In summer of 1984, American popular culture was dominated by Ghostbusters, a blockbuster that combined sharp comedy and spectacular visual results on a scale — and in an not likely harmony — filmgoers had never seen earlier than. Its nice success superior the careers of eachone concerned, not least that of Invoice Murray. Having already been an early (if not immediately beloved) Saturday Night time Dwell solid member and given much-praised performances in comedies like Caddyshack, Stripes, and Tootsie, he introduced his well-knownly indifferent sensibility to the position of the ghost-busting Dr. Peter Venkman and thereby grew to become essentially the most in-demand comic actor in Hollywooden. When, lower than six months later, The Razor’s Edge opened with Murray within the starring position, followers purchased tickets in hopes of extra laughs.
It’s not as if that they hadn’t been warned. The Razor’s Edge was adapted from a novel by W. Somerset Maugham, a popular author in his day, however exhaustingly a straightforward humorist. On the professionalmotional circuit, Murray harassed that this was “a serious film,” not a comedy however a drama. Neverthemuch less, each critics and audiences on the time had trouble settle foring him within the position of Larry Darrell, a once-lightcoronary hearted younger man who comes again from World Battle I overwhelmed by the necessity to venture again out into the world in quest of the ultimate truths of existence. Murray was driven to make the movie (for which he took pay solely as co-screenauthor) out of the deep identification he felt with the character, which may solely have intensified the sting of its failure.
That Larry was a fellow Chicagoan solely explains a part of the enchantment. Murray’s thirtieth deliveryday, the delivery of his first youngster, and the demise of pals like Doug Kenney and John Belushi (who’s indirectly eulogized within the movie) had put him in a reflective mind-set, whereas his developing wealth and fame introduced personal and psychological challenges of their very own. The prospect of exotic location shoots in Paris and the Himalayas, the place Larry’s peripatetic searching takes him, might have candyened the deal. Revisited at the moment, the end result has plenty of memorable moments, a few of them possessed of genuine beauty and grandeur. Alas, the story Maugham tells within the novel, wealthy with the subtleties of memory, perception, and deception, doesn’t survive the Hollywooden tendencies towards over-compression and literal-mindedness.
It have to be mentioned that a number of the blame lies with Murray himself, whose goofball instincts conflict in opposition to the 9teen-twenties setting; as he later admitted, he and director John Byrum have been flawed to insist on a period piece. (Simply imagine the possibilities of Murray playing a returned Vietnam veteran as an alternative.) Regardmuch less, he continued to follow his interior Larry within the aftermath, decamping to Paris along with his younger family with a view to reside and be taught removed from the American scene he knew. It was there that he encountered the educateings of the mystic G. I. Gurdjieff, whose influence on Murray’s persona we’ve previously featured right here on Open Culture. That marked another step alongside the trail of experience that may lead him to play wiser, unhappyder, but never wholely unfunny characters in pictures like Wes Anderson’s Rushextra and Sofia Coppola’s Misplaced in Translation — and, in so doing, win dramatic respectability in any case.
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Primarily based in Seoul, Colin Marshall writes and broadcasts on cities, language, and culture. He’s the creator of the newsletter Books on Cities in addition to the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Summarizing Korea) and Korean Newtro. Follow him on the social internetwork formerly referred to as Twitter at @colinmarshall.

