The Group (1966) ***

The ensemble picture provided a showcase for new talent. But consider the gender imbalance at work. Only Candice Bergen proved a breakout star of any longevity compared to a flop  like The Magnificent Seven (1960) from which six relative newcomers – Steve McQueen, James Coburn, Charles Bronson, Robert Vaughn, Eli Wallach (only his fourth movie) and Horst Buchholz – became top-billed material.

Part of the problem was Hollywood itself, not enough good roles for actresses who weren’t destined for spy movies or to become a decorative supporting player, and who could not headline a western, war picture or (with the exception of Bonnie and Clyde) a hardnosed crime movie. But part of the problem was the structure of The Group. Yes, there’s a 150-minute running time, but there are eight main characters to contend with.

And the story doesn’t have a central focus like The Magnificent Seven where characters are built in asides to the main action but has to meander in eight different directions. Luckily, it still remains a powerful confection, tackling, as if setting out to shock audiences,  contentious issues like mental illness, leftwing politics, birth control and lesbianism. What could easily have descended into a chick flick or a glorified soap opera instead pushes in the direction of feminism.

A bunch of wealthy privileged university female graduate friends sets out in the 1930s to change the world only discover, to their amazement, that the male-dominated dominion  chews them up and spits them out.

Only Lakey (Candice Bergen), who prefers the company of women, appears to find fulfilment but that’s mostly from running off to the more liberated Paris at the earliest opportunity to study art history though the Second World War puts an end to that.

Kay (Joanna Pettet) seems to have made the best marriage, with a wannabe alcoholic writer (Larry Hagman), but she ends up in a mental asylum. Dottie (Joan Hackett) also views life in the art world, marrying a painter, as the best option only to later prefer a more mundane husband.  Priss (Elizabeth Hartmann), the strongest-minded of the octet, lands a man of a stronger, controlling, character.  

Polly (Shirley Knight) is the most sexually adventurous. Ostensibly, Helena (Kathleen Widdoes), a renowned traveller, and Libby (Jessica Walter), a successful novelist, appear to achieve the greatest independence and success but come up short in that most important of endeavors, romance. The men, you should be warned, are all one-dimensional scumbags.

The movie focuses mainly on Kay, Polly and Libby. Lakey shows up at the beginning and the end.

At its best, it’s an insight into the world of women, on a grander scale than any of the tear-jerkers of previous decades. But it suffers from too many characters and too little time. It might have been better as a mini-series, though that, obviously, was not an option at the time. The Sidney Buchman (Cleopatra, 1963) screenplay fails to match the intensity of the critically-acclaimed source novel by Mary McCarthy, a huge bestseller.

It’s a surprising choice for Sidney Lumet (The Pawnbroker, 1964), more mainstream than his general output, but while he clearly presents the characters in sympathetic fashion, his hallmark tension is missing.

Mostly, it works as a time-capsule of a time-capsule, a movie about the 1960s optimism of 1930s optimism, and the obstacles faced by both.

Only Candice Bergen (Soldier Blue, 1970) approached the level of success achieved by The Magnificent Seven motley crew, achieving top-billed status in a number of films and her screen persona, possibly as a result of this movie, was often independence. Leading lady in Will Penny (1968) and Support Your Local Sheriff (1969) was the height of success for Joan Hackett.

Already twice Oscar-nominated as a Supporting Actress, Shirley Knight was the best-known of The Group, but was only thereafter top-billed once, in the low-budget Dutchman (1966) although she won critical plaudits for The Rain People (1969).

An Oscar nominee for her debut A Patch of Blue (1965), Elizabeth Hartmann was top-billed in You’re A Big Boy Now (1967) and then fell into the supporting player bracket. Never top-billed, Joanna Pettet was a strong co-star for the rest of the decade but that was marked by flops like Blue (1968) and The Best House in London (1968) and she drifted into television.

Best known for Number One (1969) and Play Misty for Me (1971) Jessica Walter failed to achieve top-billing. Though, as a result of this review, it has been pointed out to me (thanks Mr Film-Authority) that I glossed over her brilliant performance in television show Arrested Development (2003-2019); in fact, if your search for her on imdb that TV series is the one that pops up first.

Most of the actresses did have long careers, sustained by leading roles in television or bit parts in movies but when you consider the success visited upon the group known as The Magnificent Seven  you can’t help thinking this was a whole generation of talent going to waste because they could not be accommodated by the Hollywood machine and did not fit the industry prototype.

For another example of gender disparity you could compare the consequent comparative success of the stars of Valley of the Dolls and The Dirty Dozen, both out the following year.

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Author: Brian Hannan

I am a published author of books about film - over a dozen to my name, the latest being "When Women Ruled Hollywood." As the title of the blog suggests, this is a site devoted to movies of the 1960s but since I go to the movies twice a week - an old-fashioned double-bill of my own choosing - I might occasionally slip in a review of a contemporary picture.

7 thoughts on “The Group (1966) ***”

  1. Thoughtful and a sad remainder of the Way It Was…men could commit uppity women to looney bins; could prevent women from using contraceptives; could … McCarthys semi bio satire was a real eye opener, and you’re right, great roles for women were either 1 dimensional, slutty, or non existent. I had hopes they would redo this as a mini series…supposedly the modern day, scaled down version of The Group, is Sex and the City?

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    1. Sex and the City is The Group liberated to a large extent. But a mini series set in the 1930s and able to devote more time to the themes and issues of the book would be great. Plus eight great roles for women. A potential launchpad for a new generation.

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  2. This is interesting. The film passed me by in 1966 but I remember the novel. I’m not sure when I read it but I think it would have been in the late 1960s. I think you have a point about how it might now make a long-form narrative on TV. What interests me most though is your comment about Lumet, suggesting it is more mainstream than his usual work. It seems to that the ‘meat’ of the narrative is very much something I would expect from Lumet, but not perhaps the length or the scale of the film. He did move between adaptation of stage productions of the classics to superior genre pieces some of which were audience favourites? Most of these were mainstream rather than ‘specialised’ or ‘arthouse’. They were simply intense and well-acted. I’m not sure where you found a copy of The Group (on Amazon?) but I’m looking for Lovin’ Molly (1974), another Lumet adaptation, of a Larry McMurtry novel. Any ideas where I might find it?

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    1. I tend to think of Lumet as a director of tight intense work – certainly some variety there – but when I think of his portfolio I’m seeing a connection betweeen Serpico, Prince of the City, The Anderson Tapes, The Pawnbroker, Dog Day Afternoon, The Hill, The Verdict to which The Group is an outlier. Listing his works reminds me just what a superb director he was and not scared of using bold material. He was definitely a mainstream director. I think The Group came from TCM. Lovin’ Molly you can find on ebay from a variety of foreign sources which will usually be in English, costing about £12-£15. Thanks for reminding me of that one, I’d forgotten all about it and Susan Sarandon is one of my favourite actors.

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