If nothing else, Mike Figgis’ Hotel chomps with relish on creative possibilities: it has the resources to bring in the likes of John Malkovich and Burt Reynolds for a day or two’s work, thereby swimming in six-degrees-of-Kevin-Bacon oddities; it plays with split or four-quadrant screens (in the latter respect building on Figgis’ immediately preceding, more tonally conventional movie, Time Code), sometimes to observe the same action from different perspectives, at other times to counterpoint the main action with art-house erotic or otherwise alluring distractions; it crams in references from both high culture (preeminently The Duchess of Malfi) and.low (celebrity gossip TV). The film has a foot in Grand Hotel-type territory, drawing on the location as a site of criss-crossing lives and possibilities, but primarily focuses on movie-making itself, on a Venice-set production of Malfi, temporarily derailed when its near-feral director (Rhys Ifans) is shot and sent into a kind of coma, eventually replaced by its producer (David Schwimmer). The movie at various times evokes vampirism and cannibalism and lycanthropy, all of them potential metaphors for the less convivial aspects of movie-making; at other times it evokes cinema’s dance-like aspects (the apparent ultimate power behind the film, played by Reynolds, is identified in the credits as “Flamenco Manager”) or jazzier free-form connotations (bolstered by Figgis’s light, pulsating score); the final scene identifies itself as a “trick,” but it’s one underlaid with menace and foreboding. For all its attributes, the film often feels overly dour and withholding and pleasure-starved (it cites the Dogme mentality, a big thing at the time), no doubt taking some impish satisfaction in being among the least conventionally ravishing productions ever set in Venice. Hotel may have more or less marked the end of Figgis’ commercial viability – since then his filmography is mostly a stream of under-seen shorts and obscurities and one-offs – but that only adds to its defiantly reckless allure.
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
Hotel (Mike Figgis, 2001)
If nothing else, Mike Figgis’ Hotel chomps with relish on creative possibilities: it has the resources to bring in the likes of John Malkovich and Burt Reynolds for a day or two’s work, thereby swimming in six-degrees-of-Kevin-Bacon oddities; it plays with split or four-quadrant screens (in the latter respect building on Figgis’ immediately preceding, more tonally conventional movie, Time Code), sometimes to observe the same action from different perspectives, at other times to counterpoint the main action with art-house erotic or otherwise alluring distractions; it crams in references from both high culture (preeminently The Duchess of Malfi) and.low (celebrity gossip TV). The film has a foot in Grand Hotel-type territory, drawing on the location as a site of criss-crossing lives and possibilities, but primarily focuses on movie-making itself, on a Venice-set production of Malfi, temporarily derailed when its near-feral director (Rhys Ifans) is shot and sent into a kind of coma, eventually replaced by its producer (David Schwimmer). The movie at various times evokes vampirism and cannibalism and lycanthropy, all of them potential metaphors for the less convivial aspects of movie-making; at other times it evokes cinema’s dance-like aspects (the apparent ultimate power behind the film, played by Reynolds, is identified in the credits as “Flamenco Manager”) or jazzier free-form connotations (bolstered by Figgis’s light, pulsating score); the final scene identifies itself as a “trick,” but it’s one underlaid with menace and foreboding. For all its attributes, the film often feels overly dour and withholding and pleasure-starved (it cites the Dogme mentality, a big thing at the time), no doubt taking some impish satisfaction in being among the least conventionally ravishing productions ever set in Venice. Hotel may have more or less marked the end of Figgis’ commercial viability – since then his filmography is mostly a stream of under-seen shorts and obscurities and one-offs – but that only adds to its defiantly reckless allure.
Wednesday, January 8, 2025
Alexandria...Why? (Youssef Chahine, 1979)
An early scene in Youssef Chahine’s Alexandria…Why?
might sum up its likeable haphazardness: a group of friends goes to the movies
in 1942 to see Ziegfeld Follies, a movie which wasn’t made until 1946,
and which is represented here in part by scenes from a different movie, and in clips lifted from
a 1970’s That’s Entertainment compilation, even leaving in a snatch of
Gene Kelly’s voice-over narration about Eleanor Powell. It’s an early tip-off
that the movie is best taken as a tumble of unreliable memories, one in which
basic narrative details are frequently unclear; the extreme over-reliance on
stock footage is objectively a weakness, but one which embodies the often
uncomprehending distance between people and the events that shape their lives.
