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Classic Cannon: Duet for One (1986) - Reviewed
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Courtesy of Cannon Films |
Julie Andrews for most of the moviegoing public is
synonymous with the upbeat escapist musical, canonized by her Best Actress win
in Disney’s Mary Poppins and a year later in the Rodgers and Hammerstein
Best Picture winner The Sound of Music.
Though appearing in Alfred Hitchcock’s Torn Curtain, the British
actress is usually the face of the big opulent Hollywood musical film. Around the 1980s however, with her
collaborations with Blake Edwards and in today’s Classic Cannon review Duet
for One, that picture perfect wholesome image like Shirley Jones who also
featured prominently in R&H productions began to transform into a more
provocative output including but not limited to nudity and/or portraying irascible
foul-mouthed characters.
With Russian director Andrei Konchalovsky (early in his
Cannon tenure) directing the two-hander play by Tom Kempinski who adapted his
own screenplay and produced by Golan/Globus, the searing drama Duet for One represents
another example of classy indie filmmaking with the Go-Go Boys keeping out of
the way. While Cannon was often notorious
for interfering with film productions to steer the film in the directions they
saw fit, in general they left Konchalovsky alone to tell his stories the way he
always has before briefly emigrating to America. Mostly, with this true story loosely based on
the life of cellist Jacqueline du Pre (later dramatized in the 1998 film Hilary
and Jackie), Duet for One offers audiences a side of Julie Andrews
they’re not used to seeing onscreen.

Stephanie Anderson (Julie Andrews) is a world-renowned
violinist on the cusp of another concert tour with her conductor husband David
Cornwallis (Alan Bates) and her trusted pupil Constantine (Rupert Everett) when
tragedy strikes and she succumbs to multiple sclerosis, screeching her career
and life to a halt. After Constantine
leaves her, she begins unsuccessfully seeking therapy from a mostly unhelpful
psychiatrist Dr. Louis Feldman (Max von Sydow reprising his role from stage to
screen). On the side as her husband begins
an affair with another woman while Stephanie starts pawning her instruments and
paraphernalia off to local vagrant Totter (Liam Neeson) whom she also takes
into her bed.
Co-written by Kempinski, Konchalovsky and Jeremy Lipp, the
film is a bit of an Oscar bait drama though Konchalovsky always gets great
performances from his veteran cast members and Andrews as the once prominent
and powerful violinist seeing her faculties disappear is ferocious as well as
vulnerable onscreen in this. Featuring an
orchestral score by Cannon regular Michael Bishop (Bloodsport; Death
Wish 4) and lensed by legendary (no pun intended) Legend cinematographer
Alex Thomson, Duet for One looks and sounds beautiful, capturing the glowing
golden aura of the concert halls to the dreary and drab isolation of her empty
home alone with her illness. Though the
subject of multiple sclerosis (and specifically this instance of it) has been
brought to film and television more recently, in 1986 it was unexpected and new
to moviegoers.
Made one year after directing arguably the greatest Cannon
film with Runaway Train, this tense and affecting drama shows Konchalovsky
slowing down the action in favor of getting inside the confining space of a
professional musician losing control of her own life and displays a side of
Julie Andrews that brings her down from the skies of Mary Poppins back
down to Earth with the rest of us. In
the director’s checkered oeuvre, Duet for One is a bit quieter and
smaller in scale but no less of a pillar of cinematic strength. Though he has had some missteps later in his
career, Konchalovsky probably remains the savior of Cannon Films and is most
certainly one of Russia’s greatest storytellers.
--Andrew Kotwicki