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Tarfumes.com - X Y & Zee

X Y & Zee
List Price: $19.98
Our Price: $123.99
Availability: N/A
Manufacturer: Sony Pictures
Starring: Elizabeth Taylor, Michael Caine, Susannah York, Margaret Leighton, John Standing
Directed By: Brian G. Hutton
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5

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Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Binding: VHS Tape
EAN: 9786302862829
Format: Color
ISBN: 6302862825
Label: Sony Pictures
Manufacturer: Sony Pictures
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Sony Pictures
Release Date: 2000-05-16
Running Time: 110
Studio: Sony Pictures
Theatrical Release Date: 1972-01-21

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Editorial Reviews:

The quintessence of '70s dreck, albeit with one and a half feet stuck in the '60s. Swinging London was already a faded memory in 1972 (and the spectacle of Dame Margaret Leighton in a see-through blouse did nothing to inspire nostalgia for it). More to the point, the consider-the-possibilities algebra of the title and the central casting of Liz Taylor as Zee, a game-playing virago of a wife, suggest a wishful revamp of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966), without a Richard Burton to supply wit, grace, and feeling. Even Michael Caine, who plays Zee's feckless architect husband, seems to be coasting on rueful memories of Alfie (1965).

Out of bored habit more than passion, Caine erotically targets Susannah York, a vague country wife who may or may not be a widow. They begin an affair. Zee cottons on right away and does her utmost to play both ends against her full-figure-gal middle. Taylor's bitch-queen act lends a certain verve; she barges about the screen in a wardrobe of multicolored, tent-like horrors that suggest, oh, Genghis Khan in Arabia. It's a measure of the film's muddled sense of itself that Zee's early description of her rival--"a soulful slob [who's] always a little out of breath and sees beauty in everything"--is dead-on about the character and the normally lively Susannah York's performance.

Zee (like Virginia Woolf's Martha) is childless, and Edna O'Brien's script underscores how often the three principals call one another "baby." We won't tip the surprise-twist climax, but the ending is the nadir of '70s pseudo-sophistication, mindless technique mongering, and cluelessness masquerading as "adult" ambiguity. Not one freeze frame but a dozen... overlapped... with zooms in and out, yet. Turn on the lava lamps, get out the throw cushions, zap the microwave popcorn--this is a definitive trash wallow. --Richard T. Jameson


Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Acting like she's in VIRGINA WOOLF 2, Taylor turns up the dail to MAXIMUM in this stupefying howl-fest!
Comment: Liz Taylor nearly kissed off her stunning WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF? comeback with an almost unbroken string of howl fests -- and this is one of the best of the worst. WIldly painted and bursting out of '60s psychedelic frocks in her a-go-go gone-amok phase, Taylor plays the sadistic, horny, wealthy, foul-mouthed wife of masochistic, horny, wealthy, foul-mouthed London architect Michael Caine.

The action starts when Caine, at a party, flashes his eyes at achingly sensitive boutique owner Susannah York. "You know, she told me she's prone to weeping if anything nice happems to her," hostess Margaret Leighton tells Liz of widow Susannah. Taylor bugs her eyes and gags: "Yuck! YUCK!"

Precisely.

Taylor turns into a woman run mad -- she's forever blaring bad rock music at home and rattling trash cans under the windows of York's flat yelling, "Is my husband in your chickenlike arms?" (You can tell that Caine likes York better because, in his scenes with her, his hair is washed.) After Liz barges in on the couple during a tete a tete, things start to get really weird: York mentions she's the mother of twins, and Taylor asks whether she breast-fed them, then relates, "I sat next to a man at dinner one night who said you haven't lived until you've seen a woman breast-feed twins. Evidentally his wife would lie sprawled on the bed, a t-t in either direction, and it was just fantastic."

York warns Caine, "Your wife -- she's possessed!" but all the sparring seems to get the married couple hot and bothered: Caine is soon back at home tying up Taylor in bed while she bellows, "You woman-hater! You fascist swine!" But, when he moves to release her, she says "No! No! Don't untie me. I want it that way."

Inevitably, Caine finds Taylor with her wrists slashed in a tubful of blood and when she doesn't die, Taylor turns up the performing dail to "MAXIMUM," acting as if she's playing Martha in VIRGINIA WOOLF all over again (blissfully ignoring such details as the fact that this time she didn't have Mike Nichols -- or anyone else, apparently -- directing her in an Edward Albee prize winning play).

Taylor elicits from York, who is at her hospital bedside, a rollicking confession of a Youthful Lesbian Incident. With a nun, yet. "You know," vamps Taylor, "I could get used to having you as my personal slave." While Caine gets it on with his mousy secretary, York and Taylor (mercifully, mostly, off-camera) play slave and mistress games, only to be discovered by Caine. The love-'em-and-leave-'em Taylor leaves York a snivelling mass, Caine doubly cuckolded, declaring about York, "She sees beauty in everything -- especially sh-t!"

