David and Lisa (1962) - Turner Classic Movies

David and Lisa


1h 34m 1962
David and Lisa

Brief Synopsis

A troubled boy begins to deal with his problems when he befriends a young schizophrenic.

Film Details

Genre
Drama
Adaptation
Release Date
Jan 1962
Premiere Information
Los Angeles opening: 18 Dec 1962
Production Company
Lisa & David Co.
Distribution Company
Continental Distributing, Inc.
Country
United States
Location
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel Lisa and David by Theodore Isaac Rubin (New York, 1961).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 34m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White

Synopsis

David Clemens is an emotionally disturbed adolescent who lives in constant terror of being touched. When his mother places him in a home for disturbed youngsters, he rejects both the other children and his psychiatrist, Alan Swinford. Gradually, however, he becomes interested in Lisa, a 15-year-old schizophrenic: as "Muriel" she is completely mute, and as Lisa she talks only in rhyme. As the relationship between the two develops, David's attitude toward Alan relaxes, and he begins to talk with the doctor. David's mother, however, is unsatisfied with her son's progress and removes him from the home. Unable to bear his mother's domination and his parents' quarreling, David runs away and returns to the home. Lisa is so delighted at his return that she ceases speaking in rhyme. During a student party the two youngsters quarrel, and Lisa runs away; after an all-night search, David finds her at a nearby museum. To persuade her to return to Alan, David shows his trust by finally reaching out to touch her, and two walk off together, holding hands.

Film Details

Genre
Drama
Adaptation
Release Date
Jan 1962
Premiere Information
Los Angeles opening: 18 Dec 1962
Production Company
Lisa & David Co.
Distribution Company
Continental Distributing, Inc.
Country
United States
Location
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel Lisa and David by Theodore Isaac Rubin (New York, 1961).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 34m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White

Award Nominations

Best Director

1962
Frank Perry

Best Writing, Screenplay

1963

Articles

David and Lisa - Keir Dulkea & Janet Margolin in DAVID AND LISA on DVD


Frank Perry directed about fifteen films between his 1962 debut with David and Lisa and his death in 1995. Few viewers would call them classic cinema, but they're certainly a varied group, ranging from eccentric dramas like The Swimmer and Play It As It Lays to the thriller Man on a Swing and the western Rancho Deluxe, not to mention the bizarre biopic Mommie Dearest, which does for Joan Crawford what Godzilla did for dinosaurs.

David and Lisa, available on DVD from Image Entertainment, holds up nicely as one of Perry's best pictures. Adapted by his wife Eleanor Perry from the fact-based novel Lisa and David by author and psychiatrist Theodore Isaac Rubin, M.D., it cost less than $200,000 to make and went on to earn many multiples of that low figure, grossing a reported $1 million in its first week. It also gave a major boost to the fledgling film careers of Keir Dullea, who'd appeared in one previous picture, and Janet Margolin, who made her feature debut here.

The movie begins with an atmospheric shot of a spacious, slightly spooky old building in the woods, just the place for some sort of mystery or melodrama to unfold. We quickly learn that it's a boarding school for mentally disturbed adolescents, including David Clemens, who's arriving for an indefinite stay. He's an immaculately groomed young fellow with an air of quiet assurance-until someone innocently touches him, whereupon he goes berserk, shrinking with terror and yowling that "a touch can kill." Whatever this institution has to offer, it's clear David needs a whopping dose of it.
br> So does Lisa Brandt, who's already at the school when David arrives. Lacking the easy intelligence that David displays, she expresses herself through two alternating personas. Most of the time she's childish Lisa, amusing herself with crayons and speaking in clumsy rhymes; but at stressful times she becomes an alter ego called Muriel, a dark and brooding figure who hardly communicates at all. A psychiatric worker named John continually urges her to unify this divided self-image and become a single, whole individual. She's a difficult case, though, and it's hard to imagine how he'll ever get through to her. The school's methods-dream interpretation, free association, and so on-come from psychoanalysis, the "talking cure" based on verbal communication. Since talking and listening are low priorities for Lisa, her therapist has a lot of work cut out for him.

Lisa is a central character in the movie, but the protagonist is David, who also seems like a tough person to reach. He certainly knows he's troubled; in an early scene he sits alone his room and bursts into tears for no observable reason. Yet his fear of being touched applies to his inner self as well as his outer surroundings, and this puts a huge obstacle in the way of effective treatment. The chief of the school, Dr. Swinford, takes a particular interest in drawing him out of his extremely tough shell, and little by little David opens up to him. A turning point comes when he returns home to visit his parents, disorienting them so much with his slightly loosened-up behavior that they immediately yank him from the school. By this time he realizes that Dr. Swinford is genuinely helping him, and a change he would have welcomed a few months earlier now comes as a crushing blow. Lisa has her own crisis at about the same time, brought about partly by her responsiveness to David's friendship. The question now becomes whether these two will help each other to a better future, or succumb again to illnesses that are as stubborn as they are severe.

The visual style of David and Lisa is simple and spare, presenting generally brief scenes with a minimum of fuss and not a fancy flourish in sight. Even the sequences depicting a recurring nightmare David has, in which he cuts off his enemies' heads with the razor-sharp hands of a giant clock, have a stripped-down look that contrasts interestingly with recent cinema's high-tech approach to scenes like this. Perry didn't have the budget to create more elaborate effects-the nightmare is more extravagant (and bloody) in Rubin's book-but he manages to make a virtue of necessity.

Most of the story's emotional weight is carried by the acting, and the movie wouldn't work nearly as well without skilled performers in the leading roles. Dullea plays David as a very troubled but readily likable youngster, and Margolin makes Lisa highly sympathetic as well as uncontrollably bizarre. The veteran actor Howard Da Silva is perfect as the likable and generous Dr. Swinford, solidly supported by Clifton James as the clinician handling Lisa's case. Richard McMurray and Neva Patterson are also effective as David's wimpy dad and overbearing mom. Yet while these key roles are well acted, the film runs into problems with its secondary characters. Most of the school's patients are written as stereotypes-the over-sensitive nerd, the tough-guy charity case, and so forth-and the performances rarely bring them to life. This is a problem the Perrys brought upon themselves, since patients other than David and Lisa are hardly even mentioned in Rubin's book. The movie earned Academy Award nominations for both members of the Perry team-Frank for best directing, Eleanor for best adapted screenplay-and one reason why neither of them won could be their weak handling of the less-important characters.

The only extras Image Entertainment provides are a scene-selection menu and optional English subtitles. This makes the DVD as no-frills as the movie, but the movie is enjoyable enough to be worth the purchase price.

For more information about David and Lisa, visit Image Home Entertainment. To order David and Lisa, go to TCM Shopping.

by David Sterritt
David And Lisa - Keir Dulkea & Janet Margolin In David And Lisa On Dvd

