It’s oddly appropriate that John Frankenheimer’s Story of a Love Story was never properly
released, and is very hard to see now – the title suggests a distancing (if not
plain redundancy), whereas the alternative title Impossible Object threatens to disappear altogether. The love
story, if such it is, is between an English writer (Alan Bates, in provocative,
improvisatory-feeling form) living in France with an American wife and a houseful
of kids, and the French wife (Dominique Sanda, one of the most beguilingly
watchful of actresses ) of an older French husband, mother of a single
daughter. The film moves around within their timeline of their relationship,
further destabilizing itself through the insertion of fantasy sequences from
Bates’ imagination, or from another imagination altogether – at various times
the movie (which, if nothing else, never seems to be merely coasting) seems to
explicitly evoke Fellini (as in a nudity-strewn dream sequence) and Antonioni
(the title also evokes his Cronaca di un amore,
and Lea Massari from L’Avventura enters
with Bates into a vaguely Don’t Look Now-ish
tumble of sexual positions) and a generalized on-the-fly kind of New Wave-ish
ness. It’s hard to know what the (at least to that point) usually tougher-contoured Frankenheimer wanted
out of such a project, if not to disappear within it, perhaps to renew himself
through an exercise in evasiveness (although with his wife Evans Evans hovering
in the role of Bates’ wife and providing a vague tether). Complaints about the
film’s inconsequentiality hardly seem fair in this context – it seems designed
to perpetually recede (as love usually does, I suppose), shifting for a while
into exotic dreaminess and then into sustained, piercing tragedy, before
veering away again into quizzical possibilities. The film’s pretty visuals and
ingratiating aspects perhaps made it too easy to dismiss (certainly something did) but it’s genuinely,
surprisingly rewarding.
Sunday, January 21, 2018
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