On a Clear Day You Can See Forever (1970) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
63 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
5/10
On a clear day.... on a cleeeeeeeear daaaaay!
funkyfry16 September 2009
Warning: Spoilers
In some ways I felt like I enjoyed this movie in spite of myself, or itself. Equally drawn to the film by my admiration of the director Vincente Minnelli and repulsed by its leading lady Barbara Streisand, I find that in the end neither artist contributed his/her best or worst work, and that the whole package itself is mostly lacking in the necessary charm. Yves Montand presents far more problems than Miss Streisand, and Minnelli trips over his own staging to try to make the modern sequences all too modern and the historical sequences all too romantic.

Streisand plays Daisy Gamble (a name only a musical comedy doyenne could possibly be saddled with), a young would-be wife who comes to a college psychologist (Montand) in hopes that he can use hypnotism to cure her excessive smoking habit. Instead, the good professor uncovers a whole past life involving a seductress called Melinda, a persona whom the professor promptly and unconvincingly falls in love with.

At first it seems refreshing to have Minnelli directing this movie, with his gloriously excessive bouquets conjured up to bring some portion of artificial magic to Daisy's wistful rooftop escape. His style quickly becomes overbearing, especially since he seems to have little taste or comfort with the modern settings and styles he's using. His use of the zoom lens, the only time I can remember him using it, is garish and obvious. An ascending helicopter shot of Montand warbling atop the Pan Am building only manages to distance us from any possible emotion that could be squeezed from his continental charmer. Only in the historical sequences with their incredibly elaborate costuming and real location shots of the Brighton pavilion, does Minnelli momentarily come alive, to live again in the romantic past for one more brief moment.

Montand is the glaring problem with the film. His character is completely unappealing and the way he plays him makes it much worse. The more we see of him, the less we appreciate him or can understand why Gamble is becoming infatuated with him. Likewise it's hard to see why Montand is becoming fascinated with the past life Streisand. His whole scheme is very underhanded, since he hasn't told Gamble that he's been recording all her sessions or that he's investigating a past life at all. His motives are supposed to be cleared up thanks to a series of distracting conferences with a professorial colleague oddly played by tough-guy character actor Simon Oakland.

When the "good professor" becomes desperate to get Gamble back on his couch and begins sending her psychic messages to "Come Back to Me", the result is less romantic than stalking. Psychic stalking -- it's something that belongs more in a Phillip Dick nightmare sci-fi story than a musical comedy. It's hard to not get a really bad taste in your mouth, especially since the film-makers have already provided a suitably obvious and suitably compatible well, uh, suitor in the person of Daisy's ex-brother-in-law played by Jack Nicholson. We first see Jacko on the roof brazenly strumming his sitar, as if he walked out of the J.C. Penney catalog of hippies. Made-to-order hippy Jack Nicholson apparently got a solo but it was cut when a decision was made not to roadshow this film. Thus even the film's relatively satisfying conclusion seems to be drawn in abstract lines, thanks to Minnelli's liberal style of shooting and the subsequent edits that cripple the film's continuity.

As for Miss Streisand herself, she does her best to play the character in a rather sophisticated way but is often undone by her own energy. I didn't feel that she carried off the multiple characters particularly well, and in her solo numbers she heaves and bellows through without any hint of real human vulnerability. She has some good moments as Daisy, but in the Melinda personality she's outclassed by her own headgear.

The film itself doesn't really ever rise to the level of its ambition. What should be a fun evening of musical comedy becomes a mere distraction. The story and its characters never really become anything human or convincing. A stifling aura of artfulness prevents the film from taking off -- it's as if all the performers and the director are standing a few feet away from the film they're making. Montand barely seems to know what movie he's in. Lerner and Lane's songs are ponderous and barely memorable. The story itself seems to revisit Lerner's past artistic life, with its Henry Higginsesque professor remonstrating himself and mistreating his naive leading lady in a way that strangely manages to evoke absolutely none of the charm that lifted his Fair Lady above the fray. The film is saved from outright artistic failure thanks to a few imaginative sequences staged by Minnelli, Nicholson's goofy and fun cameo, and a few moments of inspired clowning by Streisand.
8 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Kind of fun...and kind of dumb as well.
planktonrules31 March 2021
After starring in "Funny Girl" and winning the Oscar for Best Actress, Barbra Streisand was on top of the movie world. However, in hindsight you wonder how such a talented lady would choose "On a Clear Day". Didn't she deserve better? Didn't she know that the script was, to put it nicely, a bit dopey? Regardless, the film was a clear step back for the singer/actress.

