Another of the movies that I recorded some time back but never got around to watching until recently was one that Anthony Perkins made when he was over in Europe: Phaedra. Now that I've seen it, I can write up the review and post it for all of you here.
We don't actually see Perkins, who plays a young man named Alexis, for 20 minutes or so into the movie. Instead, we see his father, Thanos (Raf Vallone). Thanos is a shipping magnate in Greece who is about to celebrate the launch of his new ship together with a whole bunch of people on one of the Greek islands, together with second wife Phaedra (Melina Mercouri). Thanos is divorced from his first wife (never seen in the movie), who took Alexis back with her to her native England. Alexis is a student at the London School of Economics, but he seems to have a greater interest in painting.
Thanos has a lot of business in other parts of Europe, and Phaedra is about to go to Paris on a shopping trip. Thanos decides that now would be a good time to bring Alexis back to Greece where he can be groomed to take over the family business. And since Paris isn't all that far that London, perhaps Phaedra could go over to London to meet Alexis and convince him to come back to Greece. Since Thanos is a powerful man, Phaedra more or less agrees to go to London.
Phaedra meets Alexis in London, and the two hit it off despite apparently never having met before. (I don't think the movie explicitly states how long Thanos and Phaedra have been married. She has a son, and I couldn't quite figure out if this is Thanos' biological son or stepson. The latter would make sense if Thanos wants Alexis to take over the family business.) Alexis talks about his "girl", which is actually an Aston Martin sports car. Other than that, Phaedra and Alexis don't just hit if off well, they hit it off enough that the two eventually have sex with each other, which is highly transgressive even though the two have no known blood relation. For fairly obvious reasons, Thanos would be none too happy if he found out what was going on.
Alexis decides he is going to go back to Greece after all, although he soon begins to get the impression that he did't make the right decision. He and Phaedra still have feelings for each other, but they can't exactly act on them because Thanos would find out. Worse, Thanos and a fellow shipbuilder have decided that a good thing to do would be to marry their kids off to each other as a way to consolidate their businesses. Phaedra decides she's not going to let this happen if she can do anything about it. And then the ship launched at the beginning of the movie, named after Phaedra, sinks. It's not the only tragedy that's going to happen.
Phaedra is based on a Greek tragedy by Euripides, so there's fairly good source material here. And the movie starts off promisingly enough. However, for me, the movie started to lose steam in the final third of the movie as it felt to me like it was going on too long at a shade under two hours. The other issue for me was that, when Perkins got behind the wheel of that Aston Martin, I couldn't help but think of him driving like a maniac in Rome in the movie Mahogany, which is of course a riotously bad movie.
Still, I'm glad I finally got the chance to watch Phaedra, even if it isn't the greatest movie out there.
