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- <text id=94TT1583>
- <title>
- Nov. 14, 1994: Television:Tomorrow Is Another Yawn
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 14, 1994 How Could She Do It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/TELEVISION, Page 83
- Tomorrow is Another Yawn
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> An eight-hour sequel to Gone With the Wind, the mini-series
- Scarlett is twice as long and not half as compelling
- </p>
- <p>By Ginia Bellafante--With reporting by Georgia Harbison/New York
- </p>
- <p> Sequels, like blind dates, inspire a certain terror. We fear
- they will be losers; we suspect they will never measure up to
- past loves--and often intuition proves true. The world, after
- all, really did not need book and movie versions of Oliver's
- Story or the films The Godfather III and Police Academy II through
- VII. Nor did the world hold its breath for the onset, in 1991,
- of Scarlett, romance writer Alexandra Ripley's 823-page follow-up
- to Gone With the Wind. Columnist Molly Ivins spoke for most
- reviewers when she wrote, "I have nothing against trashy books--I like good trash--but this is dreadful."
- </p>
- <p> Despite all the harsh assessments, Scarlett was a commercial
- success; it has sold 20 million copies worldwide and was on
- the New York Times best-seller list for 34 weeks. Now CBS plans
- to capitalize on--or, rather, re-inflict--Scarlett fever
- with an eight-hour, four-part mini-series based on Ripley's
- sequel (beginning this Sunday at 9 p.m. EST).
- </p>
- <p> Starring Joanne Whalley-Kilmer in the title role, Timothy Dalton
- as Rhett Butler and 2,000 extras, Scarlett is a prodigal $45
- million production--the most expensive mini-series ever made.
- Rights to the book cost a record $9 million; history professors
- were marshaled to advise on the proper period china and silverware.
- And CBS, hoping that the show will help carry it to first place
- in the November Nielsen sweeps, is promoting the epic accordingly.
- In addition to launching a multimillion-dollar advertising campaign,
- aimed largely at young women, the network will hold online computer
- discussions and offer tie-in giveaways, and some CBS affiliates
- will even give Scarlett look-alike parties.
- </p>
- <p> As the book did, the TV movie whisks us along on Scarlett O'Hara's
- unsuspenseful journey to self-actualization. As it happens,
- this requires stops in no fewer than 53 locations. Scarlett
- moves about from Atlanta to Charleston, from Savannah to Ireland,
- chasing Rhett, making a fortune in real estate, succoring rebel
- peasants and raising a child. Predictably a postfeminist heroine,
- she is self-sufficient and sexually assertive yet at the same
- time sweetly vulnerable. Ultimately, she gets her man, all the
- while remaining kind, politically concerned and mesmerizingly
- thin.
- </p>
- <p> "My Scarlett is very different from the character that Vivien
- Leigh played," explains executive producer Robert Halmi Sr.,
- who originated the project and put up the money for it. "This
- is a mature lady. At the end of Gone With the Wind, she winds
- up with no friends, just money. What kind of ending is that?
- I had to create somebody who starts there. Vivien Leigh started
- gorgeous and young and perky and ended up completely broken.
- I had to find somebody who could start out broken and end up
- being gorgeous and fulfilled and in love."
- </p>
- <p> The role of Scarlett might easily have been cast with a quick
- phone call to Susan Lucci, but instead Halmi conducted a worldwide
- search, which took six months and cost $1 million. He claims
- he auditioned 1,000 women before happening upon British actress
- Whalley-Kilmer one evening while watching television. "She is
- that determined little girl who knows exactly what she wants,"
- says Halmi. "She can also manipulate people: she's bitchy, she's
- smart, she's lovable."
- </p>
- <p> Best known for her performance in the 1989 film Scandal, Whalley-Kilmer
- brings an unnecessary sophistication to a role that requires
- her to do little more than kiss in midsentence and appear alternately
- tortured and feisty. In fact, many cast members--including
- Sir John Gielgud (Scarlett's grandfather) and Julie Harris (Rhett's
- mother)--seem wasted on a story without much of a plot and
- a script devoid of sharp dialogue. Dalton is a sufficiently
- handsome Rhett, although he lacks the intelligence and wit of
- Gone With the Wind's Clark Gable. What's more, Dalton is not
- given resonant lines like the movie's "All we've got is cotton
- and slaves and arrogance." Instead he is obliged to say things
- like "You're trying to pass yourself off as a lady--you couldn't
- fool a blind deaf-mute."
- </p>
- <p> Scarlett the telefilm is slightly more salacious than Scarlett
- the tome but ultimately no more compelling or fun. Margaret
- Mitchell's estate stipulated that a sequel to her 1936 novel
- not contain any explicit sex. The TV producers, spared this
- constraint, show Scarlett and Rhett disrobing each other frantically
- in a fisherman's hut. Moreover, the character of Lord Fenton
- (Sean Bean), with whom Scarlett has an affair, is given far
- more prominence than he enjoyed in the book. He is a secret
- rapist-murderer who beats Scarlett when she dismisses him. "I
- am not accustomed to sudden onsets of chastity!" he yells while
- groping and slapping her.
- </p>
- <p> The tawdrier scenes are so strangely earnest that they fail
- to imbue this interminably long spectacle with the campiness
- it desperately needs. No one expected Scarlett to be comparable
- with David O. Selznick's Gone With the Wind, the recipient of
- nine Academy Awards.But it might at least have tried to measure
- up to Melrose Place.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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