We couldn't put it better.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: great fun to watch
Comment: I cannot believe that the last review was 2003. Come on all you Elizabeth Taylor fans write a review. I am in the process of watching all of E.T. (she likes to be called this today) films and enjoyed this one enormously. I found myself laughing at many times at La Liz's gestures. She was hysterical at times and I do mean that in a good way. A roll of the eyes,a deepening of her voice an Irish accent was a great show of what she can do. Some people are born into this world to be an actress and she is one of them. Oh, and Michael Caine and Sussanah York were fine in their performance but at times low key compared to E.T.'s performance. So put the kids to bed, get comfortable on the couch and watch. You won't be sorry.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Taylor shines in comic role!
Comment: Set in the swinging London scene of the early 1970's, the last gasp of the hippie era clashes with the chic international jet set. The result is this triangular jewel of a movie. Robert Blakeley (Michael Cain) is married to the glamorous, manic and barren Zee (Elizabeth Taylor). Intricate games and a few threads of love hold the marriage together. Into the volatile mix comes Stella, a younger woman who is on the edge and ready for a little shove.
Michael Caine and Susannah York are great actors in any right. Mr. Caine particularly shines in this film. However in "X, Y and Zee" both actors are blown off the screen by an inspired comic performance by Elizabeth Taylor. Not often given the chance to play comedy she turns in a well-timed and poignantly funny performance in this Black Comedy of marriage, sexual confusion, and social boredom.
It is sad that Miss Taylor was mostly relegated to dramas and not allowed often enough to stretch her comic wings. You can see flashes of her comic abilities in such odd fare as "Boom", "Reflections In A Golden Eye" and "Hammersmith Is Out!" But in this film she soars as a woman of wit and warmth who will stop at nothing to come out on top.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Elizabeth Taylor's show all the way
Comment: "X, Y And Zee" has often been accused of being a rerun of Elizabeth Taylor's Oscar winning film "Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf", however while they both have a fiery leading female character the plots and characters overall are totally different. Like her or deplore her, Zee Blakeley played by Miss Taylor really did offer Elizabeth her best role in years. It shows equal elements of comedy, melodrama, tragedy and sympathy that Elizabeth handles very well.

The film is an unmistakeable icon of the 1970's lifestyle with loud music, dreadful clothes, long hair and over the top makeup. To enjoy the film you have to put your own set of beliefs and personal style on hold and just sit back for the ride. "X, Y And Zee" tells the story of the ongoing self destructive marriage of successful architect Robert Blakeley (Michael Caine) and his wife Zee who enjoy an affluent lifestyle and are part of the swinging cafe society of upper strata London. However their life is far from ideal in that they seem to enjoy testing the strength of their marriage through often quite savage mind games and personal baiting that in a way tends to keep the partnership exciting and unpredictable. Into their lives comes young dress designer Stella, a widow with two small boys who is instantly attracted to Robert and offers him a way out of the tiring merry go round of verbal sparring and violence that is the norm in his life with Zee. The film chronicles their growing love for each other and Zee's attempts to break up the relationship by fair means or foul. These involve her screaming abuse and emptying rubbish bins on their doorstep, to attempting suicide in a futile attempt to win Robert back. The story has a quite startling twist in its conclusion which I wont devulge here but it brings in a possible lesbian element to the story which is left up to the viewer to work out.

"X, Y And Zee" is an exhausting film to watch in some repects but it is very enjoyable and is totally dominated by Elizabeth Taylor's performance as Zee. Michael Caine and Sussanah York, both fine performers with many great roles ahead of them are totally sidelined by Elizabeth's flamboyant playing here. Zee with her loud music, garish and trendy clothing, over the top makeup and tendency to dramatise everything makes the other performers pale into insignificance. Zee however is not a total monster and at times Elizabeth is able to breath extra dimension into her character to reveal that behind the confident facade and biting humour is a woman scared about what will happen and about being left alone. I always like to compare this 1972 effort by Elizabeth with her effort in following year in 1973 "Ash Wednesday" where she plays a character a million light years away from Zee's personality. It really reveals Elizabeth's often underestimated range as an actress.

Despite its dated 70's dreck as one critic called it, "X, Y And Zee" is a fascinating look into another time. The film also has a great performance from veteran actress Margaret Leighton who I always loved as the other woman in Noel Coward's "The Astonished Heart". Here she plays eccentric and bohemian society hostess Gladys complete with flowing gowns,frizzy wig and spangled eye glasses who is a friend of the Blakeley's and is responsible for introducing Stella to Robert. Some of her dialogue is priceless and she almost succeeds in moving the attention off Zee on occasion, in particular the big party scene at the beginning.

Directed with gusto by Brian Hutton, who also guided Elizabeth Taylor through the very interesting but unfortunately seldom seen thriller "Night Watch", it really is a celebration of the times and might not be a film nowadays to everyone's taste. I enjoy it for its look at 1970's mores and for the wonderful full blooded performance by Elizabeth Taylor in the central role. She works very well with Michael Caine and it's a pity the two never teamed up again in a movie. So get out your platform shoes, flares, and loud music and sit back for a dip into the swinging 1970's London lifestyle.


Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Hysterically Camp Liz Taylor at her Best
Comment: Yet again Amazon.com proves it is 'King of the Off-Beat'.

This movie is campy fun from beginning to end.

Michael and Liz are trapped in a sadisistic love-hate marriage until one day they set off for a typical party of the 'Swinging London Scene', where Michael sees and falls for the ever-so-sensitive Susannah York...pale,blonde,widowed single mother of twins. Liz will have none of it & with the help of her gay pal tries every trick in the book to win him back...suicide attempts,lesbian seduction...she'll stop at nothing.

Liz is at her absolute hysterical best,even the dreary Michael Caine can't put out her light.



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