Reviewing movies since 1984, online film critic since 1998. Here you will find a film essay or review, interviews, and a focus on certain trends in current Hollywood, and what's eclipsed in favor of something more mainstream.
"Carrie" is geeky horror with its tongue firmly placed on its cheek until the
final reel. That is when an onslaught of violence makes us realize Brian De
Palma's sleight-of-hand at the controls. This is De Palma's most absorbing film,
utilizing his admiration for Alfred Hitchcock in ways he could never manage
later on.
Sissy Spacek is the freckled, extremely shy high school teenager Carrie White,
the butt of all jokes and abuse by her gym class. Her class is full of whiny,
rebellious teen girls, all of whom have great contempt for Carrie. Why? Maybe
because Carrie is too easy to pick on or maybe because they use her as a
scapegoat for their problems. The most rebellious and popular girl in school,
Chris Hargensen (Nancy Allen), wants to get even with Carrie since Chris is
forbidden to go to the prom by her gym instructor, Miss Collins (Betty Buckley).
It turns out the class had taunted Carrie in the shower at school and, now,
everyone has to pay for it with detention. Chris does get even by using her
dopey boyfriend (a very young John Travolta), whom she refers to as an idiot, to
get some...well, you might know where this is leading. The infamous chaotic
climax says it all, and if you have seen this film, you know exactly what I am
referring to.
Carrie's home life should be paradise compared to high school but it is closer
to the definition of Hell on Earth. Her mother, Margaret White (Sissy Spacek),
is a religious woman who doesn't want her daughter sullied by her high school
experiences. If Margaret feels Carrie has sinned, particularly with the observance of
her "dirty pillows," then Carrie is to be locked in a closet. There is no way on
earth that Carrie could ever go to the high school prom with the most popular
guy in school, Tommy Ross (William Katt), if her mother is so inhumanly strict.
Based on Stephen King's novel which put the novelist on the map, "Carrie" is like no
other horror film before it. There is nothing Gothic about "Carrie" and there
are definitely no inhuman monsters that she has to face. Like "The Exorcist" in
1973, "Carrie" is concerned with the main character and her own personal demons
within a realistic setting. She has a rare talent for telekinesis though
director De Palma wisely uses a gimmicky horror device sparingly. What I
remember most about "Carrie" are its honest depictions of high school life. The
volleyball game where Carrie misses hitting the ball starts the film off (not to
mention P.J. Soles as Norma, who whacks Carrie on the head with her red hat).
The lovingly eroticized, slow-motion sequence of the girls showering after the
game while Carrie discovers a typical occurrence in teen girls, her period. The
"American Graffiti" moment where Chris is cruising with her boyfriend while
listening to Martha Reeves' "Heatwave." The sympathetic Miss Collins consoling
Carrie, who can't believe Tommy Ross has asked to her to the prom.
Sissy Spacek makes the most of her compassionate view of Carrie - a bemused girl
with a talent few share and an inability to belong. Spacek makes Carrie into a
frightened, fierce, sometimes helpless, tormented girl but always showing how
human and caring her soul is. Her transformation from helpless and insular to a
lovely prom queen to a Satanic, blood-soaked figure of uncontrollable means is
thrilling to watch. It is emotionally frustrating for the audience to see that
Carrie mistakes the kindness of others for unduly cruelty, particularly during
the horrifying climax.
Piper Laurie ("The Hustler") is no less thrilling as the equally tormented and
tormenting mother, Margaret, who has no patience for sin. She has a slew of
great moments but one that works wonders, illustrating her character's growing
madness, is when she sees Carrie's pink prom dress. "You are wearing a red
dress," says Margaret. "It's pink momma," says Carrie. It is a moment that still
makes me squirm, as does the whole film.
If there are any flaws, it is that De Palma's film could have been longer
(reportedly budgeted at the meager sum of 1.8 million). It seems that it skips
by so fast that you wish there was more. "Carrie" is the kind of film that could
have become a TV series because of its up front view of teen life (it later
became a musical). Still, it is the Amy Irving character, Sue Snell, that leaves
me wondering about her motives. Firstly, Susan seems to be hateful of Carrie but
then she decides to ask her own boyfriend (!) to take Carrie to the prom. It is
also clear that Sue is not aware of Chris's plans at the prom, but why the
change of heart? Minor flaw but still perplexing.
De Palma has many tricks up his sleeve, and his innovative use of slow-motion
and split-screen techniques serve him well since he uses whatever he needs to
make his story come alive. But what is most clever is how he has made an almost
jokey revenge tale as humane as he has, thanks to Spacek, and then turns the
screws from a typical high school tale into a gripping horror film that can
dazzle but also scare you into oblivion. The final shot is proof of this.
As with "Scary Movie" parodying "Scream," it is simply a real effort to sit
through "Plump Fiction," a parody of "Pulp Fiction" and "Reservoir Dogs." Why?
Well, the jokes are simply recycling dialogue bits and other gags from "Pulp
Fiction" without the finesse or pungent wit Tarantino brought to his own work.
The concept behind "Plump Fiction" just can't possibly work anyway.
The filmmakers of this film forget that satire and parody search for the sublime
and the ridiculous in other notable films that may have unintentionally funny
scenes or that have material ripe for parody. Keenan Ivory Wayans might have
done better satirizing "Nightmare on Elm Street" and the "Friday the 13th" films
more so than "Scream" when making "Scary Movie." The reason is because "Scream"
was a postmodern slasher flick that actually winked at the audience already,
providing the humorous ambition of actually satirizing and deconstructing the
slasher genre. Say what you will about "Scream" but I never took it seriously as
a modern horror film, at least not in the same breath as "Halloween" or "The
Exorcist."
The same problem plagues "Plump Fiction." There is a scene in the horrendous
wannabe spoof "Spy Hard" where Leslie Nielsen and a female lead dance at a club mimicking the
expressions of John Travolta and Uma Thurman's famous dance sequence from "Pulp
Fiction." The problem is that the sequence from "Pulp" was a riff on Travolta's
dance numbers from "Saturday Night Fever" and a riff on the Batdance from the
pulpy "Batman" TV series. It was already mocking and satirizing those
pop-culture icons. So how can you possibly spoof or satirize something that is
already a spoof? It goes without saying that "Plump Fiction" has a similar dance
sequence that is actually funny, but not at the same level as "Pulp" was.
"Plump" basically reiterates most scenes from "Pulp" and "Reservoir Dogs." Scenes
involving Sandra Bernhard and some Reservoir Nuns, not to mention Forrest Gump
and Nell, hardly elicit much of a smile. Best bits involve Pamela Segall and
Matthew Glave as the Coxes, riffing on "Natural Born Killers" which is certainly
ripe for parody. Segall does an excellent impersonation of Juliette Lewis and
her body language - the difference is that she is in on the joke and it is
well-executed. Tommy Davidson is also terrific as Julius, the Samuel L. Jackson
character, and at least he brings his own persona to the proceedings. I also
enjoyed a clever scene that parodied "Clerks" and "Reality Bites." But many of
these gags seem desperate at best.
The Zucker brothers have made spoofing a household name but consider the sources
they were spoofing. "Airplane" spoofed all disaster films in general. "Top
Secret" spoofed all spy films and Elvis pictures. And so on. Their targets were
films that were not aiming to be funny at all. "Pulp Fiction" was a black comedy
that was riffing and deconstructing all of film noir in general. That is what
the filmmakers of "Plump Fiction" have forgotten.