The main focus is on teenage Yehia, fixated against the odds on becoming an
actor (his specific obsession with studying at the Pasadena Playhouse would
seem weirdly arbitrary, absent the knowledge that Chahine himself studied there
and is channeling his own life experience); the quest made all the more
quixotic by Mohsen Mohieddin’s often wild overacting in the role; other
plotlines include a wealthy uncle who abducts a drunken British soldier and
then falls for him, a Jewish family that leaves for Palestine, and various bits
of espionage and resistance. The storytelling is often extremely choppy, major
demarcation points coming and going, characters and concerns popping in and out,
ultimately all ending in rushed celebratory fashion as the family and its
contacts works every angle to help Yehia fulfil his dream, excess sentiment
held at bay by an utterly goofy final shot. In terms of the evolution of
Chahine’s work, the film holds up less well than its immediate predecessor Return
of the Prodigal Son, which exhibits many comparable weaknesses/oddities
while attaining greater overall resonance, the memory of its astounding, bitter
blood-spattered finale causing Alexandria…Why? to feel almost like
doodling by comparison.
Thursday, January 2, 2025
Bleak Moments (Mike Leigh, 1971)
Almost too aptly titled, Mike Leigh’s debut film Bleak
Moments revolves around Sylvia, a thirty-something secretary in a small
accounting firm who lives with her developmentally-challenged sister Hilda, being
very slowly and ineffectually wooed by Peter, a teacher. Anne Raitt is
fascinating as Sylvia, sometimes strikingly severe looking, as if about to step
into a Gothic melodrama, probably overly reliant on cigarettes and sherry, but
with ample hints of a playful inner life, a faint smile drifting across her
face as she softly tweaks the conversation with comments that don’t quite find
an audience (such as introducing herself as the President of Venezuela, or asking
a visitor if he wants some nuts before admitting she doesn’t have any). The
lives on display are all highly constrained: by their drab and cramped living
and working spaces; by inescapable circumstances (Sylvia’s colleague and friend
Pat joylessly cares for her bed-ridden mother); by hang-ups and anxieties (Peter
seems to find every word a struggle, regurgitating things he read in books
without conveying any deep engagement with them); by sexual naivete and
inadequacy (there’s no sex in the film, but that’s the point). It frequently
shudders with awkward silences: a date night between Peter and Sylvia, depicted
in excruciating detail, moves from the most atmospherically challenged Chinese
restaurant imaginable to a strangulated and somewhat poignant aftermath in
Sylvia’s living room. But Leigh also allows glimpses of small beauty and
possible transcendence: Sylvia and Hilda are both captivated by the tentative
but sincere singing and guitar-playing of a man who rents their garage, and Pat
is drawn to a faith-healing group, becoming convinced that Hilda might find a
cure there. Sylvia vehemently opposes this fancifulness (it’s the most emotion
she displays about anything) but the ending suggests she may be tacitly
allowing Pat to take a shot, a concession more likely however to extinguish one
of the film’s few shards of hope than to fulfil it.
Wednesday, December 25, 2024
Benedetta (Paul Verhoeven, 2021)
It’s not hard to see why Paul Verhoeven’s Benedetta was
viewed in some quarters as blasphemous or insensitive or offensive; the
director’s lusty approach to religious-themed material all but invites those
judgments. But by the same token, its vividness and brashness, its embrace of
the shocking and scandalous, gives it the feeling of playing for high stakes:
in depicting a devout believer who nevertheless embraces transgression (particularly
in matters of sexual pleasure), then it posits faith as something full and
complex and, for all its deprivations, scintillating (in this respect at least,
Bunuel sometimes comes to mind in watching the film). Set in the 17th
century, the film starts with Benedetta’s childhood admission to the convent:
as a young adult, evidence of her potential saintliness accumulates, and she’s eventually
named Mother Superior; one of the film’s delicious ambiguities is that while
the Mother she displaces (Charlotte Rampling) is more correct in her behaviour
and her devotion to the institution’s well-being, Benedetta (despite her highly
reciprocated sexual desire for a novice nun) is the truer believer and more
likely instrument of God’s will. The film is as propulsive and gripping as any
of Verhoeven’s high-voltage Hollywood works, with action scenes of comparable
impact (several of them built around visions of a very dynamic Jesus); the lead
actress Virginie Efira is extraordinarily and fully present, not least in the
very frank love-making scenes. The film’s intense physicality manifests itself
in multiple ways: the deep-rooted fascination of stigmata (amplified here by
unanswered questions about whether Benedetta’s bleeding wounds are
self-inflicted, and even if they are, does that inherently reduce their God-given
significance), a focus on bodily orifices and excretions, on the details of
sexual pleasure, on the can’t-look-away horrors of the plague that threatens
the surrounding country, all contributing to a startling overall viewing
experience.
