OUT OF THE
BLUE
Colin Firth Roles Page
by
Lisa W
Colin as
Alan
FILM FACTS
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PLOT SUMMARY
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GENERAL COMMENTS
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COLIN'S COMIC SKILLS
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TRIVIA
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FAVOURITE QUOTES
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FURTHER DISCUSSION
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WEB LINKS
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CREDITS
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BACK
TO MAIN ROLES PAGE
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FILM FACTS
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- Colin's
character: Alan (the
principal character)
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- Other
cast: John Lynch (Rudy),
Cathy Tyson (Julie), Catherine Zeta Jones (Chirsty), Dexter Fletcher (Anthony), Wendy Morgan (Liz),
Jonathan Kydd (Neil),
Dominique Atkins (Angelique), Bill Cashmore (Phil),
Tina Deen (Amanda), Daniel Strauss (Chef)
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PLOT SUMMARY
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Out of the
Blue is a satire which lays bare
the absurd pretensions of a video maker's world. Colin plays Alan, an
aspiring director, who apparently cannot separate art from life, with
unfortunate consequences. His claim to fame: "he invented the title
sequence for the trendiest arts review programme ever invented". From
its bright and breezy Roy Lichtenstein-inspired pop cartoon title
credits to its quieter conclusion (to the strains of "Blue Moon"),
this made-for-TV drama is lively and entertaining.
Much of the action takes
place in a warehouse/studio which is also Alan's flat. The play opens
on a phone conversation in which Alan, observed by his easy-going art
director Rudy, is attempting to do some wheeler-dealing, to get
financial backing for his latest pop video, which he claims he is
doing simply for "love and art". If we were in any doubt that this is
a comedy, confirmation comes quickly when Alan casually lists the
'one or two little things' he needs to get going on his project,
starting with a camera. His film of Angelique singing is a pastiche
of arty video music clips - all flying feathers and sticky red paint
against a white backdrop. As Rudy explains very clearly to Chirsty,
"he's a film director - he talks shit sometimes. It comes with the
territory".
A keynote for the story to
follow takes place during an inebriated conversation in a cafe near
the start of the play:
ALAN: It's to
do with age maybe. There's a certain time when everything is new and
rich and exciting, and yet people - you just - and people - uh - feel
things more. You live more fully because you just - do things. For no
reason. Big things - happen to them. They feel big things. Those are
the sorts of moments I want for this. They're sort of luminous. They
show up on film.
RUDY: They don't show up on
film. They only happen on film. They don't happen in life. You can
make them happen. You can make anything happen with that editing
machine of yours. Films are easy. Christ, this is life here.
ALAN: No they do. They
happen when you're that age. People feel big things. Big things
happen.
And yet when a
'real' event occurs in the cafe - Rudy and Julie have a public fight
in which they throw food and drink all over each other - Alan looks
away, because this is too real and 'unartistic' for him.
Alan first sees Chirsty
when she turns up to quietly watch the filming - and significantly,
he first views her through the camera lens. Already, his view of her
is coloured by the image she creates. He meets her when a
recalcitrant mouse refuses to come out of its box and be filmed, and
he is immediately charmed by her beauty, youth and ingenuous outlook
on life. He asks if he might film her for a video title
sequence.
Colin plays Alan as a man
whose mind runs ahead of his mouth's ability to keep up. He is
sometimes almost inarticulate, except when discussing video and film
images. We soon learn that life experience is something he sees only
in terms of its possibilities as art - he translates everything into
camera images, and editing possibilities:
It's like
magic. Just these buttons, the whole world's changed. I love it. I
love the way you can control everything. Nice if you could do it in
life. Life's a bit more tricky.
Immediately, he tries to
take control of life by reshaping events - he spins different stories
to Chirsty about how Rudy happened to lose the top of his index
finger. When she drops off to sleep on his bed, he secretly films
her, and that sense of voyeurism becomes the keynote to their
relationship. When they have what Chirsty sees as a romantic day out,
Alan sees it as a photo opportunity. He manipulates the discovery of
a message in a bottle, to see how she will respond to it, and seduces
her with romantic words that sound like he got them from a
movie.
Even the audience is
subject to Alan's manipulations - in one scene, Chirsty and Alan
appear to be driving at night in the rain. But as the scene
progresses, we learn that it is faked, with a stationary car set in
Alan's studio, and sound and lighting effects.
