Too Hot to Handle (1960 film) explained

Too Hot to Handle
Director:Terence Young
Screenplay:Herbert Kretzmer
Story:Harry Lee
Producer:Phil C. Samuel
Cinematography:Otto Heller
Editing:Lito Carruthers
Music:Eric Spear
Distributor:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Runtime:90 minutes
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Budget:£250,000[1]

Too Hot to Handle (U.S. title: Playgirl After Dark) is a 1960 British neo-noir crime thriller film directed by Terence Young and starring Jayne Mansfield, Leo Genn and Carl Boehm.[2] The screenplay was by Herbert Kretzmer from a story by Harry Lee.

Plot

Johnny Solo, the owner of the Pink Flamingo club in London's Soho area, battles with rival club owner Diamonds Dinelli and the police. When Johnny receives threats and demands for protection, he fights back.

Johnny's girlfriend Midnight Franklin, one of the club's headliners, wants him to leave the business. In the background are a sadistic client, an underage chorus girl, a wisecracking siren who is not averse to rough trade, a visiting journalist and a dancer who guards her past.

The journalist becomes involved in the strip scene while writing a story on the clubs. The competition between the two clubs intensifies. Johnny unknowingly plays a part in the death of the chorus girl. Midnight informs on him to save him from the violent blackmailers who are pursuing him.

Cast

Production

Too Hot to Handle was Mansfield's first film away from 20th Century Fox after achieving stardom in the mid-1950s. Fox loaned her to other studios while awaiting a suitable film for her.

The film was billed as "an exposé of 'sexy, sordid Soho, England's greatest shame'."[3]

Mansfield's risqué see-through clothing and the film's racy musical numbers caused some controversy that delayed the American release until January 1961, and the sexiest frames were displayed in Playboy magazine. The US posters called it "The Sizzler You Read About in Playboy Magazine!"

For its American release, Too Hot to Handle was retitled Playgirl After Dark and was edited to meet censor requirements. Famously, this included animating clothing on Jayne Mansfield during the title song (along with frame enlargements and cuts to the audience which showed less of Jayne generally). This was released by a smaller company, Topaz, and only released in black and white, with 8 minutes of plot cut out toward the end. The original color UK version has not had a home video release to date. It was originally rated X by the BBFC.

The film was released in France uncensored. Many scenes were shot twice, where the dancers wear more or less clothing, and the French version used the takes with less clothing (and a different edit of Jayne's title song). The German color version is a mix of both takes, along with additional censor cuts, including the deletion of most of Jayne's song "You Were Made For Me" (a parody of Marilyn Monroe).[4]

The film was shot in England from 10 August until around October 1959.[5]

Filming was temporarily halted at the order of Actors' Equity when £100,000 of the budget failed to materialize, partly because of the illness of Sydney Box, who was slated to produce.[1]

Critical reception

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Purporting to lift the lid off the strip-club underworld, it does so (in so far as the film bears any but the most general relation to its subject) only to give the audience a titillating glimpse of nudity and brutality. The attempts to work a moral into the action, or environmental cause and effect into the characterisation, are patently insincere. Such convenient dual morality is nothing new. But one expects that at the very least it should be competently presented. A contrived plot, some atrocious acting, and a script that is almost a parody of the thick-ear genre prevent even that minor satisfaction. Apart from some lavishly staged cabaret numbers, only two things relieve the tedium. One is the extreme realism of sequences showing tired businessmen lecherously inspecting the strip-tease shows. The other occurs when Lilliane is confirmed as a cut above the other strippers by the discovery that in her spare time she reads Havelock Ellis, Krafft-Ebing and Sigmund Freud."[6]

Variety wrote: "Jayne Mansfield made a 6,000 mile journey to make this British meller, but the trip hardly seems worth it. It will need all her marquee value to sell this dubious and seamy piece of entertainment which is set among the flashy backgrounds of Soho's striptease joints. Harry Lee is credited with the original idea, but the word "original" is flattering. Herbert Kretzmer's screenplay is hardly inspired and even that talented director, Terence Young, seems dispirited with the matter on hand. ...The chief letdown is the off-color thesping of Miss Mansfield as Midnight Franklin. ... The nightclub settings are flamboyant and overdone. Some of the production numbers come over reasonably well on the screen, though it is doubtful if they could be staged (even allowing for expense) in the average stripteasery. Dialog veers from dull to vulgar and there are many loose ends in an endeaver to provide authentic atmosphere."[7]

Halliwell's Film & Video Guide described the film as a "[r]otten, hilarious British gangster film set in a totally unreal underworld and very uncomfortably cast."[8]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Work on Film Resumed . . 26 September 1959 . 32486 . 8.
  2. Web site: Too Hot to Handle . 30 December 2023 . British Film Institute Collections Search.
  3. Book: Willetts, Paul. The Look of Love: The Life and Times of Paul Raymond, Soho's King of Clubs. London. Profile Books. 2013. 190. 978-1-8476-5994-1.
  4. https://orangecow.org/board/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=358
  5. Weekly Variety. 2 September 1959. p. 22.
  6. 1 January 1960 . Too Hot to Handle . . 27 . 312 . 153 . . ProQuest.
  7. 28 September 1960 . Too Hot to Handle . . 220 . 5 . 26 . . ProQuest.
  8. Book: Halliwell, Leslie . Halliwell's Film & Video Guide 2000 . . 1999 . 978-0-0065-3165-4 . Walker . John . 15th . London . 848 . Leslie Halliwell . registration.