I have said it before and I will say it again. Spoofs are often at their best
when they mock films that take themselves seriously. The original "Star Wars"
was not exactly serious science-fiction, though "The Empire Strikes Back"
certainly had a darker tone. Therefore, spoofing something that was in and of
itself a subtle send-up of science-fiction serials often presents a problem. Mel
Brooks scored high marks with spoofing James Whales' "Frankenstein" and "The
Bride of Frankenstein" in "Young Frankenstein" but that worked wonders
because the "Frankenstein" films were, on some level, meant to be taken
seriously. Brooks's "Spaceballs" has scores of jokes and puns and some of it
is funny, but too much broad humor and yuk-yuk jokes prove how stale some of
it can be amid the precious gags that work.
The movie opens with an obscenely long shot of a massive space cruiser with a
sign that reads "We Brake For Nobody." We meet Dark Helmet (Rick Moranis),
who has difficulty breathing through his mask and who intends to steal the
atmosphere of the planet Druidia. He has help thanks to President Skroob (Mel
Brooks), the president of Spaceball, a neighboring planet of Druidia. Of
course, someone must stop him and who better qualified than Lone Starr (Bill
Pullman), the stud-like space jockey and his assistant, Barf (the late John
Candy), a Mog (half man, half dog), and the "Jewish princess" Princess Vespa
(Daphne Zuniga), who is not about to marry Prince Valium. There is also good
old Brooks in another role as the all-powerful Yogurt who keeps saying "May
the Schwartz be with you" and possesses an all-powerful ring that allows you
to use the Schwartz. And how can we forget the oily, edible Pizza the Hut?
"Spaceballs" has lots of great gags. I love the shot where stormtrooper
clones literally comb the desert with a giant comb. I also like the lightsaber duel where Dark Helmet
keeps bumping into the camera crew. And how about the actor's doubles? Or
Michael Winslow from the "Police Academy" films who can mimic all kinds of
computerized sounds? And how about the priceless John Hurt reprising his role
from "Alien" where his chest bursts with an alien doing a tap dance number?
But the joke to end all jokes, the epitome of greatness, is when Dark Helmet
and President Skroob watch a videocassette copy of "Spaceballs" the movie and
fast-forward to find Lone Starr and his friends. It is a purely hilarious
sequence that fits with the postmodernist movement where we are always
reminded we are watching a movie.
"Spaceballs" is not a great Brooks comedy like "Young Frankenstein" or "The
Producers" but it sure has its fill of clever jokes, amidst juvenile ones, to
score a decent mark on the laugh meter. Suffice to say that if you are a fan
of "Star Wars," you'll enjoy it more than most.
EYES WIDE SHUT (1999) A conclusion of the complete shot-by-shot analysis (or mere description to some) of the late director's last film
By Jerry Saravia
Bill arrives home at four in the morning with his costume in a bag (the entrance door to his apartment
is a dark blue color). He walks around the apartment to his daughter
Helena's bedroom, which is again lit in blue by the color outside her bedroom window.
He shuts his eyes and then opens them, perhaps glad he is home and that
his family is safe. Bill walks to his blue-lit study and puts the
costume in a cabinet. He comes to his bedroom where Alice is laughing
while sleeping, presumably dreaming. Bill wakes her up and she confesses
that she dreamt of the naval officer who was mocking her. She then
continues describing sexual acts (not all that different from what Bill
had seen at the orgy) and her frolicking and having sex with all the men
watching her with the naval officer. She says that she saw Bill in the
dream and laughed at him mockingly, as she did in their earlier argument
scene. Bill is again nonplussed, not to mention speechless, and she
hugs him tightly. Fade to black.
It is the
next day, and Bill is seen arriving at the Sonata cafe in a taxi with
the costume in his bag. He walks to the cafe but it is closed. Bill
walks into a coffee shop called Gillespie's and asks for coffee from a
waitress (Carmela Marner) with a British accent and a faded pink shirt.
As he sits contemplating, he asks her if she knows of when the Sonata
cafe will open again and if she knows Nick Nightingale, the pianist. She
says, "Sure. He comes in here." Interestingly, she starts speaking in a
New York accent and then reverts back to her British accent almost as
is she is disguising herself (I cannot be sure why but it does lend to
the film's dreamlike pull). To lend credibility to his fictitious story
of supposed medical tests for Nick, he shows his State Medical Board card once again.
Bill
arrives at the hotel where Nick had been staying. Still carrying the bag
with his costume, he speaks to a gay clerk (Alan Cumming) who is
immediately smitten by Bill. Bill again presents his State Medical Board
card, and asks him if he saw Nick and if anything unusual had happened
to him. The gay clerk tells him that Nick was escorted from the hotel in
the early morning by "two big guys, the kind you don't fool around
with," chucking at the possibility of making a sexual reference. He also
mentions that Nick had a bruise on his cheek and that he looked scared.
Bill leaves without much information about Nick's whereabouts.
Bill
travels in another taxi to the Rainbow shop to return his costume. He
sees Milich again who notices that Bill had forgotten his mask. Bill
says he had not left it in the party, though where he had left it is
never made clear. Milich's daughter introduces herself to the doctor,
and again we see the two Japanese men from the previous night, who have
made some arrangement with Milich. Bill is confused and we sense that
Milich is a pimp and his daughter is a prostitute. The other possibility
is that on the previous night, Milich was only faking his incredulous
behavior towards his daughter's sexual antics.
Next we
see Bill in his office, which has a pinkish glow coming from the shades.
He is fantasizing further about his wife Alice with the naval officer,
who are now shown to be nude and making love. His secretary comes into
the office and he tells her that he needs to cancel his afternoon
appointments.
This
time, Bill is driving his Ranger Rover out to Long Island to the
mansion. He may either try to retrieve his mask or inquire about Nick,
though we are not sure of his intentions. A bluish glow seems to appear
in long shot as Bill parks his Ranger Rover in front of the front gate
of the mansion. As he walks towards the blue gate, there is a slow zoom
to the surveillance camera which is tracking him. Bill then notices a
limo arriving at the other side of the gate. An elderly man steps out
and hands him an envelope, then abruptly leaves. Bill opens the envelope
and reads that it is a warning not to make any further inquiries about
what he had seen at the mansion the previous night. This sequence is all
accomplished with images and the discordant piano theme by Ligeti.
There is no dialogue at all (none is necessary) and it further shows
Kubrick's mastery of the film medium to tell a story with visuals.
It is now
nighttime again, as we see a master shot of Bill's apartment building
(the same shot that opens the film after Alice's undressing before the
camera). Bill arrives home and is greeted by Alice (wearing a faded pink
shirt) and his daughter, Helena, as they sit on the table going over
math problems. There are various books on the table, all representing
the colors of the rainbow, and the table cover is a faded red. He tells
Alice that he needs to go back to the office for more appointments. Bill
gets a beer from the refrigerator and hears Alice's voice from the
previous night where she confesses to her sexual orgy dream. The scene
ends with a close-up of Alice smiling at Bill.
