wakes up, goes outside his cabin. Peg is there she says Duke arrived home late last night. He's suspicious and watching them now. Duke wants to meet Corky.

* Corky gets Fats and returns to Peg's house for some coffee. After small talk, Duke leaves to lock up some of the unoccupied cabins on the lake. He discovered Ben's car, unoccupied and returns to Peg's house. Corky says the car must be Ben's (as though he's never seen him). Duke asks him to call around to figure out what's going on. Corky makes a phone call and pretends to be talking to Ben. They get into an argument.

* Later, Duke and Peg get into an argument in their bedroom. Duke thinks Peg has slept with Corky.

* Later, Duke and Corky are out in the lake with fishing poles. (It appears Peg has gone to town.) They get out in the middle of the lake and Duke tells Corky that Peg admitted she slept with Corky. Corky laughs it off. Duke gets his line snagged on something heavy. Corky says he's cold and wants to go in now. (Note Corky is without Fats for over 5 minutes...) Duke keeps reeling in his line. Finally, he reels in a log. They row back to shore and spot Ben, lying on the sore, half in and half out of the water.

* They get out and examine the body. Corky lies and says it's not Ben. Duke tells Corky to call the hospital and tell them to come right away. Corky runs off. Duke tries to revive Ben but gives up after he realizes Ben's dead. 

* Duke enters Corky's cabin while Corky is in Peg's house. He snoops around and finds Ben's wallet hidden in a drawer. He takes the wallet and starts to leave when he sees Fats in the kitchen. He walks over to Fats. Fats stabs Duke to death. As Duke collapses, the camera pulls back to reveal Corky.

* Corky asks Fats what is he going to do now? Fats says to wrap both bodies in a sheet, dump them in the lake, clean the blood up off the kitchen floor and get in the shower. 

* Peg returns. Corky tells her Duke went hunting and kicked him out. Peg tells Corky that she's decided to leave Duke and go with Corky, but she has to wait for Duke to return form his hunting trip first. They agree to go get packed to be ready to go.

* Corky packs in his cabin with Fats. He tells Fats that Fats will not be going with Peg and him on their trip. Their act together is over. Fats is enraged. He says he's the only reason Corky because famous. He tells Corky he has to kill Peg, to stab her with the knife. Corky stabs himself to death instead. 


Review of script:

The script is published in one of William Goldman's books (Five Screenplays). This is the version I'm using.

While entertaining and very well-written, it is formatted quite different from a typical spec script. (This script was contracted upon reading Goldman's manuscript for the novel this is based on. It is very detailed in terms of editing suggestions and camera directions.) Sluglines, if they exist, are all non-standard. All caps are used liberally to indicate where the camera is to focus. None-the-less, readable and very engaging.

About the perspective from which the story is told, I can't help to think that this is a story about a very unstable young man with an unhealthy obsession over a woman his age. The doll Fats represents his worsening psychological issues. As the film evolves, it's revealed Corky has what I guess would be called a split personality. The doll Fats represents his self-centered part of his character and Corky himself, as the world superficially sees him, is his bright, sweet, kind self. If it were about a supernatural doll doing evil things to help Corky, one that has corrupted Corky somehow, I'd feel more comfortable with the story. (I'd also prefer we follow Peg more closely, making this a little more about her.) But Corky is the protagonist, and a very non-sympathetic one at that. The story simply explores an aspect of his worsening psychosis in the framework of a horror movie.

Screen grab from Magic (1978)
Peg, Fats, and Corky 


Review of the film:

In a "monster in the house" movie, a "monster" (Fats) is introduced into the "house" (namely Corky, or his world) as the result of a character flaw or sin. It's like a fable, giving us a moral lesson. The sin here is Corky's egotistical desire to be liked and successful. To have an act that never fails. As a result, Fats comes into his life and the selfish side of him is uncontrollably channeled into Fats. It gets worst and worst, until Fats makes Corky do terrible things, all so he can do what he wants. The only way to defeat the monster is for Corky to kill himself. That's a moral lesson?

The acting is good, especially Ann-Margret. The very young Anthony Hopkins is solid but doesn't have the engaging smoothness he commanded later in his career. The editing and pacing are good. Good camera work and direction. Is it scary? Not really. It's shot as though it's a horror (with jump cuts, as usual), but we are simply watching a poor man's mental health dissolve before our eyes. If you like these types of psychological thrillers, this is the movie for you.

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