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The Troublemaker (1964 film)

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Directed by
  
Music by
  
Director
  
Theodore J. Flicker

Story by
  
6.4/10
IMDb

Produced by
  
Robert Gaffney

Initial release
  
22 June 1964

Music director
  
Cy Coleman

Cinematography
  
Gayne Rescher

The Troublemaker (1964 film) cdnfuncheapcomwpcontentuploads201308troubl

Written by
  
Theodore J. FlickerBuck Henry

Starring
  
Tom AldredgeJoan Darling

Edited by
  
William AustinJohn McManus

Cast
  
Similar
  
Buck Henry movies, Comedies

The Troublemaker is a film directed by Theodore J. Flicker that premiered at the Beekman Theater in New York City on June 22, 1964. Flicker co-wrote the script with Buck Henry; both men appear as actors in the film. The humor was based on The Premise, a Greenwich Village-based comedy troupe Flicker created that he and Henry both participated in.

Contents

Plot

Jack Armstrong (Tom Aldredge) gives up his career as a chicken farmer to open a coffee shop in Greenwich Village. Lawyer T. R. Kingston (Buck Henry) assists Jack in his endeavor, which becomes paying protection money to Sal Kelley (James Frawley) and other city officials. Soon, Jack and T.R. find themselves in a bit too deep, and are being chased down by the officials. Jack’s girlfriend Denver (Joan Darling) joins the mix, and the trio gets into all sorts of chaos.

The Premise

The Premise was an improv group originally started by Flicker in 1960, where it performed in the Premise Theater in Greenwich Village. The original members of the group were Flecker, George Segal, James Frawley, and Joan Darling - all of which, except George, made an appearance in The Troublemaker. Buck Henry joined the group later on. He discussed his experience in an interview with Bill Dana and Jenni Matz in 2005.

“...basically it was what all improvisational groups do. There were audience suggestions, about, just about everything. We did set pieces and audience suggestion pieces and then we always did one act based on the news, so that it, it was kind of new and fresh or at least seemed new and fresh, ‘cause they were formulae to get at various kinds of spoofing the news. But, but, you know, and the audience would suggest a movie or a year or a, a nationality or an event of some kind and we’d act it out. But we were determined to do it…”

A performance put on by The Premise is where Bill Dana first met Buck Henry, and got him onto The Steve Allen Show in 1961.

Production

This film was shot on location in the West Village and Times Square in New York City. It was produced under Ozymandias Productions and Seneca Productions, and distributed through Janus Films.

The crew for this film includes Ben Berk (Assistant Director), Gayne Rescher (Director of Photography), Robert Gaffney (Producer), John McManus and William Austin (Film Editors), Cy Coleman (Music Composition and Conduction), David Moon (Art Director), Leif Pedersen (Set Decoration), Robert Maybaum (Sound), and Lewis Bushnell (Production Manager).

Critical reception

Bosley Crowther of The New York Times gave the film a mixed review. He applauds Flicker’s direction, but isn’t charmed by the comedy of the film.

Despite not being a fan of the storyline or the jokes, Crowther admires the professionalism of the crew, which includes Gayne Rescher’s cinematography and Cy Coleman's music for the film.

In an obituary for director Flicker, Variety called Troublemaker an “indie cult classic”.

References

The Troublemaker (1964 film) Wikipedia