Bill returns to the office and, outside his office, we see the
Christmas tree with a rather faded pink glowing star. There is the final
flash of Alice's sexual fantasy with the naval officer, and she seems
to really be enjoying herself. He decides to call Marion Nathanson, the
patient's daughter who made a pass at him the night before. Carl, her
boyfriend, answers the phone however and Bill hangs up on him.
We are now back in the nighttime streets of New York,
specifically Greenwich Village. Bill arrives at Domino's apartment in a
cab. He enters the apartment carrying a small cake-box.
He knocks on the door but it is her roomate, Sally (Fay Masterson),
dressed in a light blue shirt, who answers the door. She lets him in and
is unaware of when Domino will be back. Signalling him to go to the
kitchen, she slowly pushes herself against him and he stars to get cozy
with her. A rainbow effect stars to form at the bottom of the screen
where blue is the most prominent color. Bill grabs Sally's breast, but
she tries to get out of the flirtatious spell by asking him to talk
about Domino. They sit at the kitchen table and she tells him that Domino is HIV positive.
Bill is stunned, unable to know how to cope with what has been a
relatively unlucky night for him.
Bill is again walking the streets at night, and the discordant piano theme starts up again. He passes a green-lit store, two phone booths lit by yellow lights, realizing that he is being
followed by a bald man. Bill tries to evade him by taking a taxi but is
then told by the driver that he is off-duty. Bill walks by a magazine
stand and grabs a newspaper. Bald man is seen again and stops in his
tracks staring at Bill. Bald man continues walking and leaves Bill's
sight. Bill walks further down the street to a coffee shop and orders a
cappuccino. He reads the paper (which has the headline "Lucky to be
Alive" on the front page) and comes across an article about an ex-beauty
queen who had a drug overdose in a hotel room. Bill discovers it is the
same mysterious woman who warned him of danger at the orgy. Once again,
Bill's dark blue coat appears black in this scene, which has warm color
tones.
Puzzled by the newspaper article, Bill goes to the hospital to
inquire about the mysterious woman, who is now named Amanda Curran (also
known as Mandy at Ziegler's early party scene). He again shows his
State Medical Board I.D. card for verification, claiming she was one of
his patients. The receptionist tells him that the patient died earlier
in the day. Bill goes to the morgue to I.D. her body (the inside of this
room is grayish, making it a cold and sterile environment, only this
time, some red, green and blue bottles are seen in the distance). In a
canted high-angle shot of her corpse, we hear her voice-over from when
she warned him and that her life would not be spared for helping him.
Bill leans down to presumably kiss her but then he slowly stands back
up. While leaving through the hallway, he walks past several abstract paintings, each representing a color of the rainbow.
His mobile phone rings, presumably Ziegler.
Bill reports to Ziegler's mansion and enters the billiard room where Ziegler is playing on a red pool table with green lamps overhead. Once again, a lighter
blue light is shining from the outside windows. Bill and Ziegler have
some drinks, and then Ziegler slowly reveals information about Bill.
Ziegler is aware of Bill's visit to the Somerton mansion since he was
there and witnessed the whole scenario. Bill is shocked, first denying
it, then telling him that Nick Nightingale's involvement was minimal.
Ziegler tells Bill that he had him followed and knows Bill had been
making inquiries earlier in the day about Nick. Throughout this pivotal
scene, there is a dramatic distance between Ziegler and Bill (recalling
similar scenes in the chateau climax of Paths of Glory), and some
knowing sexual references in dialogue. Also Bill's dark blue suit
changes, once again, to an almost black color when he walks across the
room due, I imagine, to shifts in lighting.
Ziegler: (referring to Nick) "By now, he is probably back with his family...probably banging Mrs. Nick."
That line is hardly significant in mentioning yet it is followed
by Ziegler's downgrading comments regarding Mandy, aka Amanda Curran,
and that she is nothing more than a hooker and a junkie who was going to
die anyway. Bill is shocked at what he is hearing, especially when
Ziegler says that the whole situation at the Somerton mansion
(last-minute interventions, threats, etc) was fake and intended to scare
Bill. Ziegler finally puts his arm on Bill's shoulder, trying to
comfort him and tells him, "People die. It happens all the time. Life
goes on. It always does, until it doesn't."
We come to a close-up shot of the mask Bill lost, though we are
not sure when or where he lost it (the mask itself may not literally be
there but it may remind Bill of where he should be). Nevertheless, it is
seen resting on a pillow and the camera slowly pans to the left as it
reveals Alice sleeping next to it (obviously, this is where Bill should
be, sleeping next to his wife). Once again, blue light fills the room
from the outside. Cut to Bill arriving home, a bit distraught and aching
for a beer. He walks to the kitchen, turns off the Christmas lights in
the tree (which has a distinct pinkish glow), and sits at the kitchen
table drinking beer.
Dissolve to Bill coming into his bedroom when he notices the mask on his bed pillow. He approaches and sits on the bed with teary eyes,
and starts crying uncontrollably. This wakes up Alice who places his
head on her breast. He tells her: "I'll tell you everything. I'll tell
you everything."
Cut to the early morning as we see Alice with no makeup sitting
on the sofa with a dangling cigarette (this is clearly a moment of
reality, not a dream any longer since Alice had always looked ravishing
through most of the film). Bill is then seen sitting on the adjacent
sofa full of remorse and shame, and we sense that Bill has told her of
his sexual escapades and near-death occurrences (Lucky to be alive
indeed). She reminds Bill, who is trying to comport herself, that they
need to go Christmas shopping with their daughter, Helena.
We see Alice wearing glasses and wearing a light blue sweater, Bill and Helena are in tow at a toy
store. Helena is hopeful she will receive a huge teddy bear from Santa. Bill finally gets the courage to speak
to Alice, asking what they should do. Alice tells him they should be
grateful that they survived all their adventures unscathed (of course,
Alice using the word "we" signifies she has had some adventures herself
outside of the Hungarian from Ziegler's party). Alice's next line is:
"Whether they were real or only a dream."
Alice then reassures him that
they are awake now and hopefully for a long time to come. Bill tells
her: "Forever." Alice smiles and then shakes her head, saying that the
word frightens her though she does love him. What follows is the
controversial last line by Alice in close-up that closes the film:
Alice: "But I do love you...and you know there is something very important we need to do as soon as possible."
Bill: "What's that?"
Alice: (pausing while staring at him) "Fuck."
The sound of the noise from the store fades out and there is an
abrupt cut to black with the title reading: "Produced and Directed by
Stanley Kubrick."
KEEPING THOSE EYES WIDE OPEN
"Eyes Wide Shut" had its
share of detractors and admirers when released back in July 1999. I am
sure the film was not fully completed, despite the fact that Stanley
showed a rough cut in New York to Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman that was
considered finished. There was talk that Stanley intended to release the
film in August of 1999 to allow more time for fine-tuning. This goes
without saying considering how Stanley's past films have always had
minor trims and/or changes, particularly Dr. Strangelove (where he
deleted a pie-fight scene), "The Shining" (he deleted an alternate
ending with Shelley Duvall after the film's initial premiere), "A
Clockwork Orange" (where he deleted a graphic shot of Alex killing the
Cat Lady), and so on. There has been speculation as to what Kubrick
may have changed or deleted in "Eyes Wide Shut" had he lived to do the
fine-tuning. Perhaps the orgy scene could have been restored if Stanley
fought it. Some have suggested that the toy store ending is all wrong
and would have been deleted, but I think it is far too essential. It is
left open to interpretation but I think the scene shows that humans are
not civilized yet (or as evolved) to otherwise think that sex cures
problems in a marriage (or as Alice refers to women's sexual history as
"millions of years of evolution," a very Kubrickian theme) Alice's
inability to say their marriage is forever yet very able to say that sex
is something they have to look forward to shows that she is no
different than Bill - they both want sex but have trouble communicating
their feelings to each other in what seems to be a fragile marriage.
