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<text id=89TT1116>
<title>
May 01, 1989: A Moll And Her Night Visitors
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
May 01, 1989 Abortion
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CINEMA, Page 68
A Moll and Her Night Visitors
</hdr><body>
<p>By Richard Corliss
</p>
<qt> <l>SCANDAL</l>
<l>Directed by Michael Caton-Jones;</l>
<l>Screenplay by Michael Thomas</l>
</qt>
<p> Britain's Minister of War John Profumo, husband of refined
movie star Valerie Hobson, has been sharing the sexual favors
of teen tart Christine Keeler with Soviet spy Eugene Ivanov .
. . Keeler's blond pal Mandy Rice-Davies, 18, declared in court
that she had bedded Lord Astor and Douglas Fairbanks Jr. . . .
Mariella Novotny, who claims John F. Kennedy among her lovers,
hosted an all-star orgy where a naked gent, thought to be film
director and Prime Minister's son Anthony Asquith, implored
guests to beat him . . . Osteopath and artist Stephen Ward,
whose portrait subjects include eight members of the Royal
Family, has been charged with pimping Keeler and Rice-Davies to
his posh friends. Part of Ward's bail was reportedly posted by
young financier Claus von Bulow.
</p>
<p> Talk about your dish! In 1963 English gossip columnists
figured they had died and gone to tabloid heaven. When these
peccadilloes hit the front pages, you couldn't tell the players
without a Who's Who and a Burke's Peerage. The scandal, a wild
party held at the sunset of imperial Britain, brought down
Harold Macmillan's Tory government and ushered in the era of
Swinging London: the Beatles, miniskirts, free love and pricey
drugs.
</p>
<p> Scandal is an express tour of the Profumo affair that moves
with a pop historian's revisionist swagger and plays like News
of the World headlines set to early '60s rock 'n' roll. Taking
a cue from Asquith's Pygmalion, the film casts Ward (John Hurt)
as an aristocratic makeover artist, discovering Keeler (Joanne
Whalley-Kilmer) in the fetid anonymity of a Soho strip club and
turning her into a star of the jet-set slumming circuit. Pluck
your eyebrows, Christine. Wet your lips. Come over and say hi
to Jack Profumo.
</p>
<p> Stephen loves Christine, in his fashion. He pampers his
girls and introduces them to his randy friends because he likes
being liked. His sin is in assuming, like nearly everyone who
jestered near the thrones of power in Britain and America, that
the games could be pubic without ever going public. Enter
Profumo (Ian McKellen), who in his high-domed hairdo looks like
a samurai of probity. Jack is an indiscretion waiting to happen.
He has so little furtive pleasure to gain, and so much
reputation to put at risk, that his dalliance has the lurid
fatalism of a soap opera. Then Christine snitches to the press,
and domestic melodrama stokes national tragedy.
</p>
<p> Scandal, whose producers had to snip a few naughty bits
from the Novotny orgy to avoid an X rating in the U.S., is
wonderfully performed by Hurt (pained irony), McKellen (droll
reserve) and, as Rice-Davies, Peter Fonda's daughter Bridget
(comic acuity). The film names names and gets the tone right.
This is a morally exhausted society, where every woman is a
whore and every man a pimp or a trick until proved otherwise.
It has no hero or heroine, only a victim: Stephen Ward, who
loved trashy women and was betrayed by distinguished men.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>