a question about the name 'Mitch Wayne'
Roger Ebert has a review of this film on his list of "great movies", at his website. When he mentions the name of Rock Hudson's character, he writes, in parentheses: "think about that name". I've pondered that statement for awhile now and can't be sure I know what Ebert means by it. Any ideas? I'm wondering if he's just using the name as an example of the movie's artifice, which he talks about at length. On the other hand, he seems to suggest there's an inside joke there that I'm just not getting.
Here's an excerpt from the review which includes that statement:
"To appreciate a film like ``Written on the Wind'' probably takes more sophistication than to understand one of Ingmar Bergman's masterpieces, because Bergman's themes are visible and underlined, while with Sirk the style conceals the message. His interiors are wildly over the top, and his exteriors are phony--he wants you to notice the artifice, to see that he's not using realism but an exaggerated Hollywood studio style. The Manhattan skyline in an early scene is obviously a painted backdrop. The rear-projected traffic uses cars that are 10 years too old. The swimming hole at the river, where the characters make youthful promises they later regret, is obviously a tank on a sound stage with fake scenery behind it.
The actors are as artificial as the settings. They look like Photoplay covers, and speak in the cliches of pulp romance. Sirk did not cast his films by accident, and one of the pleasures of ``Written on the Wind'' is the way he exaggerates the natural qualities of his actors and then uses them ironically.
The film stars Rock Hudson as Mitch Wayne (think about that name), who grew up poor on the Texas ranch owned by oil millionaire Jasper Hadley (Robert Keith). He's been raised with Jasper's son Kyle (Robert Stack) and daughter Marylee (Dorothy Malone). Now Mitch holds an important post in the Hadley Oil empire, which requires him to wear a baseball cap and keep a yellow pencil parked over his ear, while studying geological maps. Kyle has turned into a drunken playboy, and Marylee into a drunken nympho."