Some may see it as an optimistic ending - I see it as Kubrick's own joke
about marriages and sex. It has the right tone to it because as the
film ends abruptly, we are then back to our own reality - the spell or
trance that Kubrick kept us in has been broken. It works in the same way
as Arthur Schnitzler's novella - a dreamlike trance with moments of
reality.
I have been
describing the colors and compositions in the film with each sequence
since they correspond to Kubrick's intentions in telling this story of
sexual adventures and, in some cases, subtle foreshadowing of future
events as they unfold.
The color red
equals the decadence of sexual appetites and the possibility of some
harmless sexual fun - it is the color of Alice and Bill's bedsheets and
their curtains. Red is quite predictably prominent at the orgy in the
Somerton mansion. Domino, the prostitute, has a red doorway entrance to
her apartment. Ziegler has a red pool table (when they are usually
green).
Blue is the color
of purity and the color of home and hearth - whenever Alice is on screen
at her home, blue is prominent. Bill sees blue at the Somerton gate,
his office has blue carpeted areas and blue doors, his flirtatious
behavior with Domino's roomate has hints of blue, especially her light
blue shirt and blue eyeshadow. The apartment windows in every
character's house has blue light filtering through or sometimes flooding
through. I think that blue is an indicator of where Bill should be - at
home with his wife. It is at the end of the rainbow - the end of his
journey or odyssey. As for the pinkish glows from certain Christmas
trees or the light pinkish shirt color worn by the waitress at
Gillespie's corresponding with Alice's similarly colored shirt when
helping with her daughter's homework, one can assume that pink is
another indicator of where Bill should be at night - after all, pink is
also the color of the star on top of the Christmas trees. Maybe pink is
the Northern Star, a guide to the ethereal blue color of his home with
his family.
The film also has
distinctive rainbow effects, considering it is set during Christmas time
and so there are Christmas trees in practically every scene. Bill's
apartment has colors of the rainbow represented in different objects and
in paintings (the latter done by Kubrick's wife Christiane, who also created the paintings in "A Clockwork Orange"). Bill goes to the Rainbow
shop, and is told by two models at Ziegler's party that he should go
with them "where the rainbow ends." Perhaps at the end of the rainbow is
red (the color of sexual decadence) but Bill chooses a different path -
blue is clearly at the end of the rainbow for him. Consider two scenes
where a deliberate rainbow forms on screen: when Bill is attacked by a
homophobic gang, a rainbow forms at the bottom of the screen where blue
is most prominent (plus he falls back on a dark blue car parked on the
street). When he flirts with Domino's friend, a rainbow forms at the
bottom of the screen where blue is again prominent. Blue is a reminder,
and a sort of sexual blocking signal for Bill, who tries to act on his
sexual impulses and always gets interrupted.
The whole film has
a dreamlike effect - most significant are the pauses and repetitions in
the dialogue. The characters say their dialogue by dragging out each
syllable, and in some cases, repeating what they had just said. The film
is also shot in grainy colors - apparently most shots were filmed with
no real studio lights, sometimes only capturing light from whatever
available source or from the lights on Christmas trees. This is not that
different from Stanley's approach in the beautiful Barry Lyndon, which
was shot with special lenses from NASA so that a scene at night could be lit from
just the candles that were on display.
Another factor is
how much of the film is sexual, implicitly or explicitly. Kubrick has
never shown sex or copulation of any kind on film. The only example I
can only think of is the speeded-up romp in the hay Alex has with two
young girls in "A Clockwork Orange" to the tune of a speeded-up version
of the "William Tell" overture. Here is a filmmaker who has always
hinted at sex, especially in his adaptation of Vladimir Nabokov's
Lolita, which has sexual entendres and connotations galore, but has
never truly shown it. Every scene in "Eyes Wide Shut" revolves around
sex in some form or another, and every encounter Bill has with other
characters is sexual or suggestive of some sexual nature, from the
romantic advances of Marion to the flirtations of Domino's roommate,
Sally, to the unexpectedly funny scene of the hotel desk clerk eyeing
Bill. Of course, the film was advertised as a sexual thriller where we
would get a chance to see Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman engaging in
full-frontal nudity while having sex (there were rumors prior to the
film's release that Cruise and Kidman played psychotherapists who have
sex with their patients.) But anyone who has studied Kubrick's career
knew that anything was further from the truth - the advertising promised
a film of "bad, bad things" and Kubrick teased us yet again. The
audience wanted outright fornication and only got as far as 158 minutes
of foreplay with no climax.
Finally, "Eyes
Wide Shut" is the kind of film that is left open to interpretation.
There is no clear resolution in the story and certain characters are
kept in an obscure light. One can ask what finally happened to Mandy,
the hooker? Was she intentionally killed or did she O.D.? What was so
secretive about the orgy in the mansion that would cause the leader, Red
Cloak, to threaten Bill's life and family? Was it an all an act to
scare him? Is Ziegler telling the truth about what went on the mansion,
or can we ever really trust anyone with a red pool table? Did Alice ever
get it on with the naval officer or did she only fantasize about it?
And what about the mask, how did it appear on Bill's pillow? Who put it
there? Did Alice find it in his study or did someone else place it
there, or is it not actually there since it is seen only from Bill's point-of-view? You can go insane trying to find the answers to such questions
when Kubrick purposely leaves them open-ended - this allows the audience
to come to its own conclusions, something which Hollywood rarely does
anymore.
"Eyes Wide Shut"
is a great film that becomes richer and more enveloping with each
viewing. It requires patience, demands attention, and allows one to
think about its characters and the subtle nuances in their dialogue
exchanges in the context of its theme about the possibility of marital
infidelity in a fragile marriage. Some have seen it once and hated it
only to gradually admire it on second viewing. Do yourself a favor: in
the mindless season after season of predominantly mediocre, bland films, check out Kubrick's last
film "Eyes Wide Shut." If you hated it or disliked it the first time,
you may find yourself at least admiring, on second viewing, the world
Kubrick has created on screen and how he fashions this world before our
eyes, as he has with all of his films. Keep those eyes wide open.
Selected Bibliography:
American Cinematographer: Oct 99, Stanley Kubrick Retrospective, author: Ron Magid.
Kubrick: Inside the Film Artist's Maze, Indiana University Express, author: Thomas Allen Nelson.
A complete shot-by-shot analysis (or mere description to some) of Stanley Kubrick's last film
By Jerry Saravia
There were outstanding films in 1999 such as Magnolia and American Beauty, but there was nothing quite like Stanley Kubrick's final masterpiece, the superbly fascinating Eyes Wide Shut.
