Guy Hamilton’s A Touch of Larceny (1960)

Guy Hamilton’s A Touch of Larceny (1960)

Adapting Andrew Garve’s The Megstone Plot and retitling it A Touch of Larceny, Hamilton’s screenplay hints he’s radically departed from the novel. Instead of Garve’s somber noir, Hamilton’s is a comedy. Easton’s ruse is to cast the...
Terrance Young’s From Russia with Love (1963)

Terrance Young’s From Russia with Love (1963)

There is a picnic in Terrence Young’s From Russia With Love (1963) but not in Ian Fleming’s novel. It’s inconsequential, shaken, but not stirred.   See Terrence Young. From Russia With Love (1963). The screenplay by Richard Malbaum and Joanna Harwood is based on Ian...
Richard Lester’s Help! (1965)

Richard Lester’s Help! (1965)

Help! It is Richard Lester’s romp with The Beatles. Among the many scenes is a brief picnic in the snow that sets up singing “Ticket to Ride.” The song and the picnic are completely disconnected. And there’s no picnic basket when the quartet sits at a red and white...
Robert Wise’s The Sound of Music (1965)

Robert Wise’s The Sound of Music (1965)

Wise’s The Sound of Music picnic is among film’s happiest and most exuberant picnics. It’s his creation because Rodgers and Hammerstein’s musical does not have  picnic. Maria and the children sing “Do-Re-Mi” while marching in the...
Ronald Neame’s The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1969)

Ronald Neame’s The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1969)

According to Muriel Spark’s novel, Miss Brodie sometimes took the girls into the Marcia Blaine school garden for a lesson. But it was a lesson and not a picnic. Neame’s school picnic of Brodie with her girls is his invention. For the film, Neame and...
Joseph Strick’s Ulysses (1967)

Joseph Strick’s Ulysses (1967)

On June 16, 1906, unknown to each other, Leopold Bloom and Molly Bloom remember the picnic on the Hill of Howth when they agreed to marry sixteen years earlier. a popular park outside of Dublin. As part of her soliloquy in which Molly recalls the day, she remembers...
Robert Ellis Miller’s The Heart is a Lonely Hunter  (1968)

Robert Ellis Miller’s The Heart is a Lonely Hunter (1968)

Miller’s picnic captures an awkward, passionless-first-time-sexual encounter between Mick and Harry in Carson McCullers’s The Heart is a Lonely Hunter. According to McCullers, Mick and Harry hardly speak, and the narrative breaks off before they have sex....
Richard Attenborough’s Oh! What a Lovely War (1969)

Richard Attenborough’s Oh! What a Lovely War (1969)

Attenborough’s Oh! What a Lovely War keeps the essential anti-war satire originally envisioned by Charles Chiltern and Joan Littlewood. New and effective, however, is the film’s final sequence, which begins as a picnic on the grass and ends with a...
Claude Chabrol’s Le boucher (1970)

Claude Chabrol’s Le boucher (1970)

It’s an ordinary school trip when Hélène guides her class to Cougnac Caves above the Dordogne River. The cave paintings are thirty-thousand-year-old, but lunch is more important for the children. They chatter when Hélène has the children safely settled on the...
Richard Lester’s The Three Musketeers (1973)

Richard Lester’s The Three Musketeers (1973)

Lester’s The Three Musketeers  is a comic adaptation of Alexandre Duma’s novel. The halte de chasse on the royal hunt portrays the lavish preparation for an outdoor meal fit for a king.   Louis XIV spent many hours hunting, and there is a passing...