The story is about a kooky lady and her apparent past life back in early 19th century England. The story begins with Daisy (Streisand) going to college and taking tons of different classes and lectures. In one of them, the professor is demonstrating hypnosis...when Daisy, in the audience, becomes hypnotized! But her hypnosis turns out to be really strange, as it's a past life regression and much of the story bounces between the present and Regency Britain. And, in the process of learning more about herself, Daisy starts to realize her life with her uptight boyfriend isn't so hot...and the Professor (Yves Montand) is

First, there is much to like. Streisand's kooky performance is a bit endearing and the music was really lovely...which you'd expect. As far as what I didn't like is that the film is clearly personality driven...to the point where you wish they'd focus LESS on how absolutely magnificent Streisand's alternate personality is. It was really obvious when it came to the costuming, where EVERYONE in Regency Britain is dressed for the period but Streisand clearly is not....and wears modern fashions which seem completely out of place and silly. Overall, a modestly enjoyable vanity project that is enjoyable to watch and utterly silly at the same time.
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
A Lavish Musical Spectacle that Fails to Sustain Interest to the End
Isaac585522 December 2008
The final musical directed by the legendary Vicnente Minnelli, ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN SEE FOREVER, is the expensive and lumbering 1970 film version of the 1965 Broadway musical, revamped to fit the talents of Barbra Streisand. In her third feature film, Barbra plays Daisy Gamble, a college student who we learn has ESP and the ability to make plants grow VERY quickly, who seeks the help of a college professor, Dr. Marc Chabot (Yves Montand) in helping her to quit smoking via hypnosis. While under hypnosis, Chabot discovers Daisy had a previous life as a 17th century temptress named Melinda Tentrees, who he falls in love with, but has to deal with the dull and annoying Daisy to get to the ever fascinating Melinda. This inventive Broadway musical has been dramatically re-tooled into a Barbra vehicle and despite Minnelli's still evident eye for color and cinema landscape, this long lumbering film fails to sustain interest until the end, despite some lovely scenery and breathtaking period costuming by the legendary Cecil Beaton. Streisand and Montand have no chemistry whatsoever and Bob Newhart, Simon Oakland, Larry Blyden, Elain Giftos, and Jack Nicholson (!?!)are wasted in pointless supporting roles. The severely tampered with Burton Lane-EY Harbug score includes "Hurry, It's Lovely Up Here", "What did I have that I Don't Have?", "Melinda", "Go to Sleep", and "Come Back to Me." For hard-core Streisand addicts only.
5 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
A Wonderful, Old Fashion, Musical
macheath4828 May 2004
On A Clear Day came at the end of the Movie Musical Cycle that started strong from MY FAIR LADY. Once the market became supersaturated with musicals (Half A Sixpence, Dr. Doolittle), the beauty of the movie musical wore off.

On A Clear Day started life as the next go-round for Richard Rodgers. After he retired working with Oscar Hammerstein, he partnered with Alan Lerner and they started to write this musical. Rodgers backed out of the project but the show made it to Broadway with Barbara Harris in the lead. It was respectfully received but never did blockbuster business. In fact, if it weren't for the song "What Did I Have?" it would almost be forgotten.

Enter Vincente Minelli and Ms. Streisand. Together, they took the idea and ran with it until it became a big, bright, lovely movie. The old songs (the title song and "What Did I Have") are rendered priceless by Barbra who sings them as emotional tour-de-forces. The new songs (a cute duet "Go To Sleep" and "Love With All The Trimmings") are wonderful. In fact, the latter was filmed a la Tom Jones. In short, everything about the film worked.

Originally it was three hours long and intended as a road show production (tickets ordered in advance; two shows a day). Paramount went for the fast buck and they trimmed it to under two hours. Yes, what is left is priceless and wonderful but I wish they would release the Director's Cut of this musical. If what we see today is still excellent, I can't help but wonder about what they took out.
42 out of 49 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
The film lacked sparkle
raymond-1061 March 2010
Warning: Spoilers
First of all I'd like to say I'm no great lover of Barbara Steisand's work so I even surprised myself that I would want to view another of her films. Perhaps I was charmed by the title "On a clear day you can see forever" which has a certain magic about it.

I once knew a gardener who talked to his plants and we have all had odd experiences concerning a telephone call or a knock at the door or meeting a long lost friend. i suppose you would call them premonitions and quite unexplainable. So Daisy Gamble with her cigarette addiction as well was not so different from the rest of us and she had enough sense to seek psychiatric help.

Flashbacks in the film added a welcome degree of variety because for me the film lacked sparkle and at times was on the edge of boredom. At times I was wondering how much longer the film would continue because it was beginning to feel rather drawn out. In a really good film you are craving for more.

I think the songs were a really great let down. None of them was particularly catchy, a tune that would stay with you for the next few days or so. I can understand why the original Broadway production was not an outstanding success.

The actors in this film seemed somewhat tired and disinterested. As a comparison check out once more "Hello Dolly" with an enthusiastic cast and great vocals and you'll see what i mean.
6 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Barbra Streisand gets to pull a Shirley MacLaine!
mark.waltz18 January 2014
Warning: Spoilers
When Broadway and Hollywood's "Funny Girl" takes on a character who seems to have more lives than Disney's "Thomasina", you know she's going to not only sing out a storm but wear some delightfully lavish costumes, both period and modern. Ms. Streisand didn't just get another big vehicle to show off her enormous talents, but a legendary director who knew a thing or two about movie detail: Vincent Minnelli. Having just completed work with Minnelli's old MGM pal Gene Kelly on "Hello, Dolly!", Barbra added, for her third movie, another movie version of a Broadway musical to her film credit, and if "On a Clear Day" wasn't the smash of the first two on stage, it was certainly a vehicle worthy of her talents.

