The $ title was a gimmick, which the studio (Columbia) exploited in its marketing campaign. However, the Oscar-nominated Brooks, better known for such serious dramas as “Blackboard Jungle,” “The Brothers Karamazov,” “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof,” and “In Cold Blood,” might not have been the right choice for this kind of frivolous “caper” picture, which he also scripted.
Though giving an appealing, quite physical performance, Beatty was criticized by some reviewers for choosing such mindless fare. So was co-star Goldie Hawn, fresh off from winning a Supporting Actress Oscar for the comedy “Cactus Flower,” in 1969. Howan was beginning to be typecast, having appeared in “There’s a Girl in My Soup,” in which she played yet another cookie tart.
The success of caper films often relies on their physical action and visual sights, and, indeed, the scene that most viewers remembered from $ is the lengthy, suspenseful and well-shot chase across a frozen lake until the villain’s car sinks through the ice (regards from a similar scene in “Psycho”).
Beatty plays Joe Collins, an American security expert who steals the contents of three safe deposit boxes from a Hamburg bank, owned by crooks, who of course cannot report the theft to the authorities. Collins’ chance comes while installing a new alarm system. Dawn Divine (Hawn), a Hamburg whore and former Vegas showgirl, helps and abets him because she likes his looks and the reward. After a bomb scare, Collins persuades bank officials to lock him in the vault, where he stashes away the contents of three boxes into the one Divine has rented. She walks with the swag, and the crooks are soon in pursuit.
The sex in the picture is more titillating than graphic. The first shot shows Divine’s backside in transparent underwear, as a tired, old-looking Scott Brady, a crooked army sergeant who specializes in heroin deals and PX thieving, slips money into her lingerie.
Arthur Brauss gives a strong performance as Candy Man, whose specialty is transporting LSD in champagne bottles, and the other villain, Robert Webber, is also effective as an American lawyer who has vaulted tax-and-syndicate ill-gotten gains. Gert Frobe joins the ensemble as Kessel, a bank official who plays into Collins’ hands.
The critical reaction to $ was mixed to negative, with some reviewers feeling the yarn was pretentious and overwritten. The audiences stayed off and the picture was a commercial failure. Even so, there are minor rewards, such as Beatty’s display of his narcissistic, sly charm, and a few thrilling set pieces. In 1972, Beatty participated actively in the McGovern presidential campaign, after which he didn’t make any movie for over two years
See Reviews of Other Warren Beatty Movies.
Cast:
Warren Beatty (Joe Collins)
Goldie Hawn (Dawn Divine)
Gert Frobe (Mr. Kessel)
Robert Webber (Attorney)
Scott Brady (Sarge)
Arthur Brauss (Candy Man)
Robert Stiles (Major)
Wolfgang Kieling (Granich)
Robert Herron (Bodyguard)
Christiane Maybach (Helga)
Hans Hutter (Karl)
Monica Stender (Betta)
Francoise Blanc (Stripper)
Walt Trott (Stars & Stripes Reporter)
Darrell Armstrong (A.P. Reporter)
Horst Hesslein (Bruno)
Wolfgang Kuhlman (Furcoat)
Klaus Tschichan (Knifeman)
Tove Platon, Kirstein Lahman (Customs Officials)
Credits:
A Columbia Picture.
An M.J. (Mike) Frankovich Production.
Produdcer: M.J. Frankovich.
Director: Richard Brooks.
Writer: Richard Brooks.
Photographer: Petrus Schloemp.
Music: Quincy Jones.
Songs: “Money Is” and “Do It to It” sung by Little Richard; “When You’re Smiling,” composed by Mark Fisher, Joe Goodwin and Larry Shay, sung by Roberta Flack.
Editor: George Grenville.
Art Directors: Guy Sheppard, Olaf Ivens.
Sound: Arthur Piantadosi, Richard Tyler, Jack Haynes.
Wardrobe: Johannes Kohner.
Makeup: Ernest Schmekel, Bob Jiras.
Hair Styles: Berry Richardson.
Assistant Director: Tom Shaw.
Opened at the Loew’s State and Tower East Theatres, New York, December 15, 1971.
Running time: 119 minutes.