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THE
LANDLORD
DVD.
Studiocanal
There
are films that somehow seem to vanish for no good reason from
time to time, and one such movie is The Landlord.
Apart from an unheralded US VHS release back in the 1980s, the
film has pretty much been out of circulation since its initial
release in 1970. Books barely reference it; fans of 70s cinema
hardly seem to have heard of it.
Yet this is no minor movie vanishing after its initial run. It’s
the directorial debut of Hal Ashby, the first in a pretty impressive
decade-long run of films – Harold and Maude,
The Last Detail, Shampoo, Being
There, Coming Home and Bound
for Glory - and is produced by Norman Jewison, then coming
straight off In the Heat of the Night and The
Thomas Crown Affair. It was Jewison’s cache that
got the financed, though other commitments meant he would quickly
hand it over to his editor Ashby.
The Landlord opens with the lead character Elgar Enders
(Beau Bridges) talking to camera about how he’s just bought
a house in a run down Brooklyn tenement and wants to throw the
occupants out, gut the place and live there himself as part of
a process of gentrification (something that, ironically, has really
happened in the neighbourhood since). Elgar is a spoiled rich
kid from the whitest of whitebread families, but he’s not
the villain that this introduction might suggest. On arriving
at his new property, he gets to meet his tenants, and quickly
starts to like them. Before long, he’s moved in to the building
and rejected his family’s bigotry and snobbishness, and
also formed close relationships with his tenants – some
closer than other, as he has a one-night stand with Fanny (Diana
Sands), the girlfriend of aggressive and racially confused black
activist and frequent arrestee Copee (Lou Gossett Jr) and forms
a more committed relationship with mix-raced dancer Lanie (Marki
Bey) who catches his eye in a nightclub (and you really can’t
blame him), and who is amused that he initially thinks she is
white.
Like
several films of the period, The Landlord tackles
the racial tension of the time head on, but it doesn’t feel
preachy, even if the screenplay by Bill Gunn (later to make Ganja
and Hess) does contain some biting dialogue and social
commentary. While Elgar’s family are rather one-dimensional
comic stereotypes, the film is even-handed, showing racism and
misunderstanding on both sides, but also suggesting that people
from wildly different backgrounds really can find some common
ground if they try. It’s helped by a personable cast –
Bridges is excellent as the naïve, likeable rich kid who
is pulled out of his complacancy and arrested childhood as the
story progresses, Sands is heartbreakingly vulnerable, Bey adorable
and Lee Grant as Elgar’s mother wonderfully snarky and hypocritical.
The Landlord doesn’t wash over the problems
it portrays, but equally it doesn’t try to exploit them.
It’s a wonderful film with a lot of heart, and it keeps
surprising you with where it goes. Its appearance on DVD is long
overdue and very welcome.
DAVID
FLINT
BUY
IT NOW (UK)
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