"Climb up, geraniums!", she sings gregariously as she dances her way through a flower garden. Is this a music video, movie musical or nature show?, you may wonder as the film begins, but after hearing her voice initially, you wait for the big star entrance, and boy, is she given one. She's on her way to Columbia University to see psychiatrist Yves Montand in an effort to stop smoking, and with their meeting, more is revealed than meets the Marlbrough. Take us back to Charles Dickens era England where we discover one of Streisand's previous lives: She's a female Oliver Twist, brought up in an work house (even seen eating gruel) yet ends up the wife of a wealthy aristocrat clad in a gorgeous beaded and hooded gown which looks like something out of "Metropolis". "Love With All the Trimmings!", she sings over the action as her manicured goddess makes her lust towards a handsome visitor obvious to everybody but the cuckolded husband.

Back in 1970 Manhattan, Streisand and psychiatrist Montand have instant rapport, even though Montand is more interested in Streisand's past lives than helping her quit smoking. This leads to the amusing revelation of his true intentions, and Montand is faced with possibly losing his greatest psychiatric discovery once Streisand learns the truth. "Come Back to Me!", he sings from his office window, and this, combined with the fact that she has gained E.S.P. from her meetings with him, makes her unable to sleep. One of the people she encounters during this song is the adorable Judith Lowry ("Phyllis's" Mother Dexter) who must mouth Montand's words to her while Streisand desperately tries to get Montand's voice out of her head.

There's plenty of comedy here, but the romantic chemistry between Streisand and Montand is nill. For the most part, he's a handsome but dull partner, giving the impression that perhaps somebody like Louis Jourdan would have been better in this role, ironic considering that Jourdan originated that part before the original show went to Broadway. Other cast members are wasted, and they include a young Jack Nicholson and a pre-TV Bob Newhart. Amusing with her few scenes is "Bewitched's" Mabel Albertson as Montand's secretary, quite ironic considering her larger part in Streisand's comic masterpiece "What's Up, Doc?".

While not perfect, and certainly nowhere near faithful to the original Broadway play (it is certainly a lot better than a recent Broadway revisal), this is at its best when Streisand is either singing, clowning, or clad in outrageous outfits. Minnelli shows he still has a flair for great detail, and even with this not being the smash he had hoped it would be (or the unfortunate misfire of his badly edited "A Matter of Time"), he shows that the magic of his triumphant MGM years had not wained.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
a brave Broadway show, a brave movie
petersj-26 September 2008
You could be forgiven at first thinking this is a bit like My Fair Lady. The flower lady, the professor having a kind of relationship with a quirky young lady and a few lovely songs. But suddenly we get into reincarnation, psychosis and hypnosis. It is very much the thinking persons musical and it was not a great success on Broadway mainly because it was way ahead of its time. Its time for a revival and to look at this again as it is a masterpiece. It was equally brave for Hollywood to adapt a complex failure like this to the screen. Cecil Beatons costumes are pure art. Not much reality but beautiful to look at. Matching nighties with the matching pillows and sheets. Costumes even blend into the wall paper. A visual feast! Barbra of course s in fine form. At the peak of her great career she pulls out all the stops. She delivers a kookie central character that she always does better than any one and when she sings well "quiet please, there's a lady on the stage". Most pleasant surprise is Yves Montand who sings the title song very well. I must admit howver, its not nearly as good as John Callum from the Broadway recording. Montand is howver impressive and its really quite a revelation. The hight light is come back to me! Its a brilliantly staged number. This is a superior movie and very profound: each time you see it you will discover something more. The layers and depth of the work are amazing and as for the score, its magnificent.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Cloudy... with low dramatic stakes
onepotato223 March 2009
Warning: Spoilers
In trying to keep up with the hipness of youthful audiences as the 70s approached, OaCD,YCSF was the product of odder and odder material selected for musicalization. Here it's past life regression, ESP and hypno-therapy... pretty loopy! The real problem with the concept (music or not) are the extraordinarily low dramatic stakes; just where can a movie go, and what can happen, when a man falls in love with a previous incarnation of a girl he can't stand? It can't go any place new, but strangely, it can't even go any place old! Indeed, if it could, audiences would still have no interest in the union of Yves Montand (playing a much older, arrogant, French ass) and Streisand. (a much younger girl). We never become invested in them, their situations or outcomes. Montand is miscast and his strong accent makes many of his lyrics unintelligible.

It's all been given a shallow 60s veneer that makes it eminently disposable; despite efforts here and there from Minelli that are respectable. It's not even adapted from a non-musical story that met with any previous success... that's just too passe! Streisand occasionally has some funny business to offer, as when she's trying not to fall asleep on her roof and improvises an energetic dance. But she over-relies on her ingratiating (translation: irritating) kooky, Jewish girl shtick. She can however sing very well, at both the "gentle" and "powerhouse" ends of the range. Amidst a score of musical dross, she gets 3 or 4 amazing songs* of much higher caliber than anything Fanny or Dolly had to offer. 'He isn't you' is a sweet trifle as sublime as Lorenz Hart's 'My Funny Valentine,' but the movie isn't able to realize any impact from it; because the lyrics don't seem to be referring to anything in the movie, and nothing remotely suggests a great love is blossoming between Chabot and Melinda.

The only cut we can view is a poor hatchet job of a much bigger film. Strong research shows a longer, better-explained and more decorative, but not necessarily a better film at: http://barbra-archives.com/films/clear_day_streisand_2.html. You can be sure there's be more Babs in that version but more importantly, there'd be more thoughtful work from Minelli.

