Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1972


The Carey Treatment

Buy The Carey Treatment now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'The Carey Treatment' is a 1972 American crime thriller film by Blake Edwards based on the 1968 novel 'A Case of Need' credited to Jeffery Hudson, a pseudonym for Michael Crichton. Like 'Darling Lili' and 'Wild Rovers' before this, 'The Carey Treatment' was heavily edited without help from Edwards by the studio into a running time of one hour and 41 minutes; these edits were later satirized in his 1981 comedy 'S.O.B.'.

Plot summary



Dr. Peter Carey (James Coburn) is a pathologist who moves to Boston, where he starts working in a hospital. He soon meets Georgia Hightower (Jennifer O'Neill), with whom he falls in love. Karen Randall (Melissa Torme-March), daughter of the hospital's Chief Doctor, becomes pregnant and is brought to the emergency department after an illegal abortion. She dies there, and Dr. David Tao (James Hong), a brilliant surgeon and friend of Carey, is arrested and accused of being responsible for the illegal abortion. Carey does not believe his friend to be guilty and starts investigating on his own, despite strong opposition by the police and the doctors around the hospital's chief.

Cast



* James Coburn as Dr. Peter Carey

* Jennifer O'Neill as Georgia Hightower

* Pat Hingle as Capt. Pearson

* Skye Aubrey as Nurse Angela Holder

* Elizabeth Allen as Evelyn Randall

* John Fink as Chief Surgeon Andrew Murphy

* Dan O'Herlihy as J.D. Randall

* James Hong as David Tao

* Alex Dreier as Dr. Joshua Randall

* Michael Blodgett as Roger Hudson

* Regis Toomey as Sanderson the Pathologist

* Steve Carlson as Walding

* Rosemary Edelman as Janet Tao

* Jennifer Edwards as Lydia Barrett

* John Hillerman as Jenkins

Production



Film rights were bought in August 1968 by A&M Productions, the production company of Herb Alpert. They said filming would take place the following year in Boston. In October Perry Leff signed Wendell Mayes to a two-picture contract to write and produce, the first of which was to be 'A Case of Need'. Turn on hit highlighting for speaking browsers by selecting the Enter buttonHide highlighting.

Film rights were then picked up by MGM. In March 1971 it was announced Bill Belasco was producing and Harriet Frank and Irving Ravetch were working on a script. In June Blake Edwards signed to direct.

Filming started in September 1971.

Edwards launched a breach of contract suit against MGM and president James T. Aubrey for their post production tampering of the film. Edwards:

The whole experience was, in terms of filmmaking, extraordinarily destructive. The temper and tantrums from my producer, William Belasco, were such that he insulted me in front of the cast and crew and offered to bet me $1,000 that I'd never work in Hollywood again if I didn't do everything his and Aubrey's way. They told me that they didn't want quality, just a viewable film. The crew felt so bad about the way I was treated that they gave me a party and usually it's the other way round. I know I've been guilty of excuses but my God what do you have to do to pay your dues? I made 'Wild Rovers' for MGM and kept quiet when they recut it. But this time I couldn't take it. I played fair. They didn't.


Coburn later said "You know, I dont mind that film. I liked my work on it. There again the studio (MGM) fucked it up. They cut ten days out of the schedule. They pulled the plug on us early. Its too bad. We did shoot the film on location in Boston though."

Reaction



Reviews

'The Carey Treatment' received mostly mediocre to negative reviews. Roger Ebert wrote: 'The problem is in the script. There are long, sterile patches of dialog during which nothing at all is communicated. These are no doubt important in order to convey the essential meaninglessness of life, but how can a director make them interesting? Edwards tries.'[http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19720405/REVIEWS/204050302/1023 The Carey Treatment Movie Review (1972) | Roger Ebert] Vincent Canby, writing for 'The New York Times', was amused by 'The Carey Treatment' but wrote, '...I don't think we have to take this too seriously, for 'The Carey Treatment', like so many respectable private-eye movies, is sustained almost entirely by irrelevancies.'https://movies.nytimes.com/movi/review?res=9803E2D8173DE53ABC4850DFB5668389669EDE

Accolades

'Edgar Allan Poe Awards'

* 1973: Nominated, 'Best Motion Picture'

See also



* List of American films of 1972

References




Buy The Carey Treatment now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1972



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1106868395.