David and Lisa - Keir Dulkea & Janet Margolin in DAVID AND LISA on DVD

Frank Perry directed about fifteen films between his 1962 debut with David and Lisa and his death in 1995. Few viewers would call them classic cinema, but they're certainly a varied group, ranging from eccentric dramas like The Swimmer and Play It As It Lays to the thriller Man on a Swing and the western Rancho Deluxe, not to mention the bizarre biopic Mommie Dearest, which does for Joan Crawford what Godzilla did for dinosaurs. David and Lisa, available on DVD from Image Entertainment, holds up nicely as one of Perry's best pictures. Adapted by his wife Eleanor Perry from the fact-based novel Lisa and David by author and psychiatrist Theodore Isaac Rubin, M.D., it cost less than $200,000 to make and went on to earn many multiples of that low figure, grossing a reported $1 million in its first week. It also gave a major boost to the fledgling film careers of Keir Dullea, who'd appeared in one previous picture, and Janet Margolin, who made her feature debut here. The movie begins with an atmospheric shot of a spacious, slightly spooky old building in the woods, just the place for some sort of mystery or melodrama to unfold. We quickly learn that it's a boarding school for mentally disturbed adolescents, including David Clemens, who's arriving for an indefinite stay. He's an immaculately groomed young fellow with an air of quiet assurance-until someone innocently touches him, whereupon he goes berserk, shrinking with terror and yowling that "a touch can kill." Whatever this institution has to offer, it's clear David needs a whopping dose of it.br> So does Lisa Brandt, who's already at the school when David arrives. Lacking the easy intelligence that David displays, she expresses herself through two alternating personas. Most of the time she's childish Lisa, amusing herself with crayons and speaking in clumsy rhymes; but at stressful times she becomes an alter ego called Muriel, a dark and brooding figure who hardly communicates at all. A psychiatric worker named John continually urges her to unify this divided self-image and become a single, whole individual. She's a difficult case, though, and it's hard to imagine how he'll ever get through to her. The school's methods-dream interpretation, free association, and so on-come from psychoanalysis, the "talking cure" based on verbal communication. Since talking and listening are low priorities for Lisa, her therapist has a lot of work cut out for him. Lisa is a central character in the movie, but the protagonist is David, who also seems like a tough person to reach. He certainly knows he's troubled; in an early scene he sits alone his room and bursts into tears for no observable reason. Yet his fear of being touched applies to his inner self as well as his outer surroundings, and this puts a huge obstacle in the way of effective treatment. The chief of the school, Dr. Swinford, takes a particular interest in drawing him out of his extremely tough shell, and little by little David opens up to him. A turning point comes when he returns home to visit his parents, disorienting them so much with his slightly loosened-up behavior that they immediately yank him from the school. By this time he realizes that Dr. Swinford is genuinely helping him, and a change he would have welcomed a few months earlier now comes as a crushing blow. Lisa has her own crisis at about the same time, brought about partly by her responsiveness to David's friendship. The question now becomes whether these two will help each other to a better future, or succumb again to illnesses that are as stubborn as they are severe. The visual style of David and Lisa is simple and spare, presenting generally brief scenes with a minimum of fuss and not a fancy flourish in sight. Even the sequences depicting a recurring nightmare David has, in which he cuts off his enemies' heads with the razor-sharp hands of a giant clock, have a stripped-down look that contrasts interestingly with recent cinema's high-tech approach to scenes like this. Perry didn't have the budget to create more elaborate effects-the nightmare is more extravagant (and bloody) in Rubin's book-but he manages to make a virtue of necessity. Most of the story's emotional weight is carried by the acting, and the movie wouldn't work nearly as well without skilled performers in the leading roles. Dullea plays David as a very troubled but readily likable youngster, and Margolin makes Lisa highly sympathetic as well as uncontrollably bizarre. The veteran actor Howard Da Silva is perfect as the likable and generous Dr. Swinford, solidly supported by Clifton James as the clinician handling Lisa's case. Richard McMurray and Neva Patterson are also effective as David's wimpy dad and overbearing mom. Yet while these key roles are well acted, the film runs into problems with its secondary characters. Most of the school's patients are written as stereotypes-the over-sensitive nerd, the tough-guy charity case, and so forth-and the performances rarely bring them to life. This is a problem the Perrys brought upon themselves, since patients other than David and Lisa are hardly even mentioned in Rubin's book. The movie earned Academy Award nominations for both members of the Perry team-Frank for best directing, Eleanor for best adapted screenplay-and one reason why neither of them won could be their weak handling of the less-important characters. The only extras Image Entertainment provides are a scene-selection menu and optional English subtitles. This makes the DVD as no-frills as the movie, but the movie is enjoyable enough to be worth the purchase price. For more information about David and Lisa, visit Image Home Entertainment. To order David and Lisa, go to TCM Shopping. by David Sterritt

David and Lisa


David (Keir Dullea), a young man suffering from an overwhelming fear of being touched, is admitted to a home for disturbed teenagers run by Dr. Alan Swinford (Howard Da Silva). Though at first resistant to interacting with the other patients, David finds himself drawn to Lisa, a schizophrenic girl who speaks only in rhymes. Their relationship, which grows from antagonism to one of trust, gives them both the strength to confront their inner demons and hope for the future.

