Chicago Sun-Times

MOVIE BROUGHT BOOK’S LISTLESS LOVERS TO LIFE

- FROM THE EBERT ARCHIVE

‘LOVE STORY’ ★★★★

Originally reviewed Dec. 28, 1970 Erich Segal’s tearjerker novel was a best-seller, and when he wrote a screen adaptation, that became a hit as well. In honor of its 50th anniversar­y (and Valentine’s Day), “Love Story” screens Sunday and Wednesday at local theaters (see fathomeven­ts.com).

Iread “Love Story” one morning in about 14 minutes flat, out of simple curiosity. I wanted to discover why five and a half million people had actually bought it. I wasn’t successful. I was so put off by Erich Segal’s writing style, in fact, that I hardly wanted to see the movie at all. Segal’s prose style is so revoltingl­y coy — sort of a cross between a parody of Hemingway and the instructio­ns on a soup can — that his story is fatally infected.

The fact is, however, that the film of “Love Story” is infinitely better than the book. I think it has something to do with the quiet taste of Arthur Hiller, its director, who has put in all the things that Segal thought he was being clever to leave out. Things like color, character, personalit­y, detail, and background. The interestin­g thing is that Hiller has saved the movie without substantia­lly changing anything in the book. Both the screenplay and the novel were written at the same time, I understand, and if you’ve read the book, you’ve essentiall­y read the screenplay. Nothing much is changed except the last meeting between Oliver and his father; Hiller felt the movie should end with the boy alone, and he was right. Otherwise, he’s used Segal’s situations and dialogue throughout.

But the Segal characters, on paper, were so devoid of any personalit­y that they might actually have been transparen­t. Ali MacGraw and Ryan O’Neal, who play the lovers on film, bring them to life in a way the novel didn’t even attempt. They do it simply by being there, and having personalit­ies.

The story by now is so well-known that there’s no point in summarizin­g it for you. I would like to consider, however, the implicatio­ns of “Love Story” as a three-, four- or five-handkerchi­ef movie, a movie that wants viewers to cry at the end. Is this an unworthy purpose? Does the movie become unworthy, as Newsweek thought it did, simply because it has been mechanical­ly contrived to tell us a beautiful, tragic tale? I don’t think so. There’s nothing contemptib­le about being moved to joy by a musical, to terror by a thriller, to excitement by a Western. Why shouldn’t we get a little misty during a story about young lovers separated by death?

Hiller earns our emotional response because of the way he’s directed the movie. The Segal book was so patently contrived to force those tears, and moved toward that object with such humorless determinat­ion, that it must have actually disgusted a lot of readers. The movie is mostly about life, however, and not death. And because Hiller makes the lovers into individual­s, of course we’re moved by the film’s conclusion. Why not?

 ?? UNIVERSAL PICTURES ?? Ali MacGraw and Ryan O’Neal star in “Love Story.”
UNIVERSAL PICTURES Ali MacGraw and Ryan O’Neal star in “Love Story.”
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