Based on the 1923 short novella by D.H. Lawrence, The Fox, a lesbian-themed drama, concerns Jill (Sandy Dennis) and Ellen (Anne Heywood), who bond intimately, overcoming social class and others differences.
The Fox | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster
|
|
The women live in a remote, snowbound cabin in an isolated, self-contained region. For the movie, the setting is changed from Lawrence’s English village to the Canadian wilderness, where the women run a chicken farm.
Grade: B (***1/2 out of *****)
Like other lesbian films made by Hollywood (“The Killing of Sister George”), the relationship is threatened and then altogether broken, when the younger, more appealing woman finds a new partner; in this case, it’s a male.
The sexuality of film’s characters is more explicit than it is in the book, in which the bisexual tendencies are implicit. In the movie, the roles are stereotypical: Sandy Dennis, right after winning a Supporting Actress Oscar for “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” plays Jill, the blond, sensitive, and dependent femme. British Anne Heywood is Ellen, the dark haired, self-reliant “butch” femme, sporting boots and flannel shirts.
A handsome male stranger, Paul (Keir Dullea), who had worked on the farm before, returns to help the distressed women. It’s noteworthy that in the book, Paul is a 20 year old hunter; in the movie, he is a farmer (more domestic?) and similar in age to the women.
While Ellen dominates the relationship, she has also grown dissatisfied. She is no longer sure she wants to stay with Jill. Paul is the symbolic fox, a romantic predator, who comes between the women when he unexpectedly proposes to Ellen. The newly formed hetero couple move in together, but the proposal arouses the women’s suppressed lesbianism. Ellen, belting out a bawdy song, “Roll Me Over,” masturbates in front of the mirror, and her self-pleasure is depicted as a “perversion.”
The movie’s plot eliminates Jill’s parents, who in the book witness their daughter’s death, when Paul chops a tree that lands between her legs.
This is the film debut of Mark Rydell, a former actor, whose future career would include genre pictures, such as “The Cowboys,” with John Wayne, or the Oscar-winning family melodrama, “On Golden Pond.”
In the book, set in 1918 England, he feels repressed by village life and wants to move out. In the movie, Paul wants to take Ellen to Vermont. Paul chooses the more independent and aggressive Ellen—by conquering the stronger woman, he proves that he’s a confident macho man. Moreover, in the book, Paul is dismayed that Ellen is still aggressive after marriage; he wishes he’d left the women “to kill one another.”
As spring begins, Ellen sells the farm, and she and Paul set off to start a new life together. Knowing that she is mourning the loss of Jill, Paul assures Ellen that she will be happy in her new life. Sadly and uncertainly, she asks, “Will I?” and the movie ends on an ambiguous note.
Many reviewers complained about the tampering with Lawrence’s book in the name of updating the characters, as well as the more explicit sexuality of the text (to make the movie more commercial) Thus, replete with blatant phallic imagery, “The Fox” shows in close-up a shotgun, an axe, a carving knife, a tree, and a pitchfork.
The film was released after the dissolution of the Motion Picture Association of America Production Code and includes scenes of nudity, masturbation, and sexual activity, both hetero and homosexual.
Rated R at the time of original release, in 1973, The Fox was reedited in order to merit the rating of PG.
The vulgarization of Lawrence, plus nudity, made The Fox more attractive commercially. Produced for a small budget of $1 million, it was a hit with audiences, earning some $25 million at the box-office.
Oscar Nominations: 1
Original Score: Lalo Schifrin
Oscar Awards: None
Oscar Context:
John Barry won the Original Score Oscar for “The Lion in Winter.”
Cast
Sandy Dennis as Jill Banford
Anne Heywood as Ellen March
Keir Dullea as Paul Grenfel
Credits:
Directed byMark Rydell
Produced by Raymond Stross
Written by Lewis John Carlino, Howard Koch, bBased on the novella by D. H. Lawrence
Music by Lalo Schifrin
Cinematography: William A. Fraker
Edited by Thomas Stanford
Distributed by Warner Bros.-Seven Arts
Release date: December 13, 1967 (Canada); February 7, 1968 (US)
Running time: 110 minutes