This film, like most of the late director's work, merits close
introspection and patience and needs to be seen more than once since it
unearths many meanings, coincidences and extreme subtleties in every
single frame thereby evoking its dreamlike power. Over time, a decade plus, it is hard to say how others perceive Kubrick's last film, since it was not meant to be his last hurrah. The film also would've been further editorialized by Kubrick, as he famously re-edited many of his films even after a premiere (2001: A Space Odyssey, The Shining, for starters). This analysis is an attempt at understanding what is going in each and every frame of Kubrick's most beautiful film since Barry Lyndon.
First, we have the title credits indicating that this is a Stanley Kubrick film starring two glamorous Hollywood actors, Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman.
The music playing in the soundtrack is from Dmitri Shostakovich's
"Waltz from Jazz Suite II." Then there is a cut to a lovingly composed,
highly erotic shot of Alice (Nicole Kidman) who walks into a room where
there is a large-scale mirror and two tennis
rackets. Her backside is shown to us as she slowly
removes her black dress baring all.
We see that she is centered between two pillars, the curtains that
barely close a window are red, and the whole shot itself is in warm
yellowish tones. Right away, there is a cut to the title of the film,
"EYES WIDE SHUT." This shot is a tease, as is the whole film - a game of
foreplay where we can see but not touch, much like the highly touted trailer.
Next we
have Dr. Bill Harford (Tom Cruise) who is dressed in a tuxedo ready to
leave while looking for his wallet (and meanwhile picks up a
handkerchief in a chest drawer, a mobile phone, and a set of keys on a table). He asks his wife,
Alice, the whereabouts of his wallet. She tells him offscreen that it
is located on the bedside table. He finds it and tells his wife, who is sitting
on the loo, that they need to get to the party soon since they are
running late. She asks him how she looks as she stands up from the loo.
He says, "Perfect." She continues to ask if her hair is okay. He says,
"It looks great." Then she says another important line that is the
summation of one of the film's strong themes about marriage: "You are
not even looking." The line is simple and direct but
so damn honest, as indicated in the adjoining moment where, ultimately,
his response to Alice is "It's beautiful. You always look beautiful."
As they are about to leave, Alice asks Bill if he has given the
babysitter, Roz, the phone and pager numbers. He says that they are on
the refrigerator door. Bill shuts off the music on the stereo, which is
incidentally the Shostakovich music we had been listening to from the
beginning. They leave the bedroom and shut the lights. Next shot is a
slightly canted Steadicam tracking shot (and there are many) of the
couple walking down the hallway as Bill helps Alice put her coat on.
Bill asks her the name of the babysitter. She says "Roz", a name he had
forgotten already. They approach the living room where Helena, their
seven-year-old daughter, is sitting next to Roz, and we get our first
glimpse of a Christmas tree next to the sofa. Roz compliments Alice on
her looks, while Helena asks her mother if she can stay up to watch The
Nutcracker. Alice agrees to it, and they wave their kisses and goodbyes
to Helena. The scene dissolves to an exterior night shot of Victor Ziegler's mansion in New York City.
Bill and Alice are inside the mansion, walking through a corridor filled with display cases and works of art. They walk past a decorative,
star-shaped light fixture as they are greeted by Mr. Ziegler himself
(played by Sydney Pollack), a millionaire, and his wife Ilona (Leslie
Lowe) inside a large marbled hall - a Christmas tree laden with
decorations is seen next to a staircase illuminated by a curtain of
light. There are the customary greetings and then a line is said by
Ziegler later reflected in Alice's monologue.
Ziegler: "Alice, look at you! God, you're absolutely stunning."
Alice: "And I don't say that to all the women, do I?" (motioning to Ilona)
Ilona: "Oh, yes, he does."
Ziegler
then mentions to Bill that the osteopath Bill recommended has fixed his
arm and that his tennis serve is better than ever. Meanwhile, Alice and
Ilona briefly complement each other on their magnificent dresses. Bill
and Alice leave as Ziegler and his wife greet the other incoming guests.
The scene dissolves to a slow-zoom out long shot of the interior
ballroom where two chandeliers of light are shaped as if they were
breasts while below is an orchestra playing. Bill and Alice dance and
Alice asks him if she knows any of Ziegler's guests. Bill's reply that
exemplifies Kubrick's dreamlike approach of dragging out every syllable
is: "Not...a...soul." Suddenly Bill recognizes the piano player, who was
studying to be a doctor before dropping out. He asks Alice if she will
accompany him to say hello. She says she needs to go to the bathroom.
Alice walks away from the ballroom and gets a glass of champagne from a
waiter and drinks it in one gulp - giving the impression that she does
not take such parties seriously.
Cut to
Bill greeting Nick Nightingale (Todd Field) whom we see standing next to
his piano. They keep tapping and patting each other on the shoulder and
on the stomach. Nick jokes that he was never cut out to be a doctor
because he is used to walking away. They laugh and drink until Nick is
interrupted (the first of many interruptions in the film) by Ziegler's
secretary that Nick is wanted. They pat each other again and Nick
reminds Bill that he will be playing at the Sonata Cafe.
Dissolve
to Alice at the bar having another glass of champagne. She sets it on
the table and a suave, tall, elegant man picks up her glass. Alice
notices this yet the man drinks from her glass anyway. He then
introduces himself as Sandor Szavost (Sky Dumont), a Hungarian playboy,
perhaps. Alice introduces herself, and she accepts his invitation to
dance. They leave the ante-room and there is a dissolve to the ballroom
where they are seen dancing. They make small talk about art galleries until Alice gazes and smiles upon seeing Bill
with two gorgeous women in the ante-room. Sandor asks her the identity
of the man she is staring at, and she responds, "My husband." Sandor
asks her why she should be married if she can have any man in the
ballroom.
Cut to
Bill conversing and giggling with two models, Nuala and Gayle (Stuart
Thorndike and Louise Taylor) who have their arms draped around each
other. Nuala flirts with Bill, spelling out every syllable of her name.
Gayle reminds Bill that they had met at a photo session at Rockefeller
Plaza and that he gave her a handkerchief for something she had caught
in her eye (the handkerchief that Bill puts in his shoulder pocket at
the beginning of the film).
There is
then a cut back to the ballroom with Sandor and Alice as they continue
to dance (the steadicam shots that follow them around are gracefully
and almost inhumanly stable). Sandor, who must hold a doctorate degree on the history and art
of love (Ovid's Book of Love is used as a reference), tells Alice that women used to get married to lose their
virginity and thus, they could have any man they wanted.
Cut to
Bill walking with Gayle and Nuala headed for the marble hall. At one
point, while Gayle mentions how knowledgable doctors are, Bill looks at
Nuala who then makes eye contact with him. At that precise moment, Bill
turns away. As they arrive in the marble hall, Bill asks where they are
going, and Gayle says they are headed where the rainbow ends.
Bill: (smiling) "Where the rainbow ends?"
Nuala: "Don't you want to go where the rainbow ends?"
Then
comes another interruption, this time Ziegler's personal assistant. He
tells Bill that he is needed by Ziegler. Bill leaves the two women
indicating that their flirtatious byplay will be continued. Bill and the
assistant walk up the staircase illuminated by the curtain of light.
Cut to a barechested Ziegler putting on his suspenders in long shot standing next to a nude body traipsed on a dark red sofa.
In this very same shot, you'll notice a glass partition on a bathtub
which seemingly obscures the vagina of a nude woman in the background
painting. There is a knock on the door and it is Dr. Bill. Ziegler tells
Bill that the girl on the sofa, Mandy (Julienne Davis), has been
shooting up speedball ("It is heroin and coke," says the nervous
Ziegler. Interestingly, Ziegler doesn't seem to remember her name and
repeats it twice, as if he is waking up from a shock of reality.)