In the end Montand sends Babs off to sing the title song, after she discovers he's a total dick who feeds her a self-esteem homily to allow himself off the hook. And she takes the bait. So, uh... hooray for that.

(*Hurry it's lovely up here, Love with all the trimmings, He isn't you, & the title song)
13 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
My All Time Favorite Movie
betazoid319 March 2005
Okay, granted you have to like Barbra Streisand to love this movie. But for those of you who don't, it's worth a catch just to see Bob Newhart and Jack Nicholson as "young" men. Jack is especially funny in his short scenes with Barbra and her fiancée...

But the main reason to see this flick is the acting and musical talent of Barbra. She has to STRETCH to play a mousy crowd follower, and then switch it up to play a haughty wealthy socialite in a past time period. The costumes are out of this world, and the film should have won an academy award for costume design, although Barbra's figure did her costumes justice. The periods in history represented by the film are stunningly presented. All in all, this is my favorite movie of all time. There is laughter, sorrow, drama, singing, dancing, lots of Barbra skin showing, sexuality, scorn, mocking, a panorama of events and celebrations and Barbra's eventual awakening as her own person. I salute Vicente Minnelli, post mortem.
51 out of 58 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Knock it off peeps!
simplemansc621 June 2014
Frankly, I think the discussion of this movie will never end. We don't know what director's cut was like...may have been better or worse. The release was just bad timing. and there was no appetite for this in the "movie going" public.

It is a dinosaur.

Streisand was at her best in this film. Montand wasn't awful, just miscast. I recently watched some of his other movie performances, and was left with a question about the appeal that folks had in him to begin with. The music/songs were only brought to life by Streisand....who else could have held your interest in the lyrics? If this had been released before "Hello Dolly" it would have been a hit. Instead, it made Streisand look like a "one-trick-pony".

Director V.Minnelli was the right choice, in my opinion, and any adaption from stage to screen is always risky. Especially with a musical. No matter how you feel about this movie, try to imagine it without her. Who could pull it off? Your answers will thrill me.

I think, all in all, it was just made at the wrong time. When I watch it now, I feel very nostalgic about the past. Yeah! It was cool to have your bedding match your nightgown!
4 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
My Fair Lady Reincarnated
Junker-225 August 2005
"On a Clear Day You Can See Forever" is nothing more than a New Age update of the "Pygmalion" / "My Fair Lady" story: A professor attempts to turn a common girl into an upper society woman. This time, however, instead of using language skills, the professor tries to do so by hypnotism and past life regression.

You know a musical has problems when reviewers constantly mention the sets and the costumes before they mention the plot and the music. The songs are instantly forgettable. (No "Get Me to the Church on Time" here, I'm afraid.) And the plot goes nowhere. To paraphrase Gertrude Stein, there is no "there" here. The characters wander through the story without ever getting from point A to point B. Professor Chabot claims several times that he will get to the root of Daisy's troubles, but he never seems to do so.

All meaningful conflict is avoided. For instance, there comes a time when Chabot's university demands he either stop his research into reincarnation or resign his position. Now there is conflict! Will he give up his career for Daisy? Alas! Nothing comes of this development. A scene or two later the university changes its mind and tells Chabot to continue on with his work. So much for conflict.

The talent was certainly assembled for this movie: Directed by Vincente Minnelli. Written, in part, by Alan Jay Lerner. A cast of Yves Montand, Bob Newhart and Jack Nicholson. And, oh yes, starring Barabara Striesand who was nearly at the top of her game at this point in her career.

But it all falls flat. Lerner's attempt to reincarnate his greatest success, the previously mentioned "My Fair Lady," is as doomed to failure as Daisy's attempt to revive the greatness of her own past.

If you enjoy movie musicals, there are far better choices than this.
17 out of 26 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Gets better every time.
Xanadu-230 December 2000
On A Clear Day improves and is more enjoyable for each viewing. The first time I saw it was such a huge elephant of a movie, a baffling entertaining jumble. So many ideas propped into one movie to make it popular and a box office hit in a time of change and when the big movie companies were desperately seeking hits to save themselves from ruin.

So this movie is crammed when ingredients that had proven successful in earlier movies in the 60´s : Barbra Streisand and a musical score (Funny Girl), gigantic sets and costumes in 19th century style (My Fair Lady), 60´s mod clothing, a big European star for the overseas market (Montand), new young stars (Nicholson) for counterculture hippy flavor, student riots (very 'now' then), reincarnation and telepathy (sci-fi), british accents both snobby and cockney (swinging London)…

Barbra is one of the biggest talents of the 20th century and was born a little too late. Those huge musicals she stars so well in where dated then and she would have been better off in the 40s or 50s. She is very beautiful, womanly and sexy when she is in period costume. In the modern scenes she is fascinating and a little annoying when she´s trying to be a kooky 60´s chick à la Twiggy.

Yves Montand is miscast even though he has earthy European charm. He is unbelievable because he cannot pronounce the dialouge!!!!! His diction is a disaster and didn´t do the film any favors. Was there really no other singer for the male lead?

The songs are very good and underrated. Why does one never hear them as other musical classics? The direction from Vincente Minelli works since the film is very lush and enthralling. The period costumes by Cecil Beaton are beautiful without being too much and look great on Babs. The snazzy Scaasi mod clothes are a hoot!