The debut film for the husband-and-wife team of Frank and Eleanor Perry, David and Lisa (1962) was a surprise commercial success when it was first released. Made on a remarkably low budget of $200,000, the film worked on several levels - as a technically accomplished first feature, as a love story, and most importantly, as a more realistic look at the treatment of mental illness minus the usual psychobabble and sensationalism associated with Hollywood produced films in the same genre. What particularly impressed critics were the naturalistic performances and the seamless mixture of documentary-like realism with nightmarish dream sequences, all strikingly photographed in black and white by Leonard Hirschfield in and around Philadelphia. In a year that saw the release of such landmark films as Lawrence of Arabia, To Kill a Mockingbird, The Manchurian Candidate and Lolita, it was no small achievement that David and Lisa won Oscar® nominations for Best Director and Best Screenplay (adapted by Eleanor Perry from the case study, Lisa and David by Dr. Theodore Isaac Rubin). The film was remade for television by co-producer Oprah Winfrey in 1998 with Sidney Poitier as the psychiatrist, Lukas Haas as David and Brittany Murphy as Lisa.

While most psychiatrists have since criticized David and Lisa for its suggestion that David's obsessive-compulsive behavior was caused by his mother's dominant personality, the film still works as a moving and insightful character study with unexpected touches of humor. And it remains one of Keir Dullea's finest performances though he admitted in Current Biography that the film actually hampered his career for awhile: "It got so that I began to hate David and Lisa. I'd walk down a street and people would come over and say, 'Hello, David, can I touch you?' And...I just couldn't break the mold professionally in either the movies or TV work I got after it."

Director Frank Perry was one of several filmmakers who was associated with the New York City independent film movement of the late fifties and early sixties, a period that saw the emergence of such talents as John Cassavetes (Shadows, 1959) and Shirley Clarke (The Connection, 1962). Perry, who studied acting under Lee Strasberg and worked as a theatre director, went on to collaborate with his wife (as screenwriter) on several critically acclaimed features (Last Summer (1969), Diary of a Mad Housewife, 1970) before they ended their marriage and working relationship in 1981. Unlike Cassavetes who abandoned Hollywood financed projects after his unhappy experiences on Too Late Blues (1961) and A Child is Waiting (1963), the Perrys managed to work within the studio system to create thought-provoking but accessible entertainments for most of their partnership. Since their split, neither filmmaker enjoyed a success comparable to their earlier work though, ironically, Frank will probably be best remembered for the camp classic Mommie Dearest, which he directed in 1981 with Faye Dunaway playing Joan Crawford.

Producer: Lee R. Bobker, Paul M. Heller
Director: Frank Perry
Screenplay: Eleanor Perry, Theodore Isaac Rubin (novel)
Cinematography: Leonard Hirschfield
Film Editing: Irving Oshman
Art Direction: Paul M. Heller
Music: Mark Lawrence
Cast: Keir Dullea (David Clemens), Janet Margolin (Lisa), Howard Da Silva (Dr. Swinford), Neva Patterson (Mrs. Clemens), Clifton James (John), Richard McMurray (Mr. Clemens).
BW-93m.

by Jeff Stafford

David and Lisa

David (Keir Dullea), a young man suffering from an overwhelming fear of being touched, is admitted to a home for disturbed teenagers run by Dr. Alan Swinford (Howard Da Silva). Though at first resistant to interacting with the other patients, David finds himself drawn to Lisa, a schizophrenic girl who speaks only in rhymes. Their relationship, which grows from antagonism to one of trust, gives them both the strength to confront their inner demons and hope for the future. The debut film for the husband-and-wife team of Frank and Eleanor Perry, David and Lisa (1962) was a surprise commercial success when it was first released. Made on a remarkably low budget of $200,000, the film worked on several levels - as a technically accomplished first feature, as a love story, and most importantly, as a more realistic look at the treatment of mental illness minus the usual psychobabble and sensationalism associated with Hollywood produced films in the same genre. What particularly impressed critics were the naturalistic performances and the seamless mixture of documentary-like realism with nightmarish dream sequences, all strikingly photographed in black and white by Leonard Hirschfield in and around Philadelphia. In a year that saw the release of such landmark films as Lawrence of Arabia, To Kill a Mockingbird, The Manchurian Candidate and Lolita, it was no small achievement that David and Lisa won Oscar® nominations for Best Director and Best Screenplay (adapted by Eleanor Perry from the case study, Lisa and David by Dr. Theodore Isaac Rubin). The film was remade for television by co-producer Oprah Winfrey in 1998 with Sidney Poitier as the psychiatrist, Lukas Haas as David and Brittany Murphy as Lisa. While most psychiatrists have since criticized David and Lisa for its suggestion that David's obsessive-compulsive behavior was caused by his mother's dominant personality, the film still works as a moving and insightful character study with unexpected touches of humor. And it remains one of Keir Dullea's finest performances though he admitted in Current Biography that the film actually hampered his career for awhile: "It got so that I began to hate David and Lisa. I'd walk down a street and people would come over and say, 'Hello, David, can I touch you?' And...I just couldn't break the mold professionally in either the movies or TV work I got after it." Director Frank Perry was one of several filmmakers who was associated with the New York City independent film movement of the late fifties and early sixties, a period that saw the emergence of such talents as John Cassavetes (Shadows, 1959) and Shirley Clarke (The Connection, 1962). Perry, who studied acting under Lee Strasberg and worked as a theatre director, went on to collaborate with his wife (as screenwriter) on several critically acclaimed features (Last Summer (1969), Diary of a Mad Housewife, 1970) before they ended their marriage and working relationship in 1981. Unlike Cassavetes who abandoned Hollywood financed projects after his unhappy experiences on Too Late Blues (1961) and A Child is Waiting (1963), the Perrys managed to work within the studio system to create thought-provoking but accessible entertainments for most of their partnership. Since their split, neither filmmaker enjoyed a success comparable to their earlier work though, ironically, Frank will probably be best remembered for the camp classic Mommie Dearest, which he directed in 1981 with Faye Dunaway playing Joan Crawford. Producer: Lee R. Bobker, Paul M. Heller Director: Frank Perry Screenplay: Eleanor Perry, Theodore Isaac Rubin (novel) Cinematography: Leonard Hirschfield Film Editing: Irving Oshman Art Direction: Paul M. Heller Music: Mark Lawrence Cast: Keir Dullea (David Clemens), Janet Margolin (Lisa), Howard Da Silva (Dr. Swinford), Neva Patterson (Mrs. Clemens), Clifton James (John), Richard McMurray (Mr. Clemens). BW-93m. by Jeff Stafford

Quotes

Trivia

Louis W. Kellman had initially tried but failed to raise funds and produce this low budget film in spite of his prior success with the low budget Burglar, The (1957). Kellman's local studio did however supply production services such as equipment and supplemental crew but he received no screen credit.

Notes

Location scenes filmed in Philadelphia.

Miscellaneous Notes

Co-Winner of the Best First Film Award at the 1962 Venice Film Festival.

Released in United States 1962

Released in United States Winter January 1, 1962

Re-released in United States on Video June 29, 1999

Shown at the 1962 San Francisco Film Festival.

Shown at the 1962 Venice Film Festival.

Winners of the Best Actor (Dullea) and Best Actress (Margolin) Prizes at the 1962 San Fransisco Film Festival.

Film is based on a true story.

Frank Perry's feature directorial debut.

Released in United States 1962 (Shown at the 1962 San Francisco Film Festival.)

Released in United States 1962 (Shown at the 1962 Venice Film Festival.)

Released in United States Winter January 1, 1962

Released in United States 1962 (Winners of the Best Actor (Dullea) and Best Actress (Margolin) Prizes at the 1962 San Fransisco Film Festival.)

Re-released in United States on Video June 29, 1999