As the story progresses,
Chirsty learns the truth about Alan's manipulations, and ultimately
she teaches him a lesson in real life.
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GENERAL
COMMENTS
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After the
disappointment of Valmont, Colin appears to have retreated for a while to the
safety of television, theatre and relatively small film projects.
Out of the
Blue is one of a
number of projects he has made for BBC TV. As he said at the BBC 60th
Anniversary Awards ceremony in 1996 (where he won as 'Most
Popular Male Actor'), BBC TV has "provided me with some of the
greatest satisfaction I've ever had in terms of work."
Out of the Blue
remains for me an
utterly charming if a minor work. In this play, Colin gives us a
young man who is completely driven by ambition and "art", completely
self-centred, unable to come up with an original thought, but always
re-working what others say, and very funny. This character is played
for humour from start to finish. I heartily recommend it - there are
some first rate actors in it, and it is a terrific little satire,
held together by Colin. He has no fear of playing a character who
loses his dignity (one of the core elements of comedy) - for example,
the tiny sequence near the start when Colin (as Alan, the "arty"
video clip director) calls for a retake of part of a song, and then
stands there with the sound guy trying to identify the exact part of
the song he wants to go from (they are both quite wonderfully foolish
here).
If you haven't seen
Out of the
Blue yet, seek it
out. Yes, it's a minor work, but it has many charms, not the least of
which is Colin being utterly charming, wilful, self-centred,
'artistic', unable to express himself except through plagiarising the
words of others, the object of humour, and very sexy indeed.
I always enjoy going back
to this play - proof that Colin can do self-deprecating comedy really
well. Also, his eyelashes are extraordinary - watch out for them in
the final shots.
Out of the
Blue features
some of Colin's best kissing scenes - a lust-filled encounter
across a restaurant table with Julie (Cathy Tyson), and several
sexy and romantic sequences with Catherine Zeta Jones.
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COLIN'S COMIC
SKILLS
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I believe Colin
is highly adept at playing comedy, though he plays 'truthful' comedy,
which is much harder than mugging for the camera, etc. He plays
comedy through characters which are perfectly observed, both for
their foibles and human weaknesses as well as for their strengths. He
plays flawed human beings. He chooses roles of this kind, and he is
not afraid to be the object of humour. Other leading examples are his
roles in The
Advocate,
Fever
Pitch and
Pride and
Prejudice.
In my opinion,
Out of the
Blue is most
definitely a comedy. It has all the hallmarks thereof. It is a
parody/satire in which all the characters, however subtly they may be
represented, are targets of one kind or another. Colin proves himself
a very able comedian in this lightweight but entertaining piece. He
gets the 'arty' director down pat: "Okay, don't forget your face,
we're coming in tight - expressions and everything". As a comic
creation, Alan is very, very funny without once being played for
laughs.
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TRIVIA
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An
extraordinary number of Colin's fellow cast members in
Out of the
Blue have achieved
significant success as actors on the big screen:
- Welsh-born Catherine
Zeta Jones is
currently burning up the big screen as the heroine of
The Mask of Zorro
(1998), opposite
Antonio Banderas. She has another CF link - she appeared in
The
Phantom (1996),
which starred Billy
Zane.
- Irish actor
John
Lynch
(The Secret of
Roan Inish,
In the Name of
the Father. . .)
plays another of his whiny (but cute) roles. The most recent is
Sliding Doors
with
Gwyneth
Paltrow, in
which he plays a character something akin to Colin's role in
Out of
the
Blue.
- Dexter
Fletcher has
quietly worked extensively in British film and TV - most recently
in the hit movie
Lock, Stock & Two Smoking Barrels (1998)
- Cathy
Tyson has
appeared in a number of successful films, including Mona Lisa (1986) opposite Bob Hoskins
and Priest
(1994) opposite
Linus
Roache,
Tom
Wilkinson and
Robert
Carlyle. She is
also one of the principal characters of a recent Granada TV mini
series, Band of
Gold (1995) and
its sequel,
Gold. And just
to make that series of CF links even more complex, Gold co-stars Mark
Strong, Colin's
co-star in Fever
Pitch.