Another interesting point is the framing of Ziegler in close-up - he is
standing in front of the very same nude painting and again obscures the
vagina right in the center - shades here of similar framing shots in A
Clockwork Orange such as Alex's boa constrictor just barely covering a
nude woman's vagina in a painting. Finally, Bill wakes up Mandy.
In the
meantime, Alice continues dancing with the Hungarian who suggests they
go to the upstairs sculpture gallery to look at some Renaissance
bronzes. Alice responds in another dreamlike state by pausing between
each word:
Alice: "Maybe...not...just...now."
We return
to Ziegler in the bathroom, putting on his shirt as he looks at Mandy
who is now covered with a blue towel. Ziegler reaffirms the shock of
reality by indicating to Mandy that she gave him one hell of a scare.
Ziegler takes Bill aside and asks him to keep the situation just between
them, entrusting Bill as if he was one of his own personal assistants.
Alice and
the Hungarian continue dancing. Alice's eyes are closed and they
suddenly open as the background music ends. She tells the Hungarian she
needs to go. He asks why. She says, "Because...I am married.", as she
shows her wedding ring to him. Last shot of Alice is framed against the
warm-toned star in the background as she kisses her index finger and
plants it on his lips.
There is
an abrupt cut to a naked Alice wearing glasses and removing her earrings
in front of her bedroom mirror. She is gently swaying supposedly to the
beat of the song playing in the soundtrack, Chris Issak's "Baby Did a
Bad, Bad Thing." Bill appears next to her, naked as well (they are both
shot from the waist up), as he kisses her. She smiles, removes her
glasses, and kisses him as she places her arms around him. She stares at
herself in the mirror, and at him, and there is a fade to black. We are
again denied the opportunity of watching a lovemaking session as
Kubrick teases us yet again.
It is the
morning after, as Bill arrives at his office from an elevator. He is
greeted by his secretary (who does speak in a New York accent, more on
accents later). As he goes to his office, we notice that there is a blue
seating area, red tinsel along the desk area, a blue carpet leading to
his office, and a Christmas tree with the requisite colored lights, plus
the yellow star. There is something cold and sterile about the
environment, as later evidenced in the morgue scene. This whole sequence
plays like a montage as Kubrick crosscuts between Alice and her daughter
and Bill's examination room scenes.
First
shot following Dr. Bill's arrival is of Alice and her daughter, Helena,
at breakfast time in the kitchen, as the daughter eats her cereal and
watches a Bugs Bunny cartoon, while Alice reads the paper - there is
also a green book on the table, which again showcases the importance of
representing all the colors of the rainbow in almost every shot. You'll
notice that the scene has that "shock of reality" again since Alice is
not made up to look like the beauty she was the night before - a
noticeable aspect during the confession scene later in the film (this
scene echoes Shelley Duvall's breakfast with Danny Lloyd in the early
morning light in The Shining). Light blue is the dominant color
in these scenes with Alice. There is also another "tease" shot of Alice
naked, shown from her backside as she puts on her black bra. Another
shot follows of Helena wearing a red
dress as Alice, in her blue bathrobe, combs Helena's hair with a blue
hairbrush.
Dr. Bill first examines a woman who is seated on a hospital bed naked - he is checking her heart. Next he
examines a young boy's neck glands as his mother stands in the
background silently observing (the mother is played by Katharina Kubrick, Kubrick's daughter). Another examination scene is of Bill
examining a man lying on a bed as he lifts the man's leg. All these
scenes are virtually monochromatic - cold and sterile once again. White
fills every shot, from the white walls to the white bed and gowns, with
dark blue only slightly represented.
The
crosscutting ends as Bill and Alice listen attentively to Helena, who
reads from a children's book. There is a cut to Alice in the living room
as she asks Bill, who is watching football on television, if they
should continue wrapping the presents. Bill says it can be finished
another time. Alice then goes to the bathroom and removes a Band-Aid tin
from the cabinet which has a bag of marijuana in it.
This
leads to one of the most important scenes in the film - the first
confession scene. Alice is seen smoking a joint on their bed. The bed
sheets and bed
posts are a faded red color. Finally, as she chuckles to herself, Alice
asks Bill if he had sex with the two models at the party. Bill is
nonplussed to hear her asking such a question, dissuading himself by
downplaying his flirtatious behavior with the models. He grabs Alice's
breasts and counterattacks by asking if she had sex with the Hungarian -
she admits she did not yet he understands why this man would want her
wife. The "shock of reality" sets in yet again, interrupting a possible
lovemaking session as Alice tries to understand Bill's statement.
Alice: "So...because I'm a beautiful woman the only reason any man wants to talk to me is
because he wants to fuck me! Is that what you're saying?"
Bill: "Well, I don't think it's quite that black and white, but I think we both know what men are like."
Alice
(seen leaning against the door frame as dark blue light fills the back
room): "So, on that basis, I should conclude that you wanted to f***
those two models?"
Bill: "There are exceptions."
Alice: "And what makes you an exception?"
Bill:
"What makes me an exception is that...I happen to be in love with you
and because we're married and because I would never lie to you or hurt
you."
Alice starts to walk to the other side of the room past the red curtains. She then says: "Do you realize that what you're
saying is that the only reason you wouldn't fuck those two models is out
of consideration for me, not because you really wouldn't want to."
What
follows is Alice's intention to understand her husband's flirtations,
thereby testing his faithfulness. She even laughs at him, giggling
uncontrollably - an unusual occurrence in any Tom Cruise film for a
female lead to be laughing and mocking the lead movie star. Bill,
wearing black underwear, is sitting hunched over and shot in close-up
with some headroom - a rather unflattering, vulnerable portrait of Bill.
As he listens to Alice's story of their past summer in Cape Cod, she
admits that she fantasized of having an affair with a naval officer she
had seen in a restaurant. Her confession also further underlies the
fragility of their marriage - Alice says she would have left Bill, their
future together, all for one night of ecstasy. Bill sits in silence,
starting to swell up when the phone rings (one of many repeated
interruptions in the film, and here it is accompanied by Jocelyn Pook's
musical score). It is a phone call from a patient's daughter.
We see
Bill in a cab out to the patient's house. Part of the dreamlike power of
these scenes is that rear-screen projection is used, as it used to be
with films from the past to save money from shooting on location. In the
case with Kubrick, who had never returned to New York since leaving the
United States back in 1960, it was a matter of recreating New York in
England. During this scene, Kubrick makes it clear that it is Bill's
story by taking a subjective stance - we are, in effect, inside Bill's
mind. The first of three flashbacks of Alice's supposed infidelity with
the naval officer takes place - we see in black-and-white, the naval
officer lying on top of Alice in bed as he removes her panties. Cut back
to Bill, who is obviously affected by Alice's confession.
Interestingly, in the novella by Arthur Schnitzler from which this
film's screenplay is based on, Bill (Fridolin) also tells Alice
(Albertina) of a fantasized love affair he had.
