House Calls (1978)
8/10
Call Night or Day
19 April 2018
House Calls is a nice romantic comedy about two mature people finding each other the second time around. Of course both Walter Matthau and Glenda Jackson have spent a lot of time looking especially Matthau.

Matthau is a doctor at Kensington General Hospital in Los Angeles who is just back from a leave of absence for a few months. He's a widower and after the proper mourning period has gone a nice hedonistic binge in Hawaii and is now back. He spots Jackson as a patient at the hospital and sees what he considers an egregious wrong done by her doctor. Matthau corrects it and earns the wrath of the chief surgeon Art Carney.

Jackson is a divorcee with a teenage son who left her husband because she was tired of him pursuing as she puts it 'the all American humping record'. They're different people but Jackson and Matthau hit it off even though the road to romance has a few potholes.

House Calls is as much a romantic comedy as a satire on American medicine. It's a subject that Matthau and Jackson have very diametrically opposed views. Jackson thinks that all doctor ought to be Albert Schweitzer and that just doesn't happen in the real world.

No budding Schweitzers at Kensington General. Art Carney is absolutely brilliant as the over aged Chief of Surgery who is having touches of senility, but won't retire. Funny, but a bit frightening as well. I suspect there are more Carneys out there than one would like to admit.

Some of the other staff includes as doctors Richard Benjamin, Gordon Jump, and Dick O'Neill. Candice Azzara has a juicy role as a widow wanting to sue for malpractice on the death of her husband. Guess who gets the dirty job to woo her a bit?

House Calls succeeds quite nicely as romance and satire not an easy combination to pull off.
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