Low-lifes and little girls: Paper Moon and Little Miss Marker
Two Depression-era comedies made seven years apart (Paper Moon 1973, Little Miss Marker 1980), with the same setup — a man living on the outskirts of the law has an orphaned little girl thrust into his life. Here is an object lesson about how to do a thing and how not to do a thing.
Peter Bogdanovich was a young man when he made Paper Moon, it was his third film (after the luminous Last Picture Show and the delightful What’s Up, Doc?). Walter Bernstein was not a young man when he made Little Miss Marker, and although he was a hugely accomplished, well-respected screenwriter at the time, this was his first (and only) theatrical feature.
Essentially, everything Paper Moon does right, Little Miss Marker does wrong. Paper Moon is acutely observed, stark and heartfelt while Little Miss Marker is shallow, limp and sentimental.
Little Miss Marker should have everything going for it — a classic, cast-iron story (by Damon Runyon) that had already been filmed twice before (in 1934 with Adolphe Menjou and Shirley Temple and in 1949 [as Sorrowful Jones] with Bob Hope and Lucille Ball), a heavyweight, almost Wilderesque cast (Walter Matthau, Tony Curtis, Julie Andrews), a budget big enough to create the streets of New York on the Universal lot. In contrast, Paper Moon is based on a relatively obscure novel, has a decidedly lightweight lead (Ryan O’Neal), and a series of bleak Kansas locations.
Plot: Paper Moon is a road picture. The little girl’s mother has died, and her probable father, a drifting grifter, is given the task of getting the little girl to a “respectable” home in the next state. He tries to get rid of her but she won’t be put off. They embark on a life of petty crime together on their journey across the Midwest. Little Miss Marker is an “urban” comedy, where a gambler leaves his little girl with his bookie, then goes off and kills himself, leaving the hard-bitten, cynical bookie to care for her. He gets involved in a B-story that has nothing to do with the little girl and a romance that has nothing to do with the B-story. All the plot lines come to an end but do not all come together.
Photography and sets: Paper Moon is shot in gritty, high-contrast black and white, which makes this 70s comedy look like a John Ford picture and also lends a great deal of gravitas to his genial, blonde-haired, blue-eyed Californian leads. Its location exteriors are all authentically weathered and withered, its interiors are spare and bleak. It’s a movie about a nation with no money and it shows in every aspect of the production design. Little Miss Marker, on the other hand, is shot in pretty, high-key general lighting, intended to make the movie a happy escape into a simpler time, but which now makes it look like 60s television or a filmed play, shot on backlot sets that look desperately back-lot; every street ends in a T, pavement is flat and even, grime is painted on in pretty, even coats.
Music: Paper Moon has no score; it uses occasional period songs to set its time and underscore the emotional terrain. Little Miss Marker has a cutesy-pie fake-“thirties” score by Henry Mancini, intended to evoke nostalgia but serving only to move the story into a kind of fairy-story Depression where colorful characters talked like wise guys and nothing bad really ever happened.
Casting: Paper Moon, as noted above, would seem to be the movie at a loss here. Who is going to play a better low-life, Walter Matthau or Ryan O’Neal? And yet, Matthau’s performance in Little Miss Marker is mannered, labored and fussy while O’Neal’s, although insubstantial, is breezy and blithe, it breathes and connects on a more human level. The cast of Paper Moon is filled with picture-perfect unknowns, while Little Miss Marker has a miscast Bob Newhart, an overplayed Brian Dennehy, a stiff Kenneth McMillan and a mugging Tony Curtis.
The Little Girl: Paper Moon, of course, cast 10-year-old Tatum O’Neal as the little girl and she won an Oscar for her work, which, although not as genuine as, say, anything from Dakota Fanning, is still winning and affecting. Little Miss Marker, on the other hand, seems to have picked a six-year-old from the “Adorable Moppet” bin and left it at that.
The Dame: there’s always a Dame, of course, and here’s perhaps where the real difference in the movies appears. In Little Miss Marker, the adorable moppet brings together Walter Matthau, the heartless curmudgeon, and Julie Andrews, a fallen society lady, to replace the family she has lost. The romance between Matthau and Andrews makes no sense and feels completely forced, and the movie ends with both of them giving up their wicked ways for the good of the child. In Paper Moon, on the other hand, Ryan O’Neal falls in lust with a giggling, insincere whore (Madeleine Kahn), and the little girl spends the second act of the movie trying to break up their romance because she’s cutting into their grifting time.
Script: Damon Runyon, one of the most instantly identifiable writers in American literature, has never been captured well on film. Like Mamet, he has a clear, definite dialogue style, one demanding committed actors capable of breathing life into his heavily stylized rhythms. Matthau tries to do so but can’t, Curtis and Newhart don’t even try, and Andrews’ dialogue has been written to completely ignore the issue. The affectionate view of gamblers and gangsters that Runyon wrote is made cartoonish, silly and harmless here; the result is a plastic, fake Runyon that doesn’t evoke Guys and Dolls, much less the New York of the 1930s. Meanwhile, Paper Moon, while slightly episodic and far from “realistic,” nevertheless teems with authenticity and well-observed details of daily life.
At the end of Paper Moon, the man makes good on his promise and delivers the little girl to her “respectable” home. The little girl takes one look around and high-tails it out of there; she realizes that a house is not a home and respectability is not fulfillment. And in a phiosophical sense, she sees that life is not a destination you arrive at, it is a journey you take. At the end of Little Miss Marker, the gambler and the fallen sophisticate get married for no reason at all and, although both are middle-aged and broke, decide to “go straight” for the sake of the little girl (whom no one asks, and who seems to be perfectly content to play cards, pick pockets and bet on horses for money). Paper Moon disdains conclusion and becomes evocative and moving, Little Miss Marker ties everything up in a neat bow and evaporates before the credits have run.