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Something for Everyone

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Something for Everyone
Original theatrical poster
Directed byHarold Prince
Screenplay byHugh Wheeler
Based on
The Cook
by Harry Kressing
Produced byJohn Flaxman
Starring
CinematographyWalter Lassally
Edited byRalph Rosenblum
Music byJohn Kander
Production
company
Distributed byNational General Pictures
Release date
  • July 22, 1970 (1970-07-22)
Running time
112 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Something for Everyone is a 1970 American black comedy film starring Angela Lansbury, Michael York, Anthony Higgins, and Jane Carr. Directed by Harold Prince (in his feature directorial debut), with a screenplay by Hugh Wheeler, the plot differs significantly from the source material, the Harry Kressing novel The Cook. Lansbury was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy.

Production for Cinema Center Films began in June 1969, first released by National General Pictures in July 1970.[1][2] The film's UK release in May 1971 was retitled Black Flowers for the Bride, subtitled A Comedy of Evil.[3]

Plot

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Handsome young stranger Konrad Ludwig is fascinated by a castle near the Bavarian village of Ornstein. He dreams of owning and living in the castle, which is the property of widowed countess Herthe von Ornstein, who lives in the dower house, financially unable to maintain the castle itself.

As Konrad schemes to become one of the countess's servants, he romances the beautiful and wealthy young lady Anneliese Pleschke, daughter of a nouveau riche couple. Konrad plots to use her family's wealth to reopen castle Ornstein. Following an afternoon chauffeuring the Pleschkes around the countryside, he gets Rudolph, the countess's footman, drunk at the local Biergarten and then run over by a train. Konrad swiftly replaces Rudolph in the countess's household.

The countess has two grown children: Helmuth von Ornstein, a shy and attractive young man, and Lotte von Ornstein, a plain and annoying girl. Helmuth is gay and begins to be romanced by Konrad when the stern majordomo, Klaus, tries to put a stop to it by firing Konrad. When the mayor of Ornstein is militantly disposed to root out all Nazis remaining in Germany, Konrad reports Klaus to the mayor after discovering he is harboring a scandalous secret: his father was a Nazi colonel, whose memory is fondly enshrined in Klaus's bedroom. Klaus is summarily and quietly put out of the countess's employ, leaving Konrad free to be Helmuth's lover while replacing Klaus place as majordomo.

Konrad encourages the countess to throw a daring, expensive party at the dower house in order to initiate a pseudo romance between Helmuth and Anneliese Pleschke. Konrad, the lover of both Helmuth and Anneliese, induces them to become engaged to each other, while secretly assuring each of them that he would always be there at the castle. When the marriage contract is signed, the Pleschke money flows in to reopen and refurbish castle Ornstein.

The marriage takes place, but the honeymoon is a disaster, leaving both bride and groom wanting an annulment. The demise of the grand design is hastened when Anneliese walks in on Konrad and Helmuth kissing. Shocked and speechless, Anneliese is ushered to the limousine in which she and her parents are to be driven to the castle by Konrad. When Anneliese hysterically opens up to her parents, Konrad turns the limousine down a steep embankment, managing to jump out before it crashes, killing Anneliese and her parents. Konrad escapes with a broken leg.

Konrad goes through a pleasant convalescence with the countess herself becoming his new romantic interest. After an amorous night in her boudoir, the two plan to marry. Helmuth is devastated, but he reluctantly allows the marriage to proceed rather than have Konrad forced to leave by a scorned countess.

Helmuth's sister Lotte has other plans. On the eve of the wedding she informs Konrad that she knows all about his murderous and scandalous exploits. Ingeniously she uses blackmail to avoid being Konrad's next victim and have him marry her instead of her mother.

Cast

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Reception

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In a contemporary review, critic Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times called the film an "essentially empty charade" and wrote: "In a diversion like this it is necessary—if only to engage the viewer's sympathies—to align your evil demon against some person or persons who are at least relatively good. But there's not really anyone to root for in 'Something for Everyone.' Miss Lansbury is rather more innocently corrupt than York, but it's also obvious that she can outwit him any minute she puts her mind to it." Regarding first-time director Harold Prince, Champlin surmised: "Prince set himself an initial assignment which was probably even more imposing than it seemed to be ... But he never defines a unifying intention for the movie—social satire, tense psychological thriller or suspense drama with comedic overtones."[4]

Critic John Simon called Something for Everyone "a thoroughly unsavory film" and decried its immorality and glorification of homosexuality: "I submit that the entire film exemplifies a kind of vengeance on the heterosexual world by a mentality resenting its real or alleged compulsion to disassemble and hide its predilections. In retaliation, anything that the so-called normal world considers healthy and decent—and some of it, so help us, is healthy and decent—is systematically trodden underheel."[5]

Prince felt that Cinema Center butchered the final edit of the film and vowed never to direct a film again without final approval of editing, advertising and distribution.[6]

On its British release as Black Flowers for the Bride, film critic Margaret Hinxman, writing in the Sunday Telegraph, called it “a dazzling compendium of skulduggery” and “a wickedly funny film, richly inventive in selecting the targets (including lingering Nazi fervour) for its humour.”[7]

Home media

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VHS releases in 1986 and 1990[8] were followed by DVD and Blu-ray releases in December 2016.[9]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Something for Everyone (1970)". Ftvdb.bfi.org.uk. Archived from the original on January 29, 2009. Retrieved October 23, 2017.
  2. ^ Vagg, Stephen (March 28, 2026). "Forgotten Film Moguls: Jere Henshaw and Gordon Stulberg of Cinema Center Films". Filmink. Retrieved March 28, 2026.
  3. ^ Films in London volume 3 number 52, 30 May-12 June 1971
  4. ^ Champlin, Charles (August 16, 1970). "'Something for Everyone' and Everyone for Angels". Los Angeles Times. p. 18 (Calendar).
  5. ^ Simon, John (1971). Movies into Film Film Criticism 1967-1970. The Dial Press. pp. 160–162.
  6. ^ "Inside Stuff - Pictures". Variety. May 12, 1971. p. 25.
  7. ^ Hinxman, Margaret (May 30, 1971). "Away Wins–and Home Losers". The Sunday Telegraph. p. 12.
  8. ^ Something for everyone. October 23, 1986. OCLC 15743328.
  9. ^ "Something for Everyone Blu-ray". Blu-ray.com. Retrieved October 23, 2017.
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