It is very ambitious combinig so many elements and hope it works. Despite it all the film does have charm and one is drawn into 2 hours of pure Hollywood entertainment and at the same time it is fascinating to see one of the very last old time Hollywood productions. (It was already outdated when it was released 1970. Bad timing; the movie must have seemed as ancient as a dinosaur. It was apparently longer. There was supposedly a scene with Babs, Jack and 'Warren' at a disco but it got cut…I would LOVE to see the original version!!!!! This is good fun to watch on rainy day…forever
36 out of 42 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
The third of Streisand's six film musicals. Seems odd there were so few.
justahunch-7054910 March 2023
Streisand at an early age conquered the music world and then followed that up with the huge Broadway success of Funny Girl. When that was filmed, became a big hit and won her an Oscar, she was signed for two more big Hollywood blockbuster musicals at the same time. The most famous was miscasting her in the extremely bloated film version of the then longest running Broadway show in history, Hello, Dolly. She then made this, but by then Dolly had more or less tanked and movie musicals were starting to lose their appeal after so many had been made in the 1960's and this was sort of rushed out without much fanfare with no reserved seats and such that existed back then for the "big" Hollywood movies and of course, it didn't do all that well. And that's a shame as it is a much better movie than Dolly ever was. Streisand is much more comfortable in this more age appropriate comic role. It's subject matter, reincarnation, was unusual for a movie musical and it is a fun film despite the thoroughly terrible decision to hire Yve Montand as her love interest. Talk about miscasting! He is way too old and he's not very good either and damages this quite a bit. The whole film's enjoyment pretty much comes from Streisand and if you like her, you will want to watch this and if you don't.....beware, because she's the show. In regard to the casting of Streisand's first three leading men in the above mentioned three musicals, could anything be more odd than having this twentysomething being romanced by Omar Sharif, Walter Matthau and Yve Montand? Two are way too old, all three are miscast and none can carry a tune. Strange indeed.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Why Don't They Ever Learn!
Donato18 August 2002
Just listen to the Broadway cast album and to the voices of Barbara Harris and John Cullum, who do wonders for the wonderful Lerner and Lane score. Then, with that beautiful cast recording fresh in mind, watch the movie, with Streisand as Streisand, and Yves Montand reading his lines with such a heavy French accent that a chain saw couldn't cut through it. The best part (for those who need something to look forward to) is what Montand does to the introductory part of the title song. Listen as he sings/says: Could anyone among us have an inkling or a clue, what magic feats of wizardry and voodoo you can do? (That one part sums up the problem that results from casting "name stars" in movie musicals instead of the appropriate talent for the various roles.) I can just see Rex Harrison entering that scene and suggesting Montand, too, could learn to do justice to the beauty of the English language.
8 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Pleasant musical
laffinsal19 February 2001
This is one of those musicals that rarely gets talked about. Even the original stage version is not as well known as say, "Oklahoma!" or "West Side Story", but it should be. It has some wonderful music and an intriguing story.

However, comparing the stage version of this show with the film would be pointless, because all filmed musicals of Broadway shows usually change in more then a few ways. As for this film, it is a charming watch, and an enjoyable way to spend a couple of hours. You don't need to be fans of either of the lead actors, but it does help if you are a musical fan and are somewhat interested in the science of ESP.

The songs in this film are all great, not one of them are what I would consider "filler". A few of the original songs from the stage show have been replaced here with different pieces, but they are good ones nontheless. My only complaint in them is Yves Montand's singing. It's difficult enough to understand his spoken word, but it's even worst when he sings. John Cullum's singing in the original Broadway version is so clear and strong, and Montand is just not at par with that. Still, the quality of the songs themselves, make up for this. The Technicolor is stupendous, lusch and vivid. It's a shame that the film was cut so badly before it was released. Not having seen that version, it's difficult for me to say whether or not it would have been an improvement over the finished product, but I doubt it. As it is, this is a decent, pleasant musical film, and worth watching if you are a fan of the genre.
24 out of 27 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
whimisal, nonsense movie
kerrbear6713 December 2003
For the time this movie was made I feel that it was a whimisal, nonsense movie that didn't require you to think very hard about the content which I find in some movies to day there is too much to think about and too many complex characters. I like movies where I can get lost in the sheer, basic simplicity of a film not in the rollercoaster ride of today's flix.
3 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
My Future Just Passed
writers_reign14 September 2006
Warning: Spoilers
It would be easy to dismiss this as The Three Faces Of Eve with songs but it is, actually, a little more than that. Alan Lerner had a lifelong interest in ESP and toyed with the idea of basing a musical on it for years before finally getting around to it in the mid sixties more or less a full decade after My Fair Lady. The Broadway version failed to find its audience but was jam-packed with great numbers (Lerner was again working with Burton Lane with whom he wrote one of the all-time great ballads, 'Too Late Now' for the MGM movie Royal Wedding) most of which the producers have seen fit to jettison leaving the leading man only three numbers but the film is, nevertheless, interesting if only for the chance to see and hear the great Montand working in English. Montand, who learned English late in life, made several films in the English language none of them really satisfactory and whilst at one level the antipathy of most of the posters here is understandable one can't help feeling they are lacking in sensitivity inasmuch as the charm and shining talent of the man are obvious even in a vehicle tailored to his co-star as is this. Streisand is certainly adequate and with Minnelli at the helm she is both costumed and photographed to full advantage but by 1970 sophisticated lyrics like those in What Did I Have were wasted on if not bewildering to an audience educated in punk rock. Despite what the nay-sayers think Montand was worth every dime of the (for the time) silly money that enticed him to cross the Atlantic. Maybe not one to buy (unless you rate even minor Montand as I do) but certainly one to rent.
3 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
A Pleasant Diversion
sddavis6329 June 2002
Although billed as a musical comedy, I didn't find this movie to be outrageously funny. It had a few chuckles in it, but nothing more. Having said that, it is a very pleasant movie to watch with some very good songs (particularly those sung by Barbra Streisand, who played Daisy Campbell.)

