Years later, Demara (Tony Curtis) encounters a major career obstacle when his application for Officer Candidate School is rejected by the Army because he lacks a high school diploma. After mulling over the situation, he forges college transcripts and is accepted as an officer by the Marines. That plan goes quickly awry, though, when he learns he must undergo a security check by the F.B.I.
Tony Curtis and Raymond Massey. |
Incredibly, The Great Impostor is based on the life the Ferdinand Waldo Demara, Jr. While some of the film is fictitious, the real Demara did pose as a monk, assistant prison warden, naval surgeon, and teacher. His life was the subject of the biography The Great Impostor, written by Robert Crichton.
Tony Curtis with Sue Ane Langdon. |
There are couple of serious segments, such as when Demara tries to reach a hardened convict and later performs emergency surgeries on 18 Korean combat casualties. In these scenes, it becomes apparent that Demara wants to do good--even if his actions put innocent people at life-threatening risks. (Imagine being operated on by a man with no medical experience whatsoever!)
Tony Curtis's fans are sure to enjoy The Great Impostor. Coming off the most impressive stretch of his career (1957-60), the actor seems to be having fun and lays on the charm. He is surrounded by a bunch of veteran actors (Edmond O'Brien, Raymond Massey, Arthur O'Connell) and attractive co-stars (Joan Blackman and Sue Ane Langdon, who steals all her scenes). However, in the end, it's just a shame that Tony didn't get the opportunity to play Demara in a more serious film, something along the lines of
I haven't seen this in years. The idea of Demara fascinated my father so we would catch this movie whenever it was aired.
ReplyDeleteI saw The Great Impostor on late-night TV, not long after having read Robert Crichton's book, which had come out in paperback about a year before.
ReplyDeleteActually, this was a reissue, combining the original book with a followup that Crichton had written a couple of years afterward, in which he recounted meeting Demara, and taking an extended road trip with him to research his story.
The Rascal And The Road kind of disappeared upon publication; the paperback combo with the first book came about after Crichton had a bestseller with The Secret Of Santa Vittoria (but that's another story ...).
Watching the movie, I noted that while it generally stuck to Crichton's book, there were some continuity tweaks, usually involving the sequence of events (Demara was a Canadian Navy surgeon before he was a Texas prison warden, among other things).
There was also the matter of casting: the real Fred Demara looked nothing like Tony Curtis.
If you'd like to see the real Demara, check out The Hypnotic Eye, a chiller flick starring Jacques Bergerac from '58.
Fred Demara has a brief supporting part as a doctor who treats a victim of acid burns (you can't miss him; he's a fat guy with a crewcut and a major Boston accent(" Wait for the paraffin to haahden.")).
Hey, it's the movies ...
Thanks for the additional interesting info, Mike!
DeleteLeawo Video downloader could help you download and enjoy the good film: https://www.leawo.org/tutorial/how-to-download-amazon-prime-movies-1373.html
ReplyDeleteAaaah.... brings back memories of seeing this film after school on "Million Dollar Movie" on WOR-TV Ch.9.. TCM should pick up the mantle
ReplyDeleteDemara's life certainly sounds similar to Frank Abignale's, whose memoirs are fascinating - as is the film, as you pointed out. I'd not heard of the Demara movie or the biography, but I'm looking forward to both, if I can find 'em.
ReplyDeleteI really hate to be a nitpicker, but I'm just back from a quick search of your archives:
ReplyDeleteEDMOND O'BRIEN.
With an O, not a U.
I know that it shouldn't drive me up a wall, but it always has.
Sorry about that ..
Thanks, Mike. Whew, I think I fixed them all!
Delete