Wednesday, December 18, 2024
Aspen (Frederick Wiseman, 1991)
Frederick Wiseman’s 1991 Aspen differs from comparable studies
like the Boston-set City Hall and Monrovia, Indiana in spending little
time on the community apparatus: there’s nothing here of council meetings or
ski resort management discussions, and the de rigueur aspects of the
project (ski slopes, ski lifts, skiers) are dispensed with fairly cursorily. Instead, Wiseman’s emphasis is on spiritual questioning and searching,
taking us into several extended discussions and lectures on such topics on
reconciling oneself to divorce from a religious perspective, or on whether capitalism
can be reconciled with religious teachings on justice (inevitably, the
contributions to these discussions occasionally carry a note of anxious
self-interest). Some of what we’re shown is unseemly or borderline absurd, such
as a rather ridiculously mentored art class in an over-the-top house, or a plastic
surgery presentation seeming to disproportionately focus on undesirable “ethnic”
features; others, like a lively discussion of a Flaubert short story, are
sincere and committed, if disproportionately populated by seemingly well-to-do
retirees with ample time on their hands. In contrast, a fortieth wedding
anniversary party held in an apparently much more low-budget and functional
location reverberates with genuine human warmth and spontaneity, whereas a group
of immigrants worries even about the availability of basic housing (and, again,
about the relative advantages of having paler skin). The film’s final sequence,
an eloquently conceived and delivered sermon about the building of religious
community, provides a note of hope that these disparate outlooks and
circumstances might somehow find common purpose (an optimism unfortunately not much
borne out by subsequent decades). In a tiny concession to Aspen celebrity-spotting,
the film includes a brief shot of CBS newsman Ed Bradley amid others in a local
gym, and (I think) British newsman Jon Snow among those playing a cozy (and
somewhat ribald) game of charades.
Wednesday, December 11, 2024
Baba Yaga (Corrado Farina, 1973)
Corrado Farina’s two best-known directorial works, They
Have Changed their Face and Baba Yaga, both feature supernatural
themes in a modern-day setting (vampires and witches respectively): a quirkier
similarity is that they both contain pseudo-intellectual citations of Jean-Luc
Godard and feature odd parodies of product commercials (for LSD and detergent
respectively). The former is the more narratively robust work, its slow
build-up of Nosferatu mythology taking a sudden swerve into sharp corporate
satire, but Baba Yaga is, if nothing else, the more stimulating visual
experience. The film’s most direct reference is Antonioni’s Blow-Up: another
photographer (in this case a woman, Valentina, played by Isabelle de Funes) who
hosts a succession of models in her home studio: the studio is an eye-candy marvel,
from the zebra skin on the wall above the bed to the transparent telephone to
the library-worthy stock of art books. Walking alone one night, Valentina
encounters a strange older woman (Carroll Baker, with very few lines, which is
probably just as well) who rapidly takes a close, sensuously-tinged interest in
her, including giving the gift of a creepily-staring doll which may have the
power to come to life and cause mayhem; it’s all somewhat hampered by brevity
though, Valentina and her boyfriend extricating themselves in 80 minutes more
easily than seemed likely, and without any very meaningful explanation or aftertaste.
Still, it’s an arresting exercise in competing female willpowers, contrasting de
Funes’ open, searching appearance against Baker’s Gothic witchiness, Valentina
early on asserting her sexual self-determination, and thereafter fighting to retain
the power of the look against a reality perpetually disrupted by fantastic visions
(paralleled by how the film itself is regularly disrupted by series of still photographs
or comic book frames, or in one instance by a sudden digression into gangster
action, which turns out to be the aforementioned commercial shoot).