Daisy is a young woman who seeks the assistance of Dr. Chabot (Yves Montand), who specializes in hypnosis, to help her quit smoking. In the course of their hypnotherapy sessions, Chabot discovers that Daisy has had past life experiences, and she has already admitted to him that she has strange "psychic" powers. She knows when telephones are about to ring, she can read thoughts, she can cause her flowers to grow at rapid rates. In fact, she's so psychic that all Chabot has to do is think of hypnotizing her and she's out.

Chabot is at first a skeptic, but in the course of exploring these past lives (without Daisy's knowledge; she still assumes that she's going under just to deal with her smoking) he becomes fascinated by Melinda (who lived in the early 1800's in London.) From there the relationship between the two develops, and the movie turns out to be a love story with an interesting twist. A decent supporting cast featuring the likes of Bob Newhart, Simon Oakland and a very young Jack Nicholson make this entertaining. If you're looking for a lot of laughs, this isn't what you want, but if you'd just like a pleasant, mildly amusing and well-paced story with some good music you'll enjoy it.

Overall I rate this as a 6/10.
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Only marginally successful as play and film...
Doylenf3 October 2006
There are times in ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN SEE FOREVER where you know Vincente Minnelli had a firm hand on the proceedings and there are moments when BARBRA STREISAND does an outstanding job on the vocals. But there are just as many dull spots in the long-winded musical that is stronger when it's showing flashbacks to Victorian England than it is in getting us involved in the modern day story.

Once again, Babs has the spotlight while the men around her are insufficiently used--men like YVES MONTAND (did he ever find a good role in an American film?), JACK NICHOLSON and JOHN RICHARDSON. She's adept at playing a girl who undergoes psychosis and reveals to her doctor (Montand) that she has another veddy British lady, Melinda, inside her, who has much more class than her modern personality. Naturally, the doctor falls in love with her other persona.

The Broadway musical by Alan J. Lerner was never an overwhelming success and the movie fails to maintain steam once the basic plot is set in motion. It's a lush looking affair, especially the Victorian scenes with Streisand in some stunning Cecil Beaton outfits, but the overall effect is one of emptiness at the heart of the story.

Summing up: No doubt Streisand's fans will probably welcome it with open arms as it does showcase her own brand of talent.
8 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
An Under-Rated Charmer
gftbiloxi13 August 2005
Based on the marginally successful 1965 Broadway musical with book and lyrics by Alan Jay Learner and a solid score by Burton Lane, the 1970 ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN SEE FOREVER was no box office disaster--but it was a disappointment, failing to draw a broad audience and performing much more poorly than any one had imagined. This is a pity, for although it cannot be classed among the truly great musical musicals it is nonetheless a very good one, imaginatively filmed and beautifully performed.

The story concerns a scatter-brained young woman named Daisy Gamble (Barbra Streisand) who is desperate to quit smoking and who lays siege to a noted hypnotist Dr. Charbot (Yves Montand.) But it happens that Daisy, for all her goofiness, is unexpectedly gifted: she can find lost items, she knows when the telephone will ring--and once under hypnosis she stuns Charbot by transforming into Melinda, a woman who lived, loved, and died more than a century before.

The cast is superior. Streisand is memorably fresh in the role of Daisy and performs her numbers with remarkable youthful zeal and a flawless artistry; she is a tremendous amount of fun to watch and an endless pleasure to hear. Although it seems many Americans fail to see the appeal of the great French singer and actor Yves Montand, he handles his songs with the same world-weary style that first brought him to the attention of the legendary Edith Piaf--and it proves a remarkably effective foil for Streisand, setting off her expansive performance to perfection. The remaining cast, which includes a very young Jack Nicholson and Bob Newhart, is equally fine.

This was the last musical for Vincent Minnelli, perhaps the greatest director of golden age musicals and creator of such films as MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS, and he endows the film with his very elegant eye; the "past life" sequences, in which designer Cecil Beaton had a hand, are particularly beautiful. Add in such beautifully orchestrated and performed songs as "It's Lovely Up Here," "Come Back To Me," and the title piece--and when all is said and done ON A CLEAR DAY is a very enjoyable film indeed.

The film was originally intended to be released in a three hour version--but in the wake of several box office disasters for large scale musicals both Minnelli and the studio thought better of it and cut the film significantly. It would seem these scenes are gone forever, and more's the pity. Still, this no-frills DVD release offers a best-possible print in terms of both sound and picture, and both long-time fans and newcomers will adore it. Recommended.

Gary F. Taylor, aka GFT, Amazon Reviewer
33 out of 39 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
an old soul in a '60's musical
blanche-26 November 2005
Barbra Streisand, with no screen test, signed a three-film contract after her enormous Broadway success. "On A Clear Day," based, of course, on the Broadway musical, was one of her projects.

