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Darling Lili (1970)
In Blake Edwards' musical romantic drama set during
wartime with a WWI "Mata Hari" spy tale - an over-budget,
major box-office flop - signaling with Star! (1968) and Paint
Your Wagon (1969) the end of a boom in musicals in the 1960s,
although it was the first attempt to dispel star Julie Andrews' reputation
as squeaky clean; Edwards spoofed this film's failure with S.O.B.
(1981) years later:
- the opening pre-title sequence set - an uninterrupted
lengthy take of the spell-binding performance of the Oscar-nominated
song "Whistling in the Dark" (by Henry Mancini and Johnny
Mercer) by patriotic British musical hall singer/dancer Lili Smith/Schmidt
(Julie Andrews), later revealed as a femme fatale and undercover
German espionage spy - the lyrics: "Often I think this sad
old world is whistling in the dark Just like a child who, late
from school walks bravely home through the park To keep their spirits
soaring and keep the night at bay Neither quite knowing which way
they are going they sing the shadows away. Often I think my poor
old heart has given up for good And then I see a brand new face
I glimpse some new neighborhood So walk me back home my darling
tell me dreams really come true Whistling, Whistling, here in the
dark with you..."
- the title credits played over the theatre crowd's
rousing, patriotic rendition of "Pack Up Your Troubles in Your
Old Kit Bag and Smile, Smile, Smile" led by Lili
"Whistling in the Dark" and "Pack
Up Your Troubles..."
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- Lili's assignment from German spymaster Colonel
Kurt von Ruger (Jeremy Kemp) who was posing as Lili's Swiss uncle
- to spy on American pilot/officer Maj. William Larrabee (Rock
Hudson) of the Eagle Squadron (the British Royal Flying Corps),
and learn the Allied side's air defense plans
- the extended champagne/fireplace seduction and awkward
bedroom sequence between Lili and Maj. Larrabee (when she tried to
coax him to reveal military secrets); after a period of prolonged
kissing before the fireplace, Lili made her exhausted lover Larrabee
carry her to bed ("Carry me!") - after trying to get into
the right position on the bed for love-making, she flatly told him: "I'm
sorry, darling. Really, I am. I just can't help it. Are you all right?...Oh,
come now, you've got to admit seduction can really be very funny
if you stop to think about it"; he objected:
"But you're not supposed to stop to think about it"; she
answered:
"Oh, Bill, that's a terribly naive point of view for a man of
your sophistication and experience"; when they went at it again,
she began laughing and frustrated him, and then apologized: "Sorry.
I really can't help it. If you really wanted me, it shouldn't matter
anyway"; when they kissed again, she stopped him and in an accusatory
tone asked: "You called me darling, you called me your love, and
you called me something else... You called me something else, a name...Suzette!";
he denied it: "The hell I did!" - he claimed that he had
called her "My pet!"
and that she had misunderstood; she again apologized: "I've been
behaving like an idiot schoolgirl and I'm sorry" but then kept
pressing: "What about Suzette?... Operation Crepe Suzette" -
he snapped back: "That's not a woman...Operation Crepe Suzette
is a military secret...And that's what it is. It's so important, I
can't even tell you. It isn't that I don't trust you. It's just a matter
of national security. I wouldn't even tell my own mother"; but
then exasperated ("The hell with security!"), he explained: "I
want to get this straight once and for all. You want honesty, you're
going to get honesty and I could get shot for it. I'm gonna give you
every little detail of the biggest military operation since Battle
of the Marne.."; he described how an aerial counter-attack against
the Germans was secretly planned and he was ordered "to lead the
attack" - "It was the most concentrated bombing effort of
the war to this day. And the code name for the whole operation was
Crepe Suzette" - unexpectedly, she stormed from the bedroom, dressed,
and as she rushed off into the hallway, he grabbed her to stop her,
when she sarcastically shouted back at him: "I fly at dawn!";
in the rainstorm outdoors as she stomped off, she asserted: "I
am going back to Paris" - and the two rode off together in his
car
- the subsequent sequence, when Larrabee confronted
Lili in a shower and explained why he had just lied to her: "So
I'm a liar. What would you rather I be, a traitor?...The lives of
hundreds, thousands of men depend upon Operation Crepe Suzette being
kept a secret. So what in the name of hellish vanity makes you think
I'd compromise that in the name of your adolescent, narcissistic
ego?...Sure, I lied to you. I had to. And you know what? I think
you're glad you caught me lying... I think maybe you have to come
up with excuses just to avoid the moment of truth...In a word, Miss
Smith, I think it's just possible you're a virgin!" - she slapped
him, but he grabbed her for a passionate kiss and they made up; she
unexpectedly fell in love with him, urging: "Turn on the warm
water"
- the subsequent confusion over divulged military secrets
known as Operation Crêpe Suzette, after Lili found out that
Crepe Suzette (Gloria Paul) was a real person - Larrabee's stripper
mistress - a rival entertainer; the jealous Lili pointed fingers
and blamed Suzette for being a German agent when she thought she
was being two-timed by Larrabee, and the pilot was arrested in London
for espionage as a spy
- after watching Crepe Suzette on stage doing a bump
and grind strip-tease, Lili's attempt to one-up her, with her own
humorous semi-striptease number at the end of her performance of
the song: "I'll Give You Three Guesses"; afterwards, she
told off Colonel Ruger: "You can take my word for it that Operation
Crepe Suzette has never existed, except in bed"
Lili's (Julie Andrews) Semi-Striptease
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- the action sequence of Major Larrabee's aerial dogfight
battle with the Red Baron ace Baron von Richtofen (Ingo Mogendorf)
to save Lili onboard a train (assailed by German war planes) as
she fled to Switzerland
- the final tacked-on, happy-ending reunion scene in
London (after the armistice) when Major Larrabee reunited with Lili
after one of her on-stage performances; as they kissed, the audience
witnessed their love and sang: "It's a Long, Long Way to Tipperary" after
the curtain closed in front of them
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The Fireplace/Bedroom Seduction Scene Between Lili and
Larrabee
Colonel von Ruger
(Jeremy Kemp)
Shower Intrusion
Crepe Suzette (Gloria Paul) = the Major's Mistress and Accused
German agent
The Major and Lili Reunited - on Stage
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