Despite producing the film himself, top-billed James Mason doesnโt have the best part in Bigger Than Life. Instead, Barbara Rushโas his suffering wifeโgets it. Masonโs a man with a life threatening chronic illness who has to take special medication. Slowlyโthough not too slowlyโthat medication starts making him psychotic. Rush is the faithful wife who ignores advice and sticks by Masonโs side, even before she finds out itโs an increasingly known side effect of the medication. After she does make that discovery, itโs basically a rush to the finish with the danger being how far is Mason going to go.
And, actually, he doesnโt go anywhere near as far as one might assume. Thereโs a bit of restraint, because the movie never wants to make Mason too much the villain. He can be psychologically abusive to son Christopher Olsen, but it takes Olsen a really long time to break down and tell mom Rush how he hates Msaon now. And even after family friend Walter Matthau counsels Rush to call Masonโs doctorโlittle does she know Masonโs actively deceiving doctor (Robert F. Simon) and has been since his first night home from the hospital. The screenplayโcredited to Cyril Hume and Richard Maibaum, but with some uncredited helpโgives Rush a range of fantastic scenes as she copes with Masonโs awful behavior, without ever really giving her a great role. Sheโs just dutiful wife. Of course sheโs going to stand by her man, why wouldnโt she?
Though I suppose Masonโs lack of actual dangerous outbursts, just psychological torture of his family, do play a part. Though itโs not like Rush gets to react to them after the fact. She doesnโt get much in the way of character development. No one does. Not even Matthau, whoโs third-billed but an overblown cameo by the second half. In the first act, heโs Masonโs best palโMasonโs a school teacher, Matthauโs the gym teacherโand essential support to the family. Once Masonโs out of the hospital, the film forgets about him until they need an exposition dump. Heโs the one who tells Rush about the drugโs side effects, as well as informs on Mason after Mason loses it at a school open house.
The scene where Mason faces repercussions for the behavior at the open house is entirely missing, as principal Rusty Laneโanother pal of Masonโs early onโfades away. The more the story focuses in on just Mason, Rush, and Olsen the more unreasonable the plotting becomes. Director Ray is able to get some real tension in the third act, but itโs almost out of nowhere. The family goes to church, which sets Mason off in unexpected ways. Not at church, however, once theyโre home, which makes Masonโs earlier public out burst a little nonsensical. His behaviorโs predictable to some degreeโheโs abusive at homeโbut only because home is the only place where the action takes place. Presumably heโs still going to work, but there are no further scenes there after a point, which makes the film more and more Rushโs, which is fine. Sheโs great. But the narrativeโs lacking.
Bigger Than Life does only run ninety-five minutes, however, so thereโs only so much it can do. Kipp Hamilton, as one of Mason and Matthauโs coworkers (who Rush suspects is having an affair with Mason at one point), completely disappears after Masonโs first day out of the hospital. Sheโs there long enough to stir up some masculine pride in his wifeโs figure (Hamilton is a snazzier dresser than Rush) so Mason decides to bankrupt the family to get Rush a fancy dress. See, the erratic behavior starts right away, when theoretically Mason is taking his prescribed doseโฆ his abuse gets worse as the film goes along, increasing as his mental problems increase, but thereโs no direct narrative connection between the two threads. Theyโre parallel, understood to be causal, but unexplored.
Instead Mason just gets on this kick where heโs going to save the world from the stupid kids of modernity through a return to classical teaching. Itโs not explored much more than that description. The script avoids a lot.
But until the third act, the movie basically holds it all together. Itโs not until Rush has a last minute monologue explaining herself, which doesnโt actually explain any of her behavior on screenโthe dialogue doesnโt jibe with her performance to this pointโit seems like no one really knows how to end the movie. Then the movie sets a goal for how it can succeed andโฆ doesnโt. What should be a great acting opportunity for Mason turns into some schmaltz. Not even enthusiastic schmaltz, much lses sincere.
Thereโs great photography from Joseph MacDonald, good direction from Rayโwho has that wide Cinemascope frame but still manages to confine his actors in it, particularly in the tense home scenes, which are the filmโs main type of sceneโand some fine production values. Ray doesnโt have quite the handle on the school scenes, particularly not as far as tension goes, but theyโre pretty sparse once things get going. One of the best sequences, Mason and Olsen playing football and Mason getting progressively more abusive, seems like itโs out of another film entirely, Rayโs style is so different and MacDonald shooting exteriors is such a visual shift.
The film acknowledges quite a bit about toxic masculinity, though nowhere near all the toxic masculinity it ends up visualizingโand Rushโs eventual capitulation to itโwhich makes things interesting. Itโs another of the filmโs little disappointments. The hasty finish keeps everyone aware from any self-examination.
Besides the great performances from Rush and Mason, Olsenโs good as the kid, Matthauโs likable in his part, Simonโs good as the doctor. If Ray gave the entire film as much subtlety as the doctors standing around silently regarding Mason, well, itโd be a much different picture. Though, given the way the script works, maybe not a better one. Itโs just a bunch of different style choices in a relatively short amount of time. Even the finale is a style choice. Rayโs great at implementing those styles, just not at making them matter.
Bigger Than Life is pretty good, but cast and crew deserve more.
This post is part of the James Mason Blogathon hosted by Maddy of Maddy Loves Her Classic Films.


Leave a reply to Andrew Wickliffe Cancel reply