
Certain Hollywood comedies from the 60s seem to have
been designed to work as sedatives. Nothing much happens in them, the
plot complications are so trivial that one never really worries about
their resolution, and everyone involved in the production seems to be
half-awake.
There's something pleasant about the phenomenon, in a
mindless sort of way -- like watching golf on television while under
the influence of a mild pain-killer.
The Glass Bottom Boat is such a film. Doris Day and
Rod Taylor have some minor misunderstandings on the road to romance. A
crowd of fine character actors involve themselves in the proceedings to
one degree or another, with nothing much to do except display their
amusing personae in the absence of any scripted wit.
The film was directed by Frank Tashlin, who had one of the wackiest imaginations in Hollywood at the time -- but he confines his energy to a few tepid bits of slapstick. Dom DeLuise puts his foot in a pie, then gets it stuck in a trashcan -- then Doris gets her foot stuck in it, too, trying to help him out of the jam. When they both jerk free, Dom falls into a fish pond.
Everyone seems to be going through the motions,
waiting for lunch, or recovering from it. Yet the tone of distance is
so consistent, so assured, that you have to think it was deliberate --
offering an anesthetic for anxiety duly indicated and professionally
administered. Arthur Godfey, the personification of the entertainer as
somnabulist, makes his film debut here -- his practiced nullity anchors
the film in its odd nether world, its sleepiness.
I don't know why it's all so delightful, so soothing -- but I don't really know how codeine works, either.
Perhaps these films did for audiences of the 60s what
Jared Hess's films do for us today -- tell us not to worry so much,
tell us that everything, as improbable as it might sound, is going to
be o. k.