Bill
enters the apartment of the patient, Nathanson, and we see blue windows
in the background. He is let in by the maid, and finally arrives at the
patient's bedroom where Marion Nathanson (Marie Richardson) is seen. The
corpse of Lou Nathanson, Marion's father, lays on her bed, which has
blue bedsheets. A small Christmas tree is seen at the entrance of the
bedroom with a faded pinkish glow. Bill and Marion sit down and talk, he
tries to comfort her. She speaks of moving away with her fiancee, Carl,
but she is barely able to comport herself. Suddenly, Marion kisses Bill
on the lips, and he pulls away. She admits she is in love with him, and
he tells her that they barely know each other. Another interruption
comes in the form of a doorbell. It is her fiancee, Carl (Thomas
Gibson). Marion hesitates kissing him, and when Carl approaches Bill and
thanks him for coming and for his support, Bill wipes his mouth while
talking to Carl. There is a close-up shot of Marion, as she stands
waiting for Bill to acknowledge her before he leaves. She is about to
say something to him when she is interrupted by Bill, who says "good
night", as he abruptly walks out.
Dissolve
to the night life of Greenwich Village, as Bill is seen walking the
crowded streets (one of the few shots in the film where New York is
shown to be crowded as it normally is). He sees a couple necking at one
point, and immediately there is a flash to Alice's B&W sex fantasy -
this time the naval officer is reaching his hand down to her vagina.
Cut back to Bill, walking faster and far more furious, as he punches his
hand in frustration (if you look quickly, you'll notice a red glow from
the bottom of the screen as he punches his hand, more noticeable in the
trailer). Bill walks past several Christmas shops as he sees a gang of
youths walking on the street talking about some "Mexican lap-dance." As
they approach him, they taunt him with sayings like "Looks like the pink
team,"and one of them elbows Bill who falls next to a dark blue car.
They continue taunting him, telling him to go back to San Francisco
where all homosexuals belong. Bill looks back angrily, and slowly you
start to notice a slight rainbow effect form just below his chest. This
scene is misunderstood by many but it is another example of how each one
of Bill's encounters borders on the sexual or, in this case, sexually
demeaning.
Bill continues walking, and is stopped by a woman in a fur coat
who asks for the time. He tells her it is past midnight, and continues
walking. She follows, asking if he would like a "little fun." They pass a
neon blue video store and a red neon liquor store, which can be seen
across the street, as well as a hotel neon light sign in yellow. Bill is surprised at her request
and she insists it will be alright and that they will not be bothered.
She shows him the entrance to her apartment, which has a prominently red
doorway.
They
enter her apartment, which of course has yet another Christmas tree (the
lights are off and only a strong blue light comes through from her
windows). A bathtub can be seen in the kitchen as she turns on the
lights and apologizes for the mess. What follows is an extraordinary
long take where she removes her fur coat revealing a purple dress, and they discuss what will be done for fun and
for how much. Christmas lights are blocked in the background by a
pillar. A pair of bras and red packaged Christmas gifts are seen above
the bathtub (only in Europe do they have bathtubs in the kitchen,
certainly not in any New York apartment I know of). She reassures him
that she does not keep track of the time.
Cut to
Alice sitting in her kitchen, surrounded by the ethereal blue light from
outside, watching Blume in Love on the television. She is seen drinking
a glass of milk and smoking a cigarette - isolated in her own home
while her husband is out enjoying the night life. There is a dissolve
then to a close-up shot of Bill with the woman in the apartment (at this
time, she remains unnamed but is later referred to as Domino, played
by Vinessa Shaw). She kisses him sweetly and softly, as faded red and
blue lights can be seen in the background. She asks him, "So, shall we?"
Before he can answer, there is yet another interruption, this time
Bill's mobile phone is ringing. He gets up from her bed and turns the
jazz music down on her radio. It turns out to be his wife Alice calling,
who inquires when he will be back. He is not sure as he lies about
still being at Nathanson's apartment and waiting for relatives to
arrive. Alice tells him she is going to bed. He hangs up, as Domino asks
him if that was Mrs. Dr. Bill. Worth noting in the medium shot of
Domino, lying on her bed, is that her purple dress appears to be crimson
red, no doubt caused by the reflection of all the Christmas lights.
Bill leaves, paying for her services though all she did was kiss him.
This scene is as erotic as they come, again in the hands of Kubrick who
continues to tease us. Whoever thought that there could be a romantic,
electrifying scene with a prostitute that did not show sexual happenings
or gratuitous nudity. Kubrick's teasing game continues.
Cut to
Bill now walking the streets again. He sees a Sonata cafe sign with
white letters and a red background, and the Sonata Jazz sign above in
blue neon lights. Bill smiles and enters the cafe. He passes an
entrance full of yellow lights and we hear Nick Nightingale, whom we met
at Ziegler's party, playing with his band. Bill sits at a table just as
Nick finishes his piece. Another shot of sexual suggestiveness is
apparent when there is a low-angle shot of Nick sitting at the piano
holding a microphone with a cable extending from it - it is as if he is
receiving oral pleasure or giving it. Nick is called over by Bill at his
table, and they talk about their current life situations. As they talk,
Nick tells Bill he has a gig later that night, unaware of where or when
he will play. Bill is nonplussed by this strange gig, and Nick tells
him it is a place where he plays the piano blindfolded and has learned
that incredible women attend the gig. There is another interruption, as
Nick's cell phone rings. We do not hear the conversation but Nick
does write the word "Fidelio" on a napkin. Bill asks Nick what the word
is, and Nick tells him it is the cryptic password to the gig. Bill asks
to go to this gig, and Nick is reluctant to give him any more
information. Bill insists, and learns that all he needs is a cloak and a
mask to get in, as well as the password.
Cut to
Bill arriving at a costume shop called "Rainbow." A man named Milich
(Rade Sherbedgia) answers in the intercom, though Bill was expecting to
see the previous owner. He explains to Milich that he is a doctor and
shows his State Medical board card (a running gag through most of the
film), as a way of getting a costume at such late-night hours. Milich
lets him in knowing that Bill will pay extra.
Milich
and Bill enter the costume shop through a red gate - the inside of the
store is dark and that ethereal blue light again comes in through the outside windows.
They enter an inner room where mannequins are on display - red curtains
are in the background and yellow lights. Bill requests a black cloak, a
mask and a tuxedo. While Milich is looking through the costumes, he
hears a noise. Bill hears it as well, as Milich walks into a room with a
glass wall and finds a bra and leftover Chinese food. He hears someone
giggling and finds two practically nude Japanese men and a young girl in bra and panties, who is in fact Milich's daughter (played by a
young Leelee Sobieski). While Milich berates the men, Milich's daughter
stands behind Bill and whispers into his ear, "You should have a cloak
lined with ermine." She walks backwards and gives him a suggestive look.
Cut to
Bill driven in another taxi, this time to Long Island. Close-up of Bill
in cab closing his eyes, as Jocelyn Pook's music starts again and he has
another flash of his wife Alice engaging in more sex with the naval
officer, all in black-and-white. There are a few dissolves as Bill
arrives at a mansion called Somerton (the nighttime scenes in the cab
and the sign of Somerton outside the mansion recall Alex's rampage at a
place called simply "Home" in "A Clockwork Orange.") Two men are seen
outside the mansion, which has a blue fence at the entrance. Bill pays
the cab driver to wait for him. Bill walks to the two gate men and gives
the password. He is driven to the front of the mansion in a red jeep.