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
The Palace (Roman Polanski, 2023)
Roman Polanski’s The Palace is at once anarchic and
exhausted, familiar-seeming while aggressively withholding much fulfilment, let
alone closure: its relentless ugliness and complete absence of eroticism jarringly
contrasts with What?, perhaps its closest cousin in Polanski’s oeuvre,
but one in which its lead actress Sydne Rome was almost constantly completely
or partially nude (as if to underline the point, Rome briefly shows up in The
Palace too, far less strikingly). The film partially draws its ruined mood
from being set on New Year’s Eve in 1999, with some characters believing the Y2K
bug will strike and do its worst, others oblivious to it; the film reminds us that
it was also the day of Boris Yeltsin’s resignation, providing clips of an
impossibly benign-seeming Putin on his first day of succession. The film seems
to suggest that the end of the world, or at least this corner of it, might be a
proportionate response to humanity’s dreggy state: virtually every wealthy
female face (and at least one male one) made grotesque by plastic surgery; one off-putting
display of entitlement and obliviousness following another; rampant financial
corruption; a degraded focus on petty whims and indulgences. But of course the
end of the world fails to arrive, and the same goes for narrative closure: the
film’s most intriguing structural element is its open-endedness, perhaps suggesting
that one layer of idiocy will always be replaced by another, perhaps implicitly
chiding the audience for even hoping to extract superficial clarity from such
underlying wretchedness. Still, the point would probably have been better made
by more sprightly writing and handling, for example with less focus on human
and animal excrement, and with more energetic casting (for instance, the no-longer-funny
John Cleese achieves little as an ancient Texan billionaire, although his
performance gets more enjoyable once his character dies and starts getting lugged
around in the manner of Weekend at Bernie’s).
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
Monrovia, Indiana (Frederick Wiseman, 2018)
Donald Trump is never mentioned in Frederick Wiseman’s Monrovia, Indiana – there’s barely any sign of politics at all – but one's sense of the film surely shifts with the knowledge that it’s located in a county where Trump won some 76% of the vote in both 2016 and 2024. The town appears to be no duller or uglier than the vast majority of small towns, and hence an embodiment of a certain kind of good place to live: the town council diligently works to balance growth and sustainability, spending extensive time on such matters as the placement of a new bench or the availability of fire hydrants; the grocery and liquor stores are well-stocked in the modern consumerist manner. And yet there are ample signs of an insularity that could easily become malleable. The community is startlingly homogenous (at least by modern urban standards), with only the slightest sprinkling of non-white faces; the town’s gun store may have a wider range of inventory than its restaurants have menu choices. The film observes a Masonic event at which a member receives a fifty-year pin, rendered inadvertently funny since no one seems capable of getting through the ornately prescribed wording and ceremony without stumbling; later, a preacher prompts a funeral gathering to sing Amazing Grace, which falls flat as he’s seemingly the only one who knows the words, at least to the second verse. These hollowly executed rituals don’t suggest much active questioning of parameters (in addition to the many who seem to have lived in or around the town forever, there are references to others who moved away and are now returning): the highest cultural activity on display is a school band rendition of the theme from The Simpsons - and yet those council meetings are intelligent and well-informed; the preacher’s sermon is articulate and even moving; whatever we might think of all that Trump support, the film doesn't suggest it would be based entirely in callousness or ignorance. As always, while Wiseman doesn't aspire to tell an entire story, the one he tells is satisfyingly complex and implication-heavy.
