The Magic Christian/Review

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< The Magic Christian
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The Magic Christian is the kind of movie that is bursting out of the seams wanting it to get into the annals of cult movie classics. But somewhere down the line, it comes flying off the rails, and you can't seem to want to take your eyes off it. If this was a train wreck, you would want to get off the tracks without taking your eyes off the damage and destruction you just witnessed.

The title gives the impression that you are going to watch a Christian allegory in the form of a fantasy movie. It would have been better if that was the case. Terry Southern, adapting his novel, might have had a bad trip while writing the movie. And that is one of the main reasons to watch this oddity because it is interesting to see how a meltdown feels.

Noted having co-written The Cincinnati Kid, Dr. Strangelove, and Easy Rider, with the latter two getting Southern his well deserved Oscar nominations. But he is also the mind behind crazy novels like Candy and well, The Magic Christian. It is the same craziness evident in his writing that he brings to the table here. Might think it is hard to imagine a two-time Academy Award nominee wrote it. But when you think about it, Doctor Strangelove felt like it could have gone in the other direction. But didnt because it had Stanley Kubrick's equally weird eccentricities that created magic.

The story is as simple as it gets. Peter Sellers plays a multi-millionaire named Sir Guy Grand who, along with his adopted son Youngman Grand (played by Ringo Starr), plays practical jokes on people. Grand would hand out vast sums of money to random people, even bribing them to fulfill his whims and flights of fancy. Grand does all this to teach his adopted son about the adage that everyone has their price. They need to push people to see how far they are willing to go.

Their whims include buying an expensive painting and ripping it apart with a knife in front of the curator or making a traffic policeman take back the parking ticket he gave Grand and eat it. For the right price, of course. All this escalates to a climactic showdown where he fills a swimming pool with cash and dumps it with a pile of money with a board reading FREE CASH!! Only catch to it has he filled it up with shit and piss instead of water. That is how crazy his antics to test people gets.

Between all that, they encounter several weird characters, including a transgender cabaret singer (played by a sporty Yul Brynner), a slave owner called Priestess of the Whip (Raquel Welch at her usual sensual best) and even a vampire (Christopher Lee spoofing his Dracula routine). All that adds up to one nutty movie where you one would blame you for calling it by what it is.

Mainstream critics tore the movie apart when it came out, and they might have got some of it right. As you can imagine from the synopsis, it feels like a bunch of episodic gags strung together and not even the best ones at that. The weird editing and score in some scenes like the auction scene, for example. Or the scene involving the cruise ship that looks more like a space ship doesn't help much.

Among the cast, Ringo Starr is pretty enjoyable as the adopted son embarking on an adventure with his crazy father. All the cameos are also pretty fun as it is great to see all the A-listers poking fun at themselves. The main problem is Peter Sellers. A significant factor that makes his performances so enjoyable is how people react to his antics. But here, it feels strange to see a comedy where he is mainly reacting to other people's antics. That lets down a lot of the gags to a large extent.

It is, in a way, a must-watch for the casual viewers to see what Peter Sellers did between the popular Pink Panther movies. It also deserves to be watched to see how all these great actors and a fantastic writer got together. They pooled in all their kookiness to create a blend that might not be for everyone—even putting a lot of people off it. Still, it is way better than the pool that Peter Sellers makes the people jump into at the climax, which is what many critics suggested the audience who watched this movie did.

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