Big Game Boxoffice Hunt
Paramount Pins Highest Hope On Hatari! (1962)
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Five Shows Daily Makes For Long Shifts at NYC's DeMille Theatre |
Theatres brought wild animals to fronts and into lobbies. There were tie-ins with zoos and auto manufacturers that had supplied Hatari! with terrain vehicles. A strong soundtrack by Henry Mancini yielded instrumental hits to link with the film. Hawks saw new direction his music needed to head and so let go of Dimitri Tiomkin, whose peak had passed. The director approaching his mid-sixties kept an awareness of what a modern audience would want. His getting free reign to do Hatari! was reward for
Hawks had studied enough TV to realize that viewers no longer needed, in fact had no want, for structured stories. They were too distracted in any case to follow three disciplined acts, home watch being anything but disciplined. Maybe Hawks noted how his own old films were TV-diced into unrelated scenes that left viewers to guess what a yarn was all about. In the end, it didn’t matter, for as Hawks well knew, they had seen all the old tropes fourscore times, so why fret with detail? Hawks would henceforth opt for scenes that would please within loosest framework of relationships among people he enjoyed, and hoped we would. This is how his films relax and reward time and again like no one else’s. You know the highlights and are each time there to see them again. Even if there was a strong narrative, any novelty to that would have dissipated long ago, in event you were back to watch again. This is how Hawks parts from other filmmakers for me. I can drift from one pleasurable scene to a next, the goodies never more than a few minutes apart. Length doesn't matter, for who’s in a hurry for any good thing to end?
The half-dozen Hawks made from
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Director-Producer Howard Hawks with John Wayne |
Hawks also had a possessive credit above titles on posters for virtually all output long before most noticed such things. This was less to honor him than to assure customers there was an outstanding show inside. The MOMA series for Hawks in May 1962, a first in the
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