The Man with Bogart's Face | |
Director: | Robert Day |
Screenplay: | Andrew J. Fenady |
Based On: | The Man with Bogart's Face by Andrew J. Fenady |
Producer: | Andrew J. Fenady |
Starring: | Robert Sacchi Franco Nero Michelle Phillips Olivia Hussey Misty Rowe Victor Buono Sybil Danning Herbert Lom |
Cinematography: | Richard C. Glouner |
Editing: | Houseley Stevenson Jr. |
Music: | George Duning |
Studio: | Melvin Simon Productions |
Distributor: | 20th Century Fox |
Runtime: | 106 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Budget: | $4 million |
The Man with Bogart's Face (also called Sam Marlowe, Private Eye) is a 1980 American comedy film, released by 20th Century Fox and based on a novel of the same title. Andrew J. Fenady, author of the novel, produced the film and wrote the screenplay.
A man calling himself Sam Marlowe (Robert Sacchi) has his face altered to resemble that of his idol, Humphrey Bogart, and then opens a detective agency. At first, he and his secretary Duchess (Misty Rowe) have meager business, but things pick up after a shooting puts Sam's picture in the paper. Some ruthless people, who are coincidentally also similar to characters in Bogart films (and played by Victor Buono, Herbert Lom, and Michelle Phillips), are after a priceless set of blue sapphires called the Eyes of Alexander (from a statue of Alexander the Great), and Marlowe and Duchess are caught in the middle of it all.
The film was based on the debut novel by Andrew J. Fenady who wrote it in long hand over 23 days. Fenady had been writer and producer of television shows and movies for 30 years and was always interested in turning it into a film.
In June 1976 it was announced that Fenady's book would be published next January and that a film version would follow.[1] "Whatever the author had in mind does not come off very well", wrote the book critic of The New York Times, adding "the conception and writing are pretty sophomoric".[2] The Los Angeles Times said Fenady "writes well".[3]
The book was popular enough for a sequel The Secret of Sam Marlow: The Further Adventures of the Man with Bogart's Face.[4]
Fenday took the film to Mel Simon who agreed to provide $4 million. Fenady says he wound up not needing all that money and returned $400,000 to Simon. "I'm a Depression baby, I don't believe in wasting money", he said.
The film was made in May 1979 with independently raised finance from Melvin Simon Productions.[5] In September 1979, when the movie was in post-production, 20th Century Fox agreed to pick up all Melvin Simon's movies made in 1979 and 1980 in a deal worth an estimated $10 million.[6] [7] They had a fifty percent interest in Bogart, meaning Fox paid Simon $2 million.[8]
Star Robert Sacchi was noted for his resemblance to Bogart and had appeared as Bogart in various roles for over a decade, including various commercials, a Broadway production of Play It Again Sam. He had toured America for four years in a one man show Bogie's Back. "I'm just a working guy trying to make an honest living", he said. "I look the way I do and I always have, and there's not much I can do about it. I never had plastic surgery or wore makeup to look like Bogie."[9]
Fenady said he cast another actor in the role until Sacchi walked in, after which the producer "went into shock. Bob doesn't need to do an impersonation. The physical impact is enough. When he began talking, I knew I had Bogart."[10]
During the filming of one scene, a boat hit John Wayne's converted minesweeper, the Wild Goose.[11]
It was the last film for George Raft.[12]
The film debuted at the 1980 Cannes Film Festival and was released in Europe before debuting in the US.[13]
The New York Times called it "an intelligent, amiable and often amusing spoof of Humphrey Bogart and the roles he played" although "everyone is so cool that there are moments when the picture seems about to drift off the screen".[14]
The film was released on DVD by Image Entertainment on July 10, 2007.