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- November 16, 1981CINEMAAt Last, Kate and Hank!
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-
- On Golden Pond burnishes age with the art of Hepburn and Fonda
-
-
- It begins with images of serenity; wild flowers gently stirring
- in an almost imperceptible spring breeze; loons, bright-eyed
- and sleek, afloat on untroubled waters; the lake itself
- shimmering in the backlight of a dying sun. The first glimpses
- of Golden Pond are washed with the kind of burnished light that
- colors our recollections of better places and better times past.
-
- The first glimpses of the aged couple who are reopening their
- comfortable old summer house are suffused with a similar light,
- though that is more a trick of the moviegoer's memory than of
- the cinematographer's art. For Katharine Hepburn and Henry
- Fonda arrive in On Golden Pond bearing with them not merely
- their vacation baggage but a montage of beloved images assembled
- from a combined 95 years of motion picture acting in 129
- features, not to mention uncounted stage and television
- appearances.
-
- Spunky Kate and Honest Hank! If people were allowed to vote on
- such matters, the pair would probably be grandparents to an
- entire nation, since they are among the very few movie stars who
- have gone on working while four or five movie generations have
- grown up. By this time, their personal crotchets and graces,
- the events in the chronicle of their lives, have merged in the
- public mind with fragments from all those movies. Down the long
- corridor of the years, it seems we have encountered them at
- every turning. When they were young they gave lessons in
- romance; in middle age they taught steadfastness and honor; now
- it seems not only right but almost inevitable that they should
- come together--astonishingly-- for the first time, to share some
- of the pains and puzzlements of age with us.
-
- It comes as a gift that the vehicle is literately written by
- Ernest Thompson and sensitively directed by Mark Rydell. On
- Golden Pond is a mature movie, and for the first time in years
- that does not make it an oddity. The youth audience the film
- industry has been wooing for more than a decade is growing up.
- According to an industry source, 43% of those Americans who
- regularly go to movies are now over 29 (only 25% were in that
- age group eight year ago). Very few major movies aimed at
- adolescents are being released this holiday season. Instead,
- the next weeks will offer Ragtime, an adaptation of E.L.
- Doctorow's panoramic vision of turn-of-the-century America;
- Reds, Warren Beatty's life of Revolutionary John Reed; Absence
- of Malice, a serious examination of journalistic ethics; and
- Whose Life Is It Anyway?, which is about euthanasia. Even the
- new John Belushi/Dan Akroyd feature is far from Animal House;
- it ia an adaptation of Thomas Berger's Neighbors, a farcically
- structured but coruscating novel about friendship. As if to
- stress the point, such legendary figures as James Cagney and
- Fred Astaire will be back on-screen before the year turns.
-
- In any season, On Golden Pond would be welcome. Like last
- year's Ordinary People, the film addresses itself seriously and
- intelligently, without sermon or sociology, to an inescapable
- human issue; in this case, finding a decent ending for a life.
- By inviting audiences to contemplate the struggle of two
- attractively idiosyncratic old parties coming to terms with
- mortality. On Golden Pond gently requires them to confront that
- same inevitability in themselves. In short, those serene images
- of the film's opening are deceptive; age is not entirely golden
- on Golden Pond; dark currents flow just beneath its surface.
-
- As the lives of Norman Thayer Jr. and his wife Ethel unfold, it
- becomes apparent that they have been spared none of the
- vicissitudes of aging except poverty. He is a retired
- professor, and there is obviously good breeding and a bit of
- money in their backgrounds. But the isolation of old age is
- upon them. No close friends are left on the pond; their only
- child Chelsea has been estranged from her father since childhood
- and now almost never comes home. Divorced, childless, she is
- living the worrisome ad hoc life of the fortyish woman who is
- still trying to find herself. The promise of a visit from her
- before the summer ends does not cheer Norman.
-
- But then, it seems, nothing could. He suffers from angina; he
- suffers from the thought of his approaching 80th birthday that
- is to be the occasion for Chelsea's return; he suffers from a
- constant preoccupation with death. "Don't you have anything
- else to think about?" his wife inquires. "Nothing quite as
- interesting," he answers. There is a bitterness as well as wit
- in that reply, as there is in most of Norman's sinker-ball
- deliveries. But bitter or not, jokes are Norman's last line of
- defense, for if he is afraid of dying, he also dreads living
- mentally and physically diminished. He can't remember
- things--the faces in an old photograph near the phone or, for
- that matter, why he picked up the phone in the first place. He
- can no longer do simple chores--can't repair the screen door,
- can't start a fire in the fireplace without imperiling the
- house. On day Ethel, seeking to get him stirring, sends him out
- to pick berries. He becomes confused, can't recall the turns
- in the road, and stumbles home in shame. In one of the film's
- most moving moments, he confesses to Ethel why he returned so
- quickly: "I was scared to death--that's why I came running
- back. To see your pretty face, to feel safe."
-
- In his wife's deliberately overstated response--she insists he
- is still her "knight in shining armor"--there is irony. For as
- Norman's apologist and mediator between him and his daughter,
- him and the world, she has become the defender of his faltering
- faith in himself and the emotional stability of their narrowing
- world.
-
- Soon Ethel is harder at work than usual as a go-between.
- Chelsea arrives with her new lover, Bill (well played by Dabney
- Coleman), a dentist whose laid-back manner does not hide a will
- hard as a platinum inlay. Then there is his 13-year-old son,
- Billy (Doug McKeon, who gets the bravado, vulnerability and
- candor of adolescence just right). He is toughing out a feeling
- that since Mom and Dad are divorced he is essentially homeless,
- that the idea of dumping him with the old folks while Dad and
- Chelsea go to Europe is desertion.
-
- Things do not begin promisingly. Norman will still not concede
- his daughter is an adult ("Look at this fat little girl" is his
- greeting), and soon he is hectoring Bill about where he and
- Chelsea will sleep ("You could have the room where I first
- violated Ethel"). As for Billy, he is wary, always ready to
- sulk or run. But there are possibilities in the situation. It
- could break Norman's habit of turning ever more tightly in on
- himself, and teach Billy his conviction that no one is
- interested in him is wrong. If an old man starts to show a
- young man the ropes (or at least how to handle a fishing line),
- perhaps Norman will see he still has useful work to perform as
- a teacher. Perhaps Billy will see that even if affection is
- crankily stated, it is still affection, and that he is worthy
- of it.
-
- The psychology may be taken a little too straight out of Erik
- Erikson, or even Gail Sheehy, and the plot verges on the
- melodramatic (it takes a boating accident to seal the bargain
- of friendship between the generations). But emotionally On
- Golden Pond is not less valid for being something of a cliche.
- Anyway, the characters are so strong that the piece does not
- play as a cliche. Hepburn, for example, may have a less chewy
- part than has Fonda, but the briskness of her manner, her
- well-justified image as a no-nonsense individualist who is
- nevertheless a good sport, serve her wonderfully. There is a
- vivifying touch of tension between an actress who was a
- liberated woman before the movement was born and her role as
- traditional wife and mother.
-
- But Golden Pond finally belongs to Henry Fonda, who has had to
- wait until the end of his life for the part of his life. As
- Norman he is able to bring together, in a single character, the
- two main strands of his talent. The old gentleman's character
- is grounded on the main line of Fonda's star career. The
- fundamental decency and intelligence that were basic to the
- likes of Tom Joad and Mr. Roberts still infuse his presence.
- Indeed, so powerful has that image been that one sometimes
- forgets how splendid he has been as a character actor. The
- military martinet of Fort Apache, the cold-eyed outlaw of Once
- Upon a Time in the West, even the hilariously befuddled
- herpetologist "Hopsy" Pike of The Lady Eve--they all light up
- in one's memory as the spirit that animated them flashes in
- Fonda's eyes. Without raising his voice he gives a bravura
- performance as he moves from depressed withdrawal to momentary
- rages, from the struggle to express affection to the struggle
- not to express it, lest it be mistaken for weakness.
-
- When Chelsea reappears, the old man even manages a tentative
- truce, acceptance of the sort Ethel has been struggling to bring
- about. Whether that truce signals a real reconciliation the
- movie does not definitively promise. But if it refuses to go
- for a big, emotional finish that would leave its audience awash
- in grateful tears, neither does it leave them without hope.
-
- With all their visitors departed, the last bags and boxes
- stowed in the station wagon. Norman and Ethel go down to the
- pond to say goodbye to the loons that have been their summer
- companions. The bird family turns out to be diminished
- too--just the mother and father are left. Fonda eyes them and
- in the wry, dry voice that has drawled through our consciousness
- for almost half a century, speaks a kind of generational
- epitaph, weary but accepting. "Babies are all grown up . . . and
- moved to Los Angeles or somewhere."
-
- The spirit in which he speaks--realistic, humorous, but with
- feeling--is precisely what claims one's respect for On Golden
- Pond. When it sometimes seems the whole society has spiritually
- decamped for Tinseltown, the movie offers the hope that people
- can come home again--at least for a visit.
-
-
- --By Richard Schickel
-
-