- Mention of Gwynneth
Paltrow brings up yet another link - she stars in the Oscar winning
movie Shakespeare
in Love, in
which Colin plays her husband, the Earl of Wessex.
- A search of the
Internet Movie Database reveals no fewer than eight films or TV
programmes with the title Out of the Blue, the earliest dating from 1931.
- One of these
(Out of the
Blue, 1995) is a
BBC TV series which follows the personal and professional lives of
the detectives at an English police station. Featured as Frankie
Drinkall, one of the principal characters, is the wonderful
Scottish actor John
Hannah of
Four Weddings
and
a
Funeral (1994),
who has another link to Colin. He starred with John Lynch and
Gwynneth Paltrow in Sliding Doors (1998).
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FAVOURITE QUOTES
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In the
rowing boat:
On the
island:
CHIRSTY: "I can do magic. I
can blow out the moon! Watch! "
Island seduction scene
(shades of Valmont):
ALAN: You know, we could do
anything we ever wanted here. Our own little island. Anything. We
could take off our clothes and lie in the rain. We could listen to
the sound of the leaves, moonbathing in the quiet dark. Warm foggy
blanket. And your eyes will be like cobwebs after a shower. And
your breath will be as soft as one o'clock on a dandelion
clock.
CHIRSTY: What was that
noise?
ALAN: It was just the
ducks talking to themselves under their wings in their
sleep.
CHIRSTY: No,
really.
ALAN: I dunno. It's -
something somewhere. Maybe an animal. You really are afraid of the
dark, aren't you.
CHIRSTY: Hold my hand.
It's best.
ALAN: You know Chirsty,
I just want you to know that I think it's a real thing happening
here, you and me. That it's not just - that I really respect you.
CHIRSTY: Stop
talking.
Two mouse
scenes:
(1) ALAN: Let
me through, I speak fluent mouse.
(2) Alan is trying to speak to Chirsty on the phone,
while the white mouse runs over his neck and shoulder:
ALAN: Tell her if I don't
here from her the mouse gets it. She can expect a tail in the
post. [Hangs up.
To mouse.] I
didn't mean it. Go on, say it. Do I have to screw up every chance
I get? Hmmm?
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FURTHER DISCUSSION POINTS
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Alan's view of the worldAlan lives in a
fantasy world, literally - a studio that becomes anything he wants to
create. He is the ultimate child of the world of image and surfaces.
He sleeps, eats, breathes celluloid/videotape. His house is full of
giant props (fake ice cream cones), tiny homes (for the mouse), fake
car on a fake street, and so on. Even his bed converts to anything he
likes at the touch of a button, via slides and projections.
The first time he looks at
Chirsty is through the lens of the camera. And the best of their
relationship is in that form. Image, surface. What can be cut and
remade? Can he have a real relationship with a flesh and blood woman?
When she falls asleep on his bed (thus ruining his first attempt at
remaking the story of Rudy's finger), his filming of her sleeping
form is very sexual, invasive, reprehensible. It's the nearest he
gets to rape. He even breathes heavily, as he does when he is aroused
elsewhere. When I look at this scene coldly, I can best understand
Chirsty's negative response to it. He really has taken something from
her.
Alan plays with romance,
but it isn't him - he's really a cynic who would like to steal back
that innocent view of the world that Chirsty has. She engages
directly with the world around her, takes pleasure in her body and in
natural things (blowing out the moon). He is always one step removed,
planning, shaping, manipulating her response. He orchestrates the
message in the bottle. He gets his kicks not from being with Chirsty,
but from how he can remake the event on the editing machine. It's
better than sex. And it gives him all the control. "I love the way
you can control everything. Be nice if we could do it with life, but
life's a bit more tricky". Another telling moment occurs after
Chirsty walks out when Rudy tells her how his finger was really lost.
Alan says. "Cut. Can we go again on that one? Little bit of a hair in
the gate."
Alan's lack of interior life
He is often surprisingly
inarticulate. It's endearing, and funny, and satiric, that he
expresses himself, when unprepared, in cliche and imprecise
ramblings. "Now don't forget - we're coming in tight on your face, so
expressions and everything" is not the most useful directorial
comment. But he gets away with it. Or when he tries to describe
Chirsty to Rudy: "You haven't met her - she's - she's - wonderful -
she's so - she's just so -" He hasn't got a handle on how best to
reconstruct it yet! He takes things people say to him, borrows them,
stores them up, replays them, just like the video clips he is
endlessly working on. He reworks images, most notably the loss of
Rudy's finger. He tries out other realities and points of view,
because he is rudderless himself.