Streisand plays Daisy, a psychic young woman who, under hypnosis, reveals a different personality who lived in England in the 1800s. Yves Montand is her confused psychiatrist, who finds himself falling for Melinda, Daisy's Other.

This is a fun film, which co-stars an absurdly young Jack Nicholson. The songs are great, particularly "Come Back To Me," "What Did I Have That I Don't Have?" and the title song. Not all of the songs from the show are in the movie, and there were some new songs added.

Streisand is an adorable Daisy and an effective Melinda, mastering a British accent and wearing costumes only rivaled by Adrian's masterpieces in "Marie Antoinette." She looks spectacular in all of them. The color in this film is eye-popping throughout, and the sets AND color in the period sections of "On a Clear Day" are amazing. Though a little on the long side, it's highly recommended.
2 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Driving Miss Daisy Crazy
Lejink13 February 2024
An interesting case of the old meeting the new here as veteran Hollywood director Vincente Minnelli and old-school Broadway songwriter Alan J Lerner attempt to come up to date as the 60's cross into the 70's and they have to contend with the new girl on the block Barbra Streisand and even the emergent Jack Nicholson in a minor supporting role.

The result unsurprisingly is a win on points for experience as the end result comes out more conventional than controversial. Streisand is the suspiciously old-looking 22 year old college student Daisy Gamble who has a life of conformity all set up and ready to go for her by her controlling cold-fish business-minded fiancé Warren.

That is, until she attends one of college professor Yves Montand's Dr Chabot's lectures on hypnotism and turns out to be a super-susceptible subject. More than that, she soon afterwards appears to be the perfect specimen for the prof's pet subject of reincarnation, bringing to life a previous self as a scandalous Regency duchess named Melinda who not only left her bumbling, aged and corpulent husband for a dashingly handsome ne'er-do-well but in fact was executed at a young age for giving away naval secrets to the enemy.

Montand is confounded and resistant to what he thinks is Daisy's elaborate charade but succeeding sessions convince him that she's for real, causing him to rebel against his college board's views on the subject and worse, he's strangely attracted to the confident and worldly Melinda into the bargain. The not-so-big questions to be resolved boil down to will the real Daisy take inspiration from Melinda to stand up and rebel against her future life as a doormat and will the professor overturn the college board's conservatism and in the process, modernise the college curriculum.

The plot of course is strongly reminiscent of Lerner's biggest hit "My Fair Lady" and even has Streisand attempt a plummy English accent in her Melinda persona. I guess I wasn't aware that reincarnation was such an emotive subject in educational circles at the time, but really the movie is just an excuse to give Babs an outlet for her kooky comedienne schtick as well as getting her into elaborate period costume and act the grand dame.

I found I wasn't convinced however. The film runs too long for one thing and while there are one or two smart one liners in the script, many other things just don't work, in particular the embarrassingly unfunny over -the-top scene when Daisy goes crazy on her New York rooftop.

Montand does his best as a French Professor Higgins but never seems really comfortable in the role. Further down the cast, besides Nicholson's negligible contribution you'll find Bob Newhart practice for his future TV sitcom roles as the stuffy college principal.

As for Hollywood great Minnelli's direction, I found it to be an awkward mix of the old and the new. He's fine when he goes back in time but is much less convincing when employing all sorts of camera tricks to presumably display his modernity. The songs were passible with the title number probably being the best known of them, although the lip-synching was at times jarringly obvious, but on the whole I'd say that the outlook for this feature was more overcast than clear at least on the day that I watched,
0 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Masterly coda to one of Hollywood's greatest careers.
alice liddell12 June 2000
ON A CLEAR DAY opens with two extraordinary sequences. Firstly, with Babs singing the title song, there is a montage of flowers growing at speed in front of our very eyes, a decisively Minnellian melange of colour and artifice to create a real eye-dazzlingly emotional explosion which reaches an ecstatic crescendo as Babs skips through a maze of floral abundance. This is followed by a chilling, antithetical credits sequence, a VERTIGOesque assembly-line of diminishing rectangles in cool, gorgeous colours, in which the familiar Broadway music feels distorted and distant.

These two sequences encapsulate the film's conflict - between heart and mind; emotion and intellect; freedom and order; dream and reality; self-expression and conformity. In 1970, the age of BONNIE AND CLYDE, M*A*S*H and WOODSTOCK, a Minnelli/Lerner/Streisand musical must have seemed amusingly quaint, but today, we can marvel at its audacity and flair, while many of its more acclaimed contemporaries seem tinny and shrill.

The narrative proper seems initially mundane after such abstract excess. Daisy Gamble (perfect name!) interrupts a lecture by famed psychologist, Marc Chabot, being accidentally hypnotised as he demonstrates on a pupil. She is a scatty, ditzy loudmouth who has come to Chabot in the hope that he will manipulate her out of a 5-packs a day smoking habit to please her ultra-conformist fiance, Warren, who has a career-crucial business dinner.

Chabot has little interest in this clumsy pest until he discovers that she has some psychic powers. Intrigued, he explores her through hypnosis and discovers her past-life as a supremely resourceful, sexually magnetic, orphaned Cockey golddigger of the Regency, who is standing trial for espionage and treason, her caddish husband having deserted her. Chabot begins to fall in love with this remarkable woman, and believing, against all his rationalist principles, in reincarnation.

Even by Minnelli's standards, this is a bravely open-ended picture, not only in its unexpected denouenment, but in refusing to simplify the bewildering, complicated emotions his characters become prey to. On a simple structural level, he contrasts conformity with the life of emotion and imagination. Chabot is a doctor whose devotion to science and facts is almost monkish in its celibate form. His office is the embodiment of conformity, a bland brown pervading walls, chairs, fittings, barred windows, books, even his own clothes. Despite being Yves Montand, he is no French lover.

Into his life comes this impossible woman whose striving for fiance-pleasing order results in further chaos. In her second incarnation, as Melinda, she brings bawdiness, vulgarity, romance, humour, daring, but, most of all, colour, sumptuous, ravishing, blinding colour. The effect she has on Chabot is reflected in the film's form, which moves from steady, mid-level, classical compositions, to outrageous fancy, dizzying camera movements, mercurial editing cutting across time and space. Chabot soon begins to have Daisy's dreams, while she becomes divided from herself in a remarkable visualisation of the split between duty and desire.

But it's not enough to suggest simplistic dichotomies - even the 'normal' Daisy has a rooftop garden which is simply magical (isn't that such a lovely idea, a woman who makes flowers grow quickly by talking to them?), while her fiance, like Darrin from BEWITCHED, is so desperate to conform that he becomes mad. 'Sciences', such as psychoanalysis are invoked in the spirit of the times, but the Pandora's Box they open in no way 'explain', but sets free, as Chabot ruefully recognises.

This is all significantly gendered as men try to control and explain a woman who darts gleefully through history, place, morality, while barely taking a break. As ever with Minnelli, the celebration of artifice only reveals how repressive real-life is, and his satire is cutting if you care to look. This is an undervalued, joyous, sad coda to one of Hollywood's greatest careers (Minnelli would go on to make only one more movie), as full of invention and love as his first film, CABIN IN THE SKY.

The music is fine, with little of the heartache as GIGI or fun of MY FAIR LADY. Montand is charming in a thankless role, but Barbara Streisand - and, God help me, I never thought I'd say this - is an absolute joy in a double (treble?) role, especially convincing in saucy period dress, yet, moving when she needs to be.
45 out of 55 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Big Babs as a shrinking violet (or Daisy)?
standardmetal2 July 2006
"On a Clear Day" is one of the less successful collaborations of Alan Jay Lerner and Burton Lane and, though I thought the film was entertaining enough, I can't say I was bowled over by it. The idea for the Broadway show must have come from the popular 50s "Search for Bridey Murphy" even though the original musical was of the 60s. Alan Jay Lerner probably had a fondness for ESP or the supernatural since he also collaborated on the shows "Brigadoon", "Finian's Rainbow", "Camelot" and even the film "The Little Prince", all of which had these elements.

Miss Streisand is one of the towering egos of show business and I found it impossible to accept her as the "mousy" Daisy Gamble. To me, her singing was always rather mannered to the point of being overbearing and to suggest, as the script does, that Daisy is commonplace and lacks personality is pretty mind-boggling. Perhaps she was more acceptable as Melinda even if her British accent was a little less than perfect.

I thought that Yves Montand as Dr. Marc Chabot (Dr. Mark Bruckner in the original Broadway musical) was adequate and, of course, he sang well. The rest of the supporting cast were also adequate without anyone really standing out and the title song, mostly sung by Yves, had to be reprised by Big Babs of course.

Entertaining but nothing special. The DVD is in the letterboxed format and there are no extras.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Mostly a misfire, but it has its moments.
Jeremy_Urquhart18 March 2024
I don't remember how I found out about this movie, but it always sounded interesting. It pairs Vincente Minnelli - directing his second-to-last film - with an increasingly popular Barbara Streisand, with this being just her third starring role. The old and the new (at the time) combine, both being people with ties to the musical genre, and bring with them an eclectic supporting cast that includes, Yves Montand, Bob Newhart, and even Jack Nicholson... though Nicholson's not in it a ton.

It has an imaginative premise involving psychology and a woman who can see a past life, and it has the kind of color and visual pop that you'd expect from a Minnelli film. But On a Clear Day You Can See Forever feels weirdly unsure of itself, like it's almost embarrassed to be a musical. With rare exceptions, you kind of have to commit to being a full-hearted musical, and hope the old-fashionedness feels charming (it can), or you have to do something more grounded and less theatrical... maybe like Bob Fosse, who I'm more and more realizing kind of changed everything with Cabaret and All That Jazz later in the 1970s.

I think On a Clear Day You Can See Forever leans more towards silliness, but it never commits enough. The songs aren't very good, either, and the musical numbers themselves are generally uninspired and infrequent; the lack of dancing stands out and feels weird, when the music "sounds" quintessentially of the musical genre, and the colors hearken back to Minnelli's superior films. The opening song is one of the worst openers I've heard in a musical movie for a while, and was maybe a sign of things to come.

I think the actors are mostly doing a solid job, there are a handful of sporadic fun moments throughout, and it's a nice-looking movie. It's also not as creepy as Minnelli's Gigi, so... that's something? I can't think of much else nice to say about the film, though.
0 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed