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Kiss Me, Stupid (1964)
In director Billy Wilder's now-rated PG-13 sex film -
a crude, satirically-biting and sordid movie about debauchery (marital
and extra-marital sex) and the obsession with fame, that received a
condemned rating from the Catholic Legion of Decency for its allegedly
smutty and vulgar tale. It was the first major Hollywood film to be "condemned" by
the League of Decency following Baby Doll (1956).
To avoid controversy, UA shifted the film's publicity and distribution
to their art-house subsidiary, Lopert Films:
- the foundation for the suggestive
and farcical film was Anna Bonacci’s 1944 Italian bedroom farce L’Ora
della Fantasia, which had been adapted into a play titled The
Dazzling Hour. It was also based on the subsequent Italian film Wife
For a Night (1952, It.), starring Gina Lollobrigida
- this caustic sex romp told about an opportunist, amateur
songwriter and neurotic piano teacher Orville J. Spooner (Ray Walston)
(wearing a sweatshirt with Beethoven's face) who was insecurely married
to beautiful wife Zelda (Jack Lemmon's real-life wife Felicia Farr),
living in the town of Climax, NV - and they were about to celebrate
their 5th wedding anniversary.
- after his closing night performance at The Sands,
drunken Las Vegas entertainer and suave playboy Dino Latino (a depraved,
lecherous, self-parodying Dean Martin) left town and was driving
to Hollywood. When the unsuspecting Dino stopped at the gas station
of deceitful gas station owner Barney Millsap (Cliff Osmond), Orville's
friend, the two aspiring and cluelessly-manipulative songsters plotted
to sabotage Italian sports car convertible, in order to strand him
for the night. In his company, aspiring amateur lyricist Barney was
hoping to help his partner Orville sell his songs to the crooner
Dino during his forced overnight visit.
- Barney hatched a plan - Orville would invite Dino to
spend the night in his home (to coax him into becoming interested in
their songs). But then, Orville became concerned that his marriage
would be put in jeopardy. He feared that Dino's insatiable, horny amorous
attentions would be focused on Zelda. (Zelda had a long-standing juvenile
crush on Dino when she was 16, evidenced by her presidency of the Dino
fan club in high school.) And one-track-minded Dino claimed he suffered
debilitating migraines if he didn't get laid every night!
The Seedy Roadhouse in Town: The Belly Button
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Waitress Polly the Pistol (Kim Novak)
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Polly's Trailer Behind the Belly Button
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- in order to ensure his wife
would avoid the libidinous Dino - Orville provoked Zelda to pack
up and leave the house in tears. Then, through Barney, he hired naughty
Polly the Pistol (Kim Novak in a role similar to her imposter part
in Vertigo
(1958)), a buxom roadhouse cocktail waitress (and floozy
prostitute) to pose as Orville's wife for $25 dollars for the night
- to sweeten the deal for Dino. She worked in the Belly Button on
the edge of town, and lived in the trailer out back.
- everything
worked as planned until Orville also became raucous and "got carried
away" with
Polly, at the same moment that Zelda returned home and watched the
shenanigans through the window. She stormed off and ended up at the
Belly Button where she began drinking multiple Bloody Marys. Concerned
about her drunken state, she was led to Polly's empty trailer to sleep
it off.
- meanwhile, Polly had become
amorous with Orville listening to his playing and singing of songs
on the piano. But Orville also realized that he had a deal for Polly
to be with Dino, so he reluctantly left with an excuse to go bowling.
However, a few moments later, he was overcome with jealousy, returned
after standing outside and seeing the lights go out, and confronted
Dino - who was having sex with Polly on the floor (Orville: "So
you're helping my wife with the dishes, ha! Who's washing and who's
drying?").
He threw Dino out of his house for flirting with and molesting his
'wife' - actually Polly.
- Then it became a case of swapped identities and sexual
partners between a housewife and a prostitute: Orville treated Polly
as his wife (and spent the rest of the night with her), and Zelda
(who had fled to the Belly Button and gotten drunk, and was resting
in Polly's trailer out back) was soon mistakenly thought to be Polly
by Dino
- Dino
explained to Zelda what had happened to him at her husband's place: "My car broke down. They put me up with some
piano teacher...What an evening!...Ah, these amateurs, what they won't
do to sell a song. He kept throwing his wife at me...Yeah. Get the
scene?...Not a bad-lookin' dame, if you like home cookin', but me,
I like to eat out, you know, Chinese one night, a little French cuisine
another, and a little delicatessen in between." And then he propositioned
her, assuming that she was Polly: "Well, it's my night on, Polly,
baby, and if you're worried about money, I tip large." She succumbed
to his kisses and her own adulterous desires.
Swapped Identities and Partners
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Orville with Polly - at the Piano
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Dino with Polly Caught Having Sex on the Floor by Orville and
Then Thrown Out
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Zelda's Surprise to See Dino Arriving at Polly's
Trailer
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Zelda Submitting to Sex with Dino
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- in the re-released, restored version of the film
(the original European version), Dino and Zelda presumably had sex
after a kiss and the lights went out, and the next morning, she awoke
naked under the sheets after he left. She saw that he had given her
a generous $500 tip (5 $100 dollar bills). When Polly was driven
back to her trailer by Orville, Zelda identified herself as the real
wife of Orville: "You
took my place last night, so I took yours." To be let off the
hook for mutually-redemptive adultery, Polly admitted: "Whatever
your husband did, he did it for you." Zelda admitted back to Polly: "Whatever
I did, I did it for him." They both admitted it was "fun" to
swap identities for one night. Zelda gave the money to Polly since
she was entitled to it. Polly encouraged Zelda to return to Orville
whom she claimed was a good man: "So when you find a good guy,
you should stick to him. I deal with married men all the time, the
heels. Believe me, you got a wonderful husband."
- the
film concluded with Orville (threatened with fake divorce by Zelda
as a trick) as he discovered that Dino had bought his song - and was
singing "Sophia" during a nationwide program
on a bank of TV screens in downtown Climax. Orville was shocked: "Why
would he sing our song after what I did to him?" After the song
finished, Dino explained how he had acquired the tune from two songwriters
on his way through Climax, NV: "Which just goes to prove that
if you've got what it takes, sooner or later, somebody will take what
you've got, baby." As a result of her windfall of $500, Polly
bought a car and was towing her trailer out of town for a new future.
- the
almost-hysterical Orville admitted to Zelda that he was completely
confused and flabbergasted by everything: "I
can't figure out any of this" - (not knowing that Zelda had spent
the night with Dino as a way to save her marriage - and her husband's
fortunes). He mused: "I mean, the ring and the song and the car
and Dino. How would you? When did she? Why would he?" - Zelda
explained to her clueless husband in the film's last line of dialogue: "Kiss
me, stupid."
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Orville (Ray Walston) With
His Pretty Wife Zelda (Felicia Farr) on Their 5th Anniversary
Orville Inviting Dino (Dean Martin) to Spend the Night in His House
Orville Pretending that Polly the Pistol (Kim Novak) Was His Wife, After Provoking
Zelda to Leave
Dino Flirting With Polly in Orville's House
Orville Also Flirting With Polly in His House
Zelda Drinking Heavily at the Belly Button
Zelda: Waking Up The Morning After
Dino's $500 dollar Tip to Zelda
Final Scene: Orville Begging to Have Zelda Back
Dino Singing Orville's Song on TV
Polly Leaving Town
Zelda to Orville: "Kiss me, stupid"
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