It's rather hard to get a fix on Alfred Hitchcock’s Topaz, and all too easy to reflexively
brush it aside as an illustration of the director’s supposed late-career
artistic exhaustion. As with many spy films of the period, exhaustion is
actually central to its theme, of men (it’s usually men) in suits sublimating
their personal lives to the grand geopolitical struggle, even though the
specific contribution of their life-threatening exploits to that struggle is
often unclear, especially on the many occasions when one’s masters prove
untrustworthy (the treacherous scheme behind the film’s title seems like such
an example of privileged access and power collapsing in on itself). Topaz has a lot of rather flatly played
conversation between such men, interspersed with set-pieces which
intermittently exhibit Hitchcock’s legendary
compositional genius and visual intensity. It makes you reflect though how
often those fraught set-pieces drew on explicitly voyeuristic or neurotic underpinnings
– Topaz by comparison is drained of
much in the way of desire or obsession, or even recognizable human
demonstrativeness. The film’s abstraction – its lack of interest in any kind of
cultural specificity (the two main Cuban characters are played by a Canadian
and a German) – becomes its own kind of statement on the milieu’s moral confusion,
bolstered by an unusually sprawling narrative that keeps shifting focus between
locations and protagonists, reflecting the underlying sense of ambiguous ethics
and boundaries. While it feels like an old man’s film in many ways, the cast
contains a startling number of actors from the French New Wave (it’s a rich
resource for any Bacon-type degrees-of-separation exercise), providing its own
sense of renewal; Michel Piccoli’s cheery wave in the final moments, and the
final shot of a newspaper being blown away, suggest that whatever the
momentousness of the world events in the background, the director is mostly
interested in moving on from them.
Friday, July 20, 2018
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