F. Scott Fitzgerald At The Movies-Almost-The Last Tycoon
Book Review
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
The Last Tycoon, F. Scott Fitzgerald, 1941
I suppose that it is just a matter of taste, or maybe just
being a cranky literary guy of sorts, but publishing a well-known author’s last
unfinished work, as here with F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Last Tycoon seems rather sacrilegious or perhaps just
publisher’s greed to play off one last time on an author’s fame. I have no
problem with, say, a publisher publishing a posthumous book like one did in
1964 with Ernest Hemingway’s A Moveable
Feast since that book had been
completed and moreover provided a great snapshot into the self-imposed American
literary exile community, including some interesting insights into Fitzgerald
as well, of post-World War I Paris.
The subject here, the partially told saga of the last of the
self-made maverick movie producers, is hardly definitive, or as compellingly
told about the corporatization of that profit-filled medium. Moreover the
pieces here add nothing to Fitzgerald’s reputation which will always hinge on
the novel, The Great Gatsby, maybe Tender Is The Night, and a slew of his prolifically
produced short stories.
That said, that off my chest I will say that Fitzgerald who
did do work as a screenwriter, although it is not clear how successfully, has a
pretty good idea of what was going on in Hollywood once the “talkies” came in
and forced the story line and dialogue of a film to ratchet up several notches.
And then there is the question of putting what looks like a good idea on the
screen with many times temperamental actors and inadequate financial backing.
In any case the movie producer here, Monroe Stahr, is foredoomed to be the last
of the independent filmmakers not only by the new system coming in place but by
the fact that despite his “boy wonder” status for producing mostly hits and
getting the most out of his employees come hell or high water he is headed for an
early grave due to rough living and a weak heart.
The story, his story as far as it goes, is told by the
daughter of one of his associates who is young enough, a college student at
Bennington, to be seriously in love with him although he is only, at best,
tepid toward her. The reason, or rather the big reason Monroe was still in
thrall to the memory of his late actress wife, and, was smitten by a woman he
met randomly on his studio lot who preternaturally looked like his late wife.
That short tremulous love affair which ended in sorrow and departure is the
human interest center of the story. Additionally there are scenes like how
screenwriters write individually and collectively (or don’t write under either
category), the importance of skilled cameramen in getting just the right effect
that the director or producer whoever is hanging over him or her, how stars are
made (or unmade), which gives an insight into the collective nature of the film
industry no matter who produces, who directs, and who stars. That theme was
done very well cinematically in the 1950s film, The Bad and the Beautiful about a post-World War II Monroe Stahr
–like figure and the director, the rags to riches actress and the screenwriter he
put the screws to in order to produce what he thought were great films.
There are also some interesting scenes, and some references
sprinkled throughout The Last Tycoon,
about the coming unionization of the industry, the fears that thought produced
in the movie moguls, including Stahr, and a decidedly more morbid fear about
the “reds” bringing revolution to their Hollywood front door which, perhaps,
foreshadowed the post-war red scare
Hollywood Ten blacklist night. Nice pieces, nice insights but as a whole he does
not hang together since the driven Fitzgerald have not worked out all the kinks
in the story-line. Enough said.
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