Chirsty doesn't play the
games he is familiar and comfortable with. She believes with all her
heart and soul, responds directly to experience, cries, laughs,
engages with her emotions. He doesn't know how to deal with that.
"Everything's so simple with her, nothing gets in the way". But does
he really want that? And if he learns anything by the end, it is that
he can't expect to forge a real relationship on the basis that he
conducts every part of his life - one step removed from reality. When
they are on the island, he says some beautiful seductive things, but
I'll bet you he is quoting something he has heard and seen (and
probably used to good effect) before. He is playacting the romantic
lead - it's in his voice. ". . . We can go bathing in the quiet dark
. . . warm foggy blanket. And your eyes will be like cobwebs after a
shower, and your breath will be as soft as one o'clock on a dandelion
clock." And it works, but she hears a noise, and when he is
confronted with her fear, which breaks the seductive routine, he can
only come up with "Oh I dunno, it's an animal of some kind". He
really is a calculating little devil, bankrupt of genuine
responses.
Rudy's view
Chirsty and the mouse are
closely related. Rudy draws the analogy very specifically for us. But
Chirsty ends up being the winner, the strong one. As the mouse is,
come to think of it, since it is the mouse 'country & western'
footage that is bought by the film company. An irony for Alan, since
it is stated that they can do what they like with the footage, and he
will lose his artistic control over it, just as he is about to do
with Chirsty. There's a cute scene with Alan and the mouse, on the
phone to Chirsty's flatmate. He can't have her, but he can be
'honest' about the mouse. Interesting that he reconstructs things
even here - we clearly hear the flatmate hanging up, and following
that, he says, "Tell her if I don't hear from her, the mouse gets
it". Playacting. Remaking the scene the way it should have
gone.
Why does Rudy react so
strongly to learning that Alan has been spinning yarns about his
finger? because it is a real part of him that he has lost. Something
he can't ignore, a real event, a real loss. "I wish you'd stop using
my life as your own personal bloody chat up line . . . you click your
fingers, I lose mine . . This is planet earth calling Alan".
Alan as voyeur
Personally, I loved the
film of Chirsty cut to "Blue Moon". Very artistic. But it shows Alan
as the ultimate voyeur on life, not a participant. A typical example
of the male gaze behind the camera lens, with the female as object of
the gaze, objectifed as a form to be admired, not a flesh and blood
woman to be loved. He has to manufacture feeling. On the other hand,
Chirstie rises above it, is natural. She has a love affair with the
camera lens. It's a significant moment when Alan consigns that tape
to the rubbish bin. What an action! But it's too late - the damage is
done.
So what is good about Alan?What is endearing about
Alan for me is that he really isn't a bad person - he just can't tell
the difference any more between truth and a better 'take' on truth.
The word 'lies' isn't in his vocabulary. He is actually very good
natured, as the scenes with Rudy indicate, in which Rudy laughs at
him, knocks him off his chair, tells him he shouldn't be chasing
after Chirsty, etc.Alan is adorable, despite
being shallow, self-centred and insensitive. And cute as a button,
self-deprecating and quite sexy too, in a way that Colin doesn't
often play. Plus, in my (possibly biassed) opinion, he doesn't have a single bad angle or bad hair day
in Out of the Blue!
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WEB LINKS
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BACK
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VISIT MY OVERVIEW OF
COLIN'S CAREER
& MY
WEB PAGE
CHECK THE INTERNET
MOVIE DATA BASE (Imdb) LISTING FOR OUT OF THE BLUE
VISIT THE ORIGINAL
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OF FIRTH WEBSITE,
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Visit Lisbeth's Out of the Blue web page
VISIT JANE'S
ARTICLES PAGE
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CREDITS
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This page was
written & assembled by Lisa W. Send me an
email
It is part of a Firthland project on the films of
Colin Firth.
Snappy photo
credits:
SHARON:
Visit
Sharon's Out of the Blue snappies page
From the end
credits of Out of the Blue - Alan watches Chirsty walk
away.
This page last
updated 18 April 1999.
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