Once
inside the mansion, Bill gives the password to a masked butler, and
promptly puts on his own mask and cloak as he walks on a red carpet
leading to the ante-room, surrounded by red curtains. He walks past
another masked man and sees a ceremony given by some man in a red cloak
and mask (known in the credits as "Red Cloak" and played by Leon Vitali,
Kubrick's long-time personal assistant). The Red Cloak is leading the
ceremony of naked masked women who form a circle around him. He is
holding an incense burner on one hand and a staff on the other. The
blindfolded Nick can be seen playing the piano. Bill is then seen by two
masked figures on the balcony, and one of them with a tricorn mask bows
to Bill as if he recognized him. Bill gives a returning bow, unaware of
who this masked figure is (my guess is that it is Ziegler, as we later
find out that he attended this very same ceremony). The masked naked
women in the circle leave and each of them arbitrarily picks one man
from the spectators to accompany them, all of whom are dressed in black
cloaks and wearing Venetian Carnival masks of different designs. Each
woman kisses the masked men while wearing their masks. One mysterious
woman (Abigail Good) comes up to Bill, kisses him and then they leave
hand in hand.
The woman
asks Bill what he is doing and why he is there. Bill feels she has
mistaken him for someone else but there is yet another interruption -
this time it is a man wearing an oversized mask who takes her away. Bill
is left alone, and begins looking around. What follows is the
controversial sequence that was censored by the MPAA for apparently
gross nudity and visible genitalia. Instead of seeing all these sex acts
that transpire on Bill's journey through the mansion, we see digitally
created nude figures (!) blocking all the sex acts that should be seen
from Bill's point-of-view - it is all subjective in endless tracking
shots but the point is lost when we cannot see what Bill has been
waiting to see, as has the audience at this point - it is another tease
but perhaps not in the way Kubrick intended since he was forced to
censor these acts. In 1999, for the MPAA to think that the audience is
not ready to see an innocent little orgy, which anyone can see in HBO
films to X-rated fare in any video store, is incomprehensible. More than
likely, it is due to the nightmarish intensity of it, especially after
having viewed the original footage intact. An essential moment since it
is shaping Bill's own sexual awakening, as well as showing sex as purely
animalistic and devoid of emotion.
Nevertheless,
Bill admires one sexual act of a masked man on his hands and knees
while on his back is a naked woman having sex with another man. An
objective shot follows of the tricorn masked man and another masked nude
woman entering this room, unbeknownst to Bill. He signals her to get
Bill's attention. Bill notices her standing next to him. She asks if he
is enjoying himself and would accompany her for a more private room.
Before this goes anywhere, there is another interruption by the
mysterious masked woman he was walking with earlier. She leads to him a
small hall and tells him that he has to leave, warning him of imminent
danger. The mysterious woman flees while a tall masked butler tells Bill
that the taxi driver wants to talk to him. Bill and the butler leave.
We then
see the blindfolded Nick led across a dance hall by a masked man - the
dance hall is full of naked men and women dancing to an instrumental
version of "Strangers in the Night." All these masked principals, the
ballrooms, and the music suggest the atmosphere of the ballroom scenes
from "The Shining."
Bill is
led back to the ante-room where Red Cloak is seen seated in the middle
of the room between two blue-costumed guards. All the other spectators
that were seen earlier are there, and all are staring at Bill while the
ominous piano theme in the soundtrack begins to play (it is Musica
Ricercata II by composer Gyorgy Ligeti - a favorite of Kubrick's who
used some of his musical compositions in "The Shining"). As Bill walks
toward the middle of the room, his black cloak suddenly changes into a
dark blue color, particularly when he passes an overhead flood light.
The Red Cloak asks Bill for his password and the password to the house.
Bill does not know the latter and lies, admitting he had forgotten it
when there never was such a password. Bill is taunted by the Red Cloak
who asks Bill to remove his clothes. Suddenly, there is another
interruption - this time it is the mysterious woman who is seen above in
the balcony and says she will "redeem him." She is then escorted by a
bird masked man and taken away, though we are not sure what will happen
to her. Bill asks about her plight, but the Red Cloak only warns him of
dire consequences, especially with his family, if he is ever to speak of
what he had seen at the mansion.As played Leon Vitali, Red Cloak (who
is not referred to as such) has a sarcastic tone and is quite polite in
his requests ("May I have the password, please!"). He never shouts or
utters obscenities, as perhaps other less imaginative filmmakers might
have if they had written the dialogue. The politeness and sarcasm make
his requests that much more threatening or as Vitali explained in an
interview, "It's almost like a sadistic English schoolmaster talking to
his unfortunate pupil."
"Mortal Thoughts" is hardly a typical Alan Rudolph production - it is more like a slow jazz version of a Mike Figgis picture. The movie, a glum morality play set in 1990's Bayonne, N.J., is not written by director Rudolph (William Reilly and Claude Kerven penned it) thus it does not contain his ability to sneak up on characters and make them vivid, as in his vastly underrated "Trouble in Mind."
At a haircut place called "Clip and Dye" (not subtle!), two hairdressers, Joy (Glenne Headly) and Cynthia (Demi Moore), go out one night to a carnival with a loudmouth, cruel and unkind man, Joy's husband, Jimmy (an atypical and deliciously evil turn by goateed Bruce Willis). Jimmy doesn't work, uses duct tape to hold his child's diapers together, gets drunk and snorts coke, and ingests way too much sugar in his coffee. At the carnival, Jimmy is killed by Joy in their van. The motive is unclear but now these New Jersey women are faced with a dilemma: call the cops or dump the body in a ditch. Which choice do you think they will make?
"Mortal Thoughts" uses a flashback structure framed against its never-ending interrogation scenes between Cynthia and two detectives (played by Harvey Keitel and Billie Neal). The only issue I have with these scenes is that they are not as effective as the story being told from Cynthia's point-of-view. Keitel is a magnetic actor and there are some solid uses of humor (powdered donut covering his lips, the Honeymooners reference) but the dialogue is often repetitive, at least until the closing scenes where a twist occurs that negates some of what preceded the film, to a certain extent. Billie Neal's detective is mostly the silent observer, though I am not sure what purpose that serves.
On the plus side, Demi Moore gives the most powerful performance of her career. Her Cynthia is a vulnerable wife and mother who tries her damnedest to be the dutiful best friend to the haywire personality of Joyce. Moore does seem like a force-of-nature, especially in her scenes with Keitel when the dialogue isn't stilted or too dry. Glenne Headly also dominates as the suffering wife of a loser like the volatile Jimmy. And Bruce Willis is about as far gone from any role he has ever played - his trademark smirks, his singing songs like "Kung-Fu Fighting" and a terrific line, possibly improvised, where he says "My fucking heart is in my throat" gives the character a lovable loser quality that Paul Newman could have played in his prime. We discover that Jimmy, Cynthia and Joyce are, however, not quite what they seem.
"Mortal Thoughts" is my kind of suspense thriller but it has elements that feel forced, as in the various slow-motion shots and overuse of melodic, slow jazz by Mark Isham amidst some dutch camera angles. Alan Rudolph lends the film atmosphere but its interrogation scenes do not quite connect as they should have, again with certain exceptions. But Demi Moore, Glenne Headly, Harvey Keitel, John Pankow (an understated role as Cynthia's husband) and Bruce Willis are pure dