FRIDAY NIGHT
What’s even better than a cosy night in? A cosy night in immersed in the world of 1950s uptown New York City nightlife. Add a classic steak dish and a special bottle and you got it made, son
WORDS: LES DUNN
SWEET SMELL OF SUCCESS (1957)
WHAT’S IT ABOUT?
Burt Lancaster plays monstrous newspaper columnist JJ Hunsecker (a thinly veiled portrait of powerful real-life pressman Walter Winchell) alongside Tony Curtis as Sidney Falco, a scheming press agent described by Hunsecker as “fully up to all the tricks of his very slimy trade”. In return for newspaper exposure for his clients, Sidney does JJ’s dirty work. But as the movie opens, Sidney has been frozen out. (“You’re dead, son,” says Hunsecker. “Get yourself buried.”) This is because he has failed to stop a blossoming relationship between JJ’s sister, Susan, with whom the columnist has an unhealthy obsession, and jazz musician Steve Dallas. To get himself unburied, Sidney must redouble his dastardly efforts to break up the romance. But just how far is he willing to go to keep JJ happy?