A Very Special Favor (1965) Poster

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7/10
An inside joke
blanche-216 December 2007
Charles Boyer asks Rock Hudson for "A Very Special Favor," a 1965 film starring Leslie Caron, Walter Slezak, Dick Shawn, Nita Talbot and Larry Storch. Boyer is Michel Boullard, a man estranged from his cold, rigid daughter, a psychiatrist, Lauren Boullard (Caron) engaged to a wimp (Shawn). Impressed by his colleague Paul Chadwick's (Hudson) success with women, he asks Paul to seduce his daughter. However, Michel then reconnects with his daughter and, becoming angry with Paul, turns against him and works with Lauren to extract revenge on his mistreatment of her. This involves inventing a lover for Lauren, a bullfighter named El Magnifico and convincing Paul he's lost it in the sack.

Paul finally catches on and enlists a female friend who isn't getting any at the moment (Nita Talbot) and has her impersonate a man so that Lauren will think he's now gay.

I notice people on the board have all kinds of theories why this film isn't on DVD except that now, of course, it is. It also isn't the only time this inside joke was used in a Rock Hudson film, if anyone recalls his description to Doris Day about her boyfriend in "Pillow Talk." "Well, there are some men...who live with their mothers..." etc. I'm sure that in those days (unlike today) Hudson's private life was safe enough that no one thought twice about using something like this in a script. Everyone probably thought it was pretty funny.

These sex comedies were all the rage in the '60s, and this one has its moments, with Hudson and Caron very good in their roles and surrounded by excellent people. In one of the first scenes, Boyer and Slezak, two suicides in real life, embrace - it really didn't get the comedy off to a good start for me. But they're both delightful, Boyer moving from romantic leads to the father roles still possessing that wonderful, easy charm he had. Slezak was a very versatile actor who could go from playing an invincible Nazi in "Lifeboat" to a role like this. Nita Talbot is one of my favorite actresses of all time - seeing her made me nostalgic for the old days.

If you like this type of comedy, at which Hudson really excelled, you'll enjoy this one. This is on a DVD set of some of the more obscure Hudson films such as "Has Anybody Seen My Gal," and the collection shows the trajectory of his career from young supporting player to lead. The fact that Hudson has since been "outed" shouldn't make his work any less enjoyable. He was, after all, doing what he was hired to do - act.
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6/10
A wonderful plot with great potential is torpedoed by one character casting
SimonJack9 May 2021
"A Very Special Favor" has a very clever idea for a movie plot. Oh, sure, it's strange, even weird, and hardly believable. But that's the kind of stuff that often makes for wonderful comedies. And, this could have been such - with the screenplay and very funny dialog, and supporting cast. But there's a big problem with the film that actually detracts from the humorous schemes and dialog of Charles Boyer's Michel Boullard. It may be two parts of a problem, or two separate problems.

The first and biggest one is Leslie Caron as Dr. Lauren Boullard. In her women's suits, professional demeanor and wise, controlled persona, Caron is about as attractive as a mackerel in the market. And she is as exciting, alive, and believable as an alluring pursuit of Rock Hudson's Paul Chadwick, as a wet fish. She never loses this persona at any time, so that in each scene with Chadwick, any attraction seems impossible. The second minus for the film is related to the first - there is absolutely zero chemistry between Hudson and Caron.

Again, there is very funny dialog between Hudson's and Boyer's characters and others. And Boyer's schemes and reversals are hilarious. Doris Day would have been perfect for the part of Dr. Lauren Boullard. With a couple of strokes of the pen, she could have been the American-born daughter of Michel's American wife who left him or who died.

As is, the unattractive, cold fish character of Caron's Dr. Boullard is a real turn-off for this film. The absence of any spark between her and Hudson's Chadwick is all over the screen, and his slight show of interest isn't at all believable. Leslie Caron had a marked beauty about her, and she was very attractive in many films. But not so in this one. Universal really needed to do a makeover of the leads for the cast here.

The ending of this film is a surprise and almost shouts for the female lead to have been Doris Day. It could have been a real funny and good closing. Instead, it puts a nail in the coffin of disbelief in the story.

But for the superb script and very good comedy provided mostly by Hudson, Boyer and Walter Slezak as Etienne, this film wouldn't even rate four stars. When fans had been flocking to Rock Hudson movies, especially his comedy romances, this film had just $4.5 million in box office ticket sales. It barely covered its budget, if that, in a year that had blockbuster films such as "The Sound of Music" ($145 million box office), "Doctor Zhivago" ($127 million box office), and four comedies that had $20 to $38 million at the box office.

I don't think that Rock Hudson's scheme of pretending to be gay (which he was in real life) had anything to do with this film almost tanking. In 1959's "Pillow Talk," Hudson's Brad Allen schemes over the phone with Doris Day to make her think the Texan she has met and is dating (a role he assumed when he met Day's Jan Morrow by chance) is an effeminate momma's boy. It was done with great humor and didn't stop that film from being a box office hit.

I'm not one who thinks of movies as occasionally miscast. But this one surely is an exception. Here are some funny lines from this film.

Arnold Plum, "I was a mess. And the sad thing is, I never knew it. She had to point it out to me."

Paul Chadwick, "What does she look like now... today... this minute?" Michel Boullard, "How does one describe inner beauty?" Paul, "Forget the inside. Let's stay on the outside for a while." Michel, "I feel safe in saying she's attractive..." Paul, "YOU feel safe? Would it be risky for anyone else to say it?"

Paul Chadwick, "She's a skinny, flat--chested girl with buck teeth. And so far, you've only been talking about her good points."

Paul Chadwick, "Oh, doctor, it's a curse, a nightmare. Do you know what it feels like to be wanted just for your body?" Dr. Lauren Boullard, "Nooo." Paul, "Ah, how I envy you. What I'd give to have a body nobody'd want..."

Paul Chadwick, "I had just enlisted in the Marine Corps that morning.... Wanda was a decent girl, but in a moment of patriotism, she offered herself to me." Dr. Lauren Boullard, "She offered herself to you." Paul, "I said, 'No!' I was a Marine now. I didn't want to do anything to besmirch the honor of the Corps. But, if I hadn't said no, she never would have jumped."

Dr. Lauren Boullard, "Mr. Chadwick, not all women destroy themselves when a man refuses to make love to them." Paul Chadwick, "I can't risk another woman."

Dr. Lauren Boullard, "Believe me, Mr. Chadwick - you can accomplish just as much within a group." Paul Chadwick, "Mmm, yeah, but it makes it a little more difficult."

Dr. Lauren Boullard, "And what is the next step? Even if a woman is standing there with no clothes on, you will be able to walk out on her." Paul Chadwick, "That'll be the day."

Etienne, "But you said he had to be destroyed." Michel Boullard, "I was thinking of a normal revenge. In France, what happens? The woman shoots the man. That's civilized."

Etienne, "Michel this is madness. Your daughter cries, so you break down and tell her the truth. In the hands of an outraged woman, that's a dangerous weapon."

Michel Boullard,, "For what she did, make her suffer, my son - marry her." Paul Chadwick, "I'm being broadsided. You said 'my son' again and my stomach didn't turn. There's something evil going on and I don't know how to fight it."
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7/10
Rock Pushing The Envelope
bkoganbing28 September 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Let me tell you this is one special favor that Charles Boyer is asking of Rock Hudson. My guess is that Hudson's estate is keeping a lid on this one.

Boyer has a daughter in Leslie Caron who is a psychiatrist by profession. He also has a colleague at work in Rock Hudson and he's concerned about his daughter. Concerned his daughter is not getting any sex.

This is a new twist on the normal Rock Hudson comedies. In two of the ones he made with Doris Day, Rock's your normal every day American wolf trying very hard to make the all-American virgin Doris Day. Here Caron is a French virgin, well into her thirties.

As Boyer tries ever so tactfully to put it, what a father might be proud of in a daughter at age 18 doesn't hold true when she's 38. As he puts it Rock, he expects him to to the deed with Caron and expose her to what she's been missing. What a favor to be asking.

A Very Special Favor then follows the usual capers that these films for Rock Hudson normally do. But the end is really an unusual one. Deciding that maybe he ought to appeal to her professionally as well, Hudson let it be known he's gay and he has switchboard operator Nita Talbot dress up in drag and pretend to be a most effeminate male. Psychiatrist Caron races to the hotel room where Hudson and Talbot are to do the deed and at that point Caron sacrifices all including bachelorhood to save Rock from the love that dares not speak its name.

I think it's rather obvious why this film isn't shown at all. What puzzles me is why Hudson who was oh so careful about keeping his homosexuality a secret would do a role like this. Maybe it's the reason why a lot of closeted gay men troll the docks for dates, hoping to have the question of exiting the closet forced on them. I leave that to the psychiatrists.

A friend told me that he was at a party at someone's house and a video of one of Rock Hudson's films was being shown. This was a pretty straight crowd he was in and Rock in the macho role he was in was getting not a few hoots from the audience. This wasn't the film they were viewing, but imagine if it was with what we know now.

My guess is A Very Special Favor will not be shown any time soon or be out on DVD or VHS. But if it does come out or is shown on TCM or AMC catch it by all means. You try and figure out what was going on in the mind of Rock Hudson.
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6/10
Double bill on my DVD
Barbouzes11 August 2016
I am reviewing the DVD I saw, which combined two "Rock Hudson" movies under the heading "Rock Hudson collection". 2 movies for the price of 1? Bring'em on! The first film: "Any Body Seen My Gal", is a Douglas Sirk comedy I had never heard of. Yet…I found this film to be a pleasure from beginning to the end! It is 1952 and Rock Hudson is very handsome and so young, and the whole movie (story, 1930s setting, colors, the ensemble cast of actors) is a delight to watch. What an enchanting piece of movie-making, with dark existential realities behind the apparent lightness. The second film ("A Very Special Favor") is a mixed bag. Because it was made in 1965, its first 30 minutes are a must-see priceless candy bordering on parody (except it is the real stuff, ah ah!): 60s decor, 60s orchestral music, Pink Panther-style opening credits, rear view projections in "Paris" or "New York", sexual banter, witty dialogue, split screens, Yves Saint Laurent dresses. After these first 30 minutes, however, the story line veers off into a war of the sexes theme that makes a modern viewer cringe, even though the film still has some very funny scenes. Rock Hudson, Charles Boyer and Walter Slezak are excellent. Leslie Caron is probably miscast.
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3/10
Innocent fun
ryancm15 December 2006
This is one of many ROCK HUDSON sex comedies made in the 60's. It's all talk and no do, like the others. Pure formula from start to finish with Rock hired to "teach" the Leslie Caron character about life in the bedroom. Some funny moments and Caron is delicious, but bogs down toward the end and becomes to contrived for its own good. Look for some familiar character actors such as Dick Shawn as a nerdy fiancé' Larry Storch as a cab driver and George Furth in a barroom scene. The always excellent Nita Talbot has a nice role as one of Mr. Hudsons many man hungry females. For a nice confection, it's worth a view. Now on DVD with HAS ANYBODY SEEN MY GAL.
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10/10
Thanks
norisna20018 January 2007
I don't need 1,000 words to say Thanks Universal for the DVD Rock Hudson's collection. I enjoyed the 5 now new films of Rock Hudson which always I waited. Now, I wait for the rest. I liked those films, first because I love comedies' Rock Hudson.He is handsome, nice,and funny I can't speck only of "A Very Special Favor" because all 5 films are very good. In "A very Special Favor' Leslie Caron and Charles Boyer are excellent in their role, same for the rest of the cast.In this film I laughed all the time.I give for this film 10 out of 10. Rock Hudson is special for this. I don't forget "Send me no Flowers" with Doris Day.I have a collection of videos and DVD of Rock H. and I wait for the rest.I hope I will see soon. Again, thanks Universal!
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2/10
I hate to say it, but this one disappointed me. . .
Natasha_Dean18 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I absolutely adore Rock Hudson, and when I learned he had done a romantic comedy with my favorite actress, the marvelous Leslie Caron, I was enthusiastic to acquire my own copy of the film. Quickly I purchased it and eagerly awaited the time that I could sit and savor the film from start to finish. When the time came and the movie began, I was at first very excited to see what would happen between my two big screen favorites, only to be bitterly disappointed. I later learned that this film was Rock's least favorite ever made, and after watching it, I can completely understand why. The basis for the film's plot, has a sickening undertone where a woman's father, fearing she is doomed to a sexless and platonic existence with her obviously effeminate fiancé, hires Rock's character to basically gaslight his daughter into finding her sexual self. When Hudson succeeds in scaring the woman so deeply to her core that she is emotionally distressed to the point of a complete breakdown, her father, having only seconds beforehand been reunited with her after a 25 year absence, swears revenge on the man he has hired after seeing how much his daughter has been hurt. Caron then turns the tables with equal ferocity, and manages to flip Hudson the same way he flipped her, shaking his sexual confidence to pitiful levels. It is after this that the father then decides that the two would be a match made in heaven and tries to get them together. Hudson, feeling desperate to regain his sexual prowess once again, agrees, and In order to convince Caron that they are meant for each other, concocts a ruse in which he dresses his secretary Mickey (Nita Talbot) who has long nursed an open crush on him, as a man (hair cut and all) and runs off to a hotel with her, giving off the appearances of a homo-erotic tryst.

The ruse works and all live happily ever after as the credits roll. Meanwhile, the viewer is left with a sick feeling in their stomach and a rotten taste in their mouth. This movie MIGHT have worked if it had been better written, and a method other than mutual gaslighting between the "lovers" to be was used as the method of wooing. The whole plot that a happy successful career woman soon to be 30 needed to be loosened up or be doomed to a life of sexless spinsterity is frankly, highly offensive.

And though the movie has one or two points that tickle the funny bone, one will not be moved to tears of laughter watching this film. They may, however, be moved to tears of sorrow that they wasted an hour and a half watching this pitiful excuse for a romantic comedy.

As I said in the title, I was sincerely disappointed that I didn't find this movie enjoyable. I wanted it so desperately to work; but unfortunately, in this case, the writers were just too darn lazy to try and write a decent plot, and thus the entire movie suffers, as does the audience.

Two thumbs down from me.
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10/10
Please Put This On Video
beebertie14 August 2005
This is a flick that will definitely not leave a bad taste in your mouth. There are lots and lots of slapstick laughter. The casting is perfect: Rock Hudson, Leslie Caron, Charles Boyer, Walter Slezak & Dick Shawn among others that are all long gone. What makes me so upset is it is the only Rock Hudson Romantic Comedy that hasn't been put on video. Posters & movie stills are floating around for people to purchase, but the video is positively not available. If all of this memorabilia is available, then why not the video? Pillow Talk, Lover Come Back, Send Me No Flowers & Man's Favorite Sport have all been made available. These are often shown on television too. This hysterical romantic comedy has only been at the theaters and shown only on television just ONE time. It is a feel good story that will most certainly warm everyone's hearts. We need more happiness today to be able to feel good. It will most assuredly make you split your sides laughing to the point of tears. I have been looking for the video forever. Fortunely I was able to find the book; which is the next best thing to being able to see the movie. So the book will have to do until they decide to come out with the video.
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4/10
Wildly uneven and not one of Rock Hudson's better vehicles.
planktonrules22 May 2012
There is a lot to like about this Rock Hudson film, but also a lot that just didn't work. Aside from being wildly uneven, it's just not that good a film.

The movie starts off quite well. Rock plays a womanizer who is absolutely irresistible to women--and he soon wins a legal case simply because the judge thinks he's a hunk. His opponent (Charles Boyer) is impressed with Hudson's sex appeal and befriends him. Soon, however, their friendship is tested when Boyer asks Rock to seduce his VERY proper and seemingly unhappy daughter (Leslie Caron). However, instead of doing this directly, when Rock finds out she's a psychologist, he decides to concoct some stupid disorder and tries to trick her into loving him. This and the rest of the film is VERY contrived--never making any sense and at times being rather offensive. My ULTRA-feminist college-age daughter kept having an apoplexy as she watched Rock's shenanigans--and she felt he was more like a date rapist than a hero! I didn't feel quite that strongly but could understand how someone could be very turned off by him--he WAS a jerk and the film stopped making sense towards the end. A FAR cry from the great films he made with Doris Day, that's for sure! Unlikable characters and poor writing make this a chore to watch at times. Very skippable.
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2/10
Do Yourself A Very Special Favor and Avoid this Mess *1/2
edwagreen28 February 2008
Warning: Spoilers
How could a cast with Rock Hudson, Leslie Caron, Charles Boyer and others produce such a stinker of a film?

Some of this reminded me of the old Doris Day and Rock Hudson films. Hudson was always at his best when he tried to fool Day into thinking that he was someone else.

We see some of that hear but the dialogue and writing produced a rather poor film.

Caron looks much older than the 30 year old she is supposed to portray. A psychologist with an extremely even life, Caron is made to go wild when her father, played with humor comedy by Boyer, introduces her to Hudson-who is his usual Casanova type guy.

The ending must have had the audience in stitches when Hudson tried to get Caron thinking that he was dating another guy.
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10/10
This is one of the best romantic comedies I have seen and should be put on video.
bertiegros-220 November 1999
Rock Hudson is at his best when it comes to romantic comedy. Their is excellent chemistry with the cast of this film. This movie should be on everyone's agenda to see if ever it becomes available. There are a lot of enjoyable laughs and you come away from it feeling good. It will definitely lift your spirits.
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1/10
I have a sense of humor and like romcoms BUT!
ptomley473 March 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I love romcoms of the 30's,40's and 50's including the Doris Day/Rock Hudson comedy team. I love the Day/Hudson comedies because Doris is independent yet still falls for the guy. We laugh with them not at them But unfortunately this movie is beyond the pale in gender relationships,even Rock Hudson hated it. (Check trivia)

The man has to beat women,be dominate, can be killed for being unfaithful and so on. It's medieval. I don't laugh at those values I fast forwarded it because I was just choking and it's cruel, it's normal for a man to hate his mother I just can't bear it Don't watch if you like funny romantic humor.
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9/10
A very funny film
janetarothwell30 December 2015
I've been reading the other reviews with interest. I saw this film on TV about 45 years ago when I was about 8 years old. Around this time I used to watch two back-to-back films on a Saturday or Sunday and I remember this film because it was absolutely hilarious. All the other good films have been repeated on TV - but I have only ever seen this once. I remember laughing and laughing when watching the film. I didn't know anything about sex at that age. I just saw it as a father trying to get his daughter to 'lighten up', to 'live', and to have an interest in finding a male companion in life, instead of an existence of continual work. I didn't see anything odd about Rock Hudson's character pretending to be a patient with his 'problem'. This subterfuge was a key part of romantic comedy films of the time. I certainly didn't see the 'set-up' scene as anything to do with sex - I just remember it as a slightly naughty prank. In some ways the film does remind me of 'pillow talk' and this isn't surprising as one of the writers is the same. I am very pleased to hear that it is now on DVD and I will be very interested to see it again.
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I Like Rock...But...
cutterccbaxter12 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I like Rock's balcony in this movie. I think I have a thing for fake NYC balconies. I never tire of seeing Eva Gabor on the fake NYC balcony for the opening of Green Acres.

I guess I have a thing for bars with dark wood paneling and this movie has plenty of them too.

I think Leslie Caron looks best when she wears bangs in this movie. Unfortunately her bang wearing scenes are few and far between, which weakened the movie immensely. Her bed has a big head board. I expect Joan Crawford to have a big head board. For some reason I didn't expect Leslie Caron to have one.

I was kinda hoping Leslie would end up with Dick Shawn instead of Rock even though as a viewer I am not supposed to think that. Like Rock, but he should have ended up with Nita Talbot (maybe they could have had their honeymoon on the Russian Front?). I'm not sure who Larry Storch should have ended up with.

Both Dick Shawn and Larry have a great head of hair. I'm not sure if that helps the movie at all but I would like to think it doesn't hurt.

Perhaps the biggest flaw of this movie is that it condones drinking and driving.

There's a lot about this movie that I feel uncertain about. Frank Devol plays a hotel clerk. He did a great job, but why not let Vic Mizzy have a go at the part?

I wish there were more group therapy sessions in the film. Then again, I say that about every movie.
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