A few questions for discussion
Not having gotten any responses on the CFB, I'm copying here a post from a week ago:
I watched "A Foreign Affair" last night, not having seen in in a while, and have several thoughts and questions. (But before all else, as I don't own a biography of Billy Wilder, what would you recommend as the best book to buy?)
(1) How much of the film was shot in Berlin? A lot of the shots are back projected, so it's hard to work out if the actors were there or not. It would be especially interesting to know if the Diva went back.
(2) How much of what WAS shot in Berlin was improvised, or at least scripted while there? Was Brackett there? It seems that much of what's said could only be understood by someone who was there, and talked to people, Germans and Americans.
(3) A short question about history: The films shows American and Russian soldiers fratinizing. I assume that this would soon end, as well as the shot where the Congressmen are taken across the Brandenburg Gate. When was the borders between the Russian and other zones closed?
(4) As for my opinion, there are moments of greatness in the film, the first 10 minutes of exposition, much of the dialog, everything with Dietrich, the presentation of the city, etc. My main problem was with the Phoebe Frost character. I was bothered by the unearned and unbelievable changes in her character, from tough-as-nails congressperson, to the schoolgirl-with-a-crush woman. I wonder if it's just a flaw in the script (along with a few others), or whether it's a matter of Jean Arthur's limitations as an actress.
I usually like Arthur (interesting to compare here role in "Mr Smith Goes to Washington" as almost an opposite of this one), but didn't buy into her character here. She was somewhat (but not completely) more convincing as the tough politician in the beginning, but lost it as soon as she went with the soldiers to the club.
As there are a lot of diva experts who regularly contribute to this board, is there someone you could see doing the role, as scripted? I can only think of Katharine Hepburn, as long as they wrote her from somewhere other than Iowa.