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
Deception (Arnaud Desplechin, 2021)
At least for most English-language viewers (those more
familiar with the Hollywood convention of, say, a Napoleon filmed in
English than with Fassbinder’s German-language Western) it may not be easy to
orient oneself within Arnaud Desplechin’s adaptation of Philip Roth’s Deception:
the film is set in London, depicting the relationship between a Jewish-American
author called Philip Roth and a British woman, both played by French actors
(Denis Podalydes and Lea Seydoux) in a film that feels entirely French despite
the odd scene in the pub and suchlike. The effect could be somewhat distancing,
if not for the vivacity of the performers, and for the many striking points of
specificity and immediacy: a recurring preoccupation with Judaism and Israel,
and also with Czechoslovakia, embodied both by the author’s cherished memories
of past travels and by ongoing relationships in the present. The film’s “reveal”
of sorts, not an unfamiliar one in an age of meta-reality concepts, is that
Seydoux’s unnamed character may be imagined (at least that’s what the author
tells his wife when she reads his notebook and reacts with outrage); the beauty
of sorts is in how little it matters whether or not that’s true, how the purely
imagined may be more truthful and piercing than the mundanely “fact-based.” For
instance, early on in the film, the woman with her eyes closed is able to
describe the studio in which they meet and have sex in improbably precise
detail, which paradoxically bolsters the sense that it may be imagined; the final
scene introduces further distance and displacement, intermingled with
tenderness and delight. The film overall isn’t as transporting as Desplechin’s
grander canvases, its energy level necessarily lower (notwithstanding various
moments when Podalydes seems to be channelling the director’s signature actor,
Mathieu Amalric) but it’s enjoyably elegant and fluid, engaging most
intelligently with the challenges of adapting Roth.
Wednesday, November 13, 2024
The Vampire Happening (Freddie Francis, 1971)
At the start of The Vampire Happening, the Hollywood
star “Betty Williams” flies to Transylvania, surrounded by passengers who are
being titillated and shocked (in those pre personalized viewing days) by a
screening of one of her own raunchy movies; she’s returning to reclaim her
ancestral title of Baroness, notwithstanding that a previous holder of the
title continues on in an undead state, the two soon criss-crossing paths as the
area’s vampire population steadily grows. Blood isn’t the bodily fluid that most
defines the movie’s tone though: it has sex on the brain to a rather endearing
degree, deploying whatever might cross its path (desserts, tree branches, stick
shifts) in the most suggestive way available, and taking particular pleasure in
depicting the corruption of an adjacent Catholic seminary. The film has a few
modern trappings (it culminates in a party where Count Dracula arrives in a
helicopter, which one would like to take as a small tribute to Demy’s Donkey
Skin, but presumably isn’t) but feels largely displaced, set in no
plausible time or place; it often has the sense of setting out mainly to amuse
itself. That’s bolstered by the bland yet tragic lead actress Pia Degermark,
the last time she would star in a film, gamely taking on not one but two roles
defined primarily by undressing and ever-changing wigs, but not in truth making
a very lasting impression (she’s marginally more striking as the dead woman
than the live one). And then, for further curio value, the film’s director is
Freddie Francis, who according to IMDB has exactly the same amount of cinematographer
and director credits (37 of each), the high-end double-Oscar sheen of the
former barely seeming connected to the lurid genre-trolling of the latter. The
Vampire Happening may not be his directorial highpoint, but it’s well-sustained
on its own low-end, sheen-deficient terms.
Wednesday, November 6, 2024
The New York Ripper (Lucio Fulci, 1982)
Lucio Fulci’s The New York Ripper is an exercise in
dualities, starting with the strange tension between the heavily stressed
authenticity of its locations (especially enjoyable in the time capsule shots
of the Times Square region, with marquee attractions ranging from Carbon
Copy to Revenge of the Bushido Blade) and a gratingly dubbed
soundtrack (interiors were filmed in Rome) consisting largely of curtly
declamatory dialogue. The film constructs its narrative on a standard sicko
killer premise (the weird casting of British stalwart Jack Hedley as an
absurdly hard-bitten detective creates its own sense of displacement), while
also seeming largely sympathetic to the spectrum of human desire, whether
manifesting itself in middle-class thrill seeking or in obsessive porn
accumulation; its graphic depictions of knifing and blood-spurting and maiming exploit
human frailty and capacity for pain while denying the audience any protective
distance, with the unseen killer’s weirdly duck-like speaking style all the
more destabilizing for its absurdity. The film’s strangest and most productive
tension may be between impulse and deliberation: the killings (for instance, inside
a car parked inside a ferry during a crossing; in the back room of a sleazy sex
club) look like the opportunistic outbursts of a madman, but are ultimately attributable
to a poignantly damaged back story, to a wrecked psychology exercising its
revenge on the world in a complexly mediated manner (inevitably, the ultimate
explanation is overly rushed and not likely to address all the viewer’s
questions); the sense of multi-layered threat borders on the Fritz Lang-ian. In
a film preoccupied with looking, there’s a strangely ethical quality to Fulci’s
cinema, his brutality feels almost scientific in its precision, and the film
insists on the validity of female desire and self-determination (albeit of a
submissive and/or doomed variety). Even so, the nastiness rapidly becomes
draining, and the film isn’t exactly enjoyable, but it never feels easily
dismissable.
Wednesday, October 30, 2024
Breakout (Tom Gries, 1975)
Within the first fifteen minutes of Tom Gries’ Breakout,
we see Mexican authorities set up a murder and then swoop in to arrest American
businessman Jay Wagner, who in what appears to be the sketchiest and most evidence-deficient
trial of all time is convicted and sentenced to twenty-eight years in a Mexican
prison; we rapidly learn that some unspecified aspect of Jay’s approach to
business threatened the interests both of the company headed by his grandfather
Harris and of the CIA, the old man collaborating in framing his grandson on
condition that he be kept alive, however meagrely. The fact of Jay being played
by Robert Duvall and his grandfather by John Huston might have lent this highly
shaky set-up a patina of class and persuasiveness, but their presence in such
low-grade, functional roles remains bewildering to the end. The primary focus
is on pilot Nick Colton (Charles Bronson), engaged by Jay’s wife (Jill Ireland)
to get her husband out; Bronson is genial and amused, at the centre of much
easygoing banter and knockabout comedy, his portions of the movie in no way
coalescing with the conspiracy-heavy framework. The film lacks much atmosphere
or tension, with a highly sanitized portrait of the prison, its deprivations
mainly conveyed through a sense of Wagner’s strength ebbing away (although in
this case that’s hard to distinguish from actorly disinterest); the action
scenes are crisply executed but hardly plausible, and the ending strangely
fails to close the loop on the overriding narrative, lacking for example any
confrontation between Wagner and the conniving old man. The film slightly
departs from the usual Bronson-Ireland paradigm in firmly attaching her
character to another man, but then can’t resist hinting at a mutual attraction
between her and Colton; Ireland’s stiffness is far outshone though by Sheree North
in the role of another team member, even if much of what she’s given to do and
say is distinctly demeaning.
Wednesday, October 23, 2024
Oedipus Rex (Pier Paolo Pasolini, 1967)
Pasolini’s version of Oedipus Rex is as mesmerizing
as any of his works, seeped in his extraordinary visual vitality: his people
intensely and vividly present, all the more so for their lack of actorliness
(even the film’s star presence, Silvana Mangano, is used primarily as a blankly
impassive canvas), the settings and trappings tangibly present in all their
dusty, sweating, crumbling, threadbare glory. The film’s boldest device places
the historical recreation within a modern-day framework, underlining the
story’s eternal urgency and ominousness, the relevance of its implication that
societies built on myth-based idolatry will collapse into perversity and
corruption, and also (in how the closing modern-day section emphasizes people
going about their business, with even Oedipus’ guide distracted by kids playing
soccer and the like) the near-impossibility of ensuring that such a message will
reach the ears of those who need to hear it. For all the story’s reliance on
coincidence and oracular revelation, Pasolini emphasizes rationality and
investigation, spending no time on the reign of Oedipus the king, but patiently
setting out the events and exchanges by which he learns the truth of his past,
and how the prediction he took such steps to avoid – that of being destined to sleep
with his mother and kill his father – ensnared him nevertheless (the long
sequence in which Oedipus’s encounter with a party of travelers turns murderous
indicates that Pasolini could have cut it as a director of action). But the
film doesn’t particularly dwell on the incest: in this rendition the details of
Oedipus’ fate are perhaps less impactful than the dawning sense that his
self-determination was always illusionary, that his great choices and acts of
courage were irrelevant to a predetermined entrapment that gradually reveals
itself, Franco Citti’s Oedipus visibly straining to understand how this could
all be, his ultimate self-imposed blindness an inevitable (if inadequate)
response to a world far beyond his capacity to understand or to shape.
Thursday, October 17, 2024
Skip Tracer (Zale Dalen, 1977)
The most abiding impression left by Zale Dalen’s 1977
Vancouver-set drama Skip Tracer is of basic cheerlessness – there’s perhaps
not a single scene in the film when anyone seems to be experiencing any very
deep or meaningful pleasure (even the scene set in a strip joint is about as
drab as they get). The film focuses on John Collins, collector for what we take
to be a predatory lending agency (the title fits a little oddly as the film
doesn’t depict too much difficulty in tracking down his targets, and it seems his
workload also encompasses taking loan applications); he’s won the company’s “man
of the year” award three straight times and is gunning for a fourth, but there’s
little sign that the relative success does much for him, as his vehicle and apartment
are both fairly non-descript and there’s no sign of a meaningful personal life.
In the somewhat over-conventional closing stretch, Collins is faced with brutal
evidence of the human cost of his efforts and quits after a final act of
rebellion; the details aren’t particularly convincing though, either in terms
of his own moral awakening or those of the actions he takes (from today’s perspective, it’s poignant to note the relative modesty of the delinquent amounts
for which lives are ruined). The film is at its best in depicting the deadening
office culture, in which women are habitually called “sweetheart” and there’s
never a vague suggestion they might fill anything more than support roles, and
in which Collins one day finds that his coveted personal office has been taken
away at the behest of the unseen “kids with business degrees” who seemingly treat
the experienced (but not formally educated) likes of Collins merely as
manipulable data points. And as in so many Canadian films of the period, one strongly
senses that the malaise and drabness extends far beyond the film’s narrow parameters.
Tuesday, October 8, 2024
Out 1, noli me tangere (Jacques Rivette, 1971)
Jacques Rivette’s twelve-hour-plus Out 1, noli me tangere
richly justifies the investment made in watching it (and that even goes for
multiple viewings - I’ve completed it three times), even if it’s confoundingly
difficult to summarize how that is. To make just a few random and inadequate
points, the great length, and large blocks of time in which very little happens
(nothing at all by conventional narrative measures) exists in tension with a
sense of temporal fluidity and uncertainty: for example, the fact of so many
characters wearing exactly the same clothes in scene after scene suggests a recurring
state of stasis (while also constituting a kind of coding, and also channeling the
recurring sense of limited economic resources); even more than usual, a cut
from one scene to another in no way indicates here that the linked events are
taking place simultaneously. The film follows two sets of characters working on
classical texts, differing in their methods but neither seeming to approach a
performance (the leader of one group, Thomas, mentions at one point that three
days have gone by without really dealing with the material); the tightly focused
nature of these projects contrasts (and intertwines) with two other characters
preoccupied by hints of a mysterious group of thirteen that may or not actually
exist, and if it does, may or may not be of much import (we eventually learn
that the group did exist in a formative stage but is now dormant, its purpose never
fully formulated, the fact of the investigation itself possibly inadvertently
prompting it back to a kind of life), their efforts likewise carrying recurring
aspects of play and performance (the film at various times references chess,
solitaire, numerology, secret messages, dress-up and other forms of play). Likewise,
while there’s no sex in the film as such, the rehearsals often crackle with
erotic possibility (even from the very first shot); conversely, the few scenes
that most seem to be heading toward carnal intimacy usually trail off into
stilted, melancholy-tinged game-playing. There’s a constant sense of
reinvention: a character wins a million francs and briefly speculates dizzily on
what might change before the money is stolen, he and his friends then channeling
their efforts into searching for the perpetrator, a project carrying, in an
albeit limited way, a renewed sense of experimentation and improvisation (in these
scenes, as in many others, we’re often aware of passers-by staring at the film-makers,
which adds to the sense of vivid engagement with the possibilities of the immediate).
Ultimately, the film confirms certain aspects of possible conspiracy while
leaving others open (the prime mover “Pierre” is never seen or heard, although
it’s tempting to think he’s in effect director Rivette, or an avatar or
derivative thereof); it moves closer to intimations of the supernatural; it positions
some characters for apparent fulfilment while leaving others dead or bereft,
with a final shot reminding us of something we witnessed (much) earlier and
which was never adequately explained, indicating that the end of the film, even
one as long and stimulating and mind-altering as this one, is a merely
contingent thing.