16 x 9
Widescreen Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Language: English
Audio: Mono
NTSC
104 MINUTES
1967 / Color
Special Features: Isolated Score Track / Original Theatrical Trailer
DVD excerpts by Julie Kirgo:
The Flim-Flam Man (1967) opens with the blast of a train whistle, signaling the heady onset of a journey into a kind of fairy-tale American past: a gilded spot on the time-space continuum where, somehow, con artists are loveable rogues, young men are naughty-but-nice Tom Sawyer types, sheriffs are gullible but basically soft-hearted, and only cheats can be cheated. This is the whimsical side of the road-movie coin, a warm-spirited precursor to the darker, meaner, tougher genre that would become such a cinematic staple in the late Sixties and throughout the Seventies, gifting us with everything from Easy Rider to Scarecrow to Smokey and the Bandit.
Given the conventions of these later films, there are some uneasy moments when we learn, early in The Flim-Flam Man, that young Curley Treadaway (Michael Sarrazin) has gone “over the hill” from Fort Bragg after slugging his “big-mouthed Yankee sergeant.” He’ll be hauled back, surely, and shipped to Vietnam…won’t he? Not, happily, in this universe. Although not nominally a period film, Flim-Flam seems to exist in a timeless rural South (with picturesque Kentucky locations standing in for North Carolina) of gleaming fields, tree-shaded lanes, and tidy one-traffic-light towns. Not a trailer-park or holler in sight.
As is often the case, it took an outsider to bring us this very American fable. Although born in Jefferson City, Missouri, screenwriter William Rose was an early volunteer in World War II, heading for Britain in 1939 to fight with Canada’s Black Watch regiment. After the war, he settled in England, becoming a stalwart of British cinema, writing two comic classics, The Ladykillers (1955) and significantly, a very early road movie, indeed, the luscious Genevieve (1953). Venturing to Hollywood in the early 1960s, Rose hit his stride with yet another picaresque tale, the zany It’s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World (1963), which, like The Flim-Flam Man, focused—although in far less benign fashion—on the nutty venality of human nature.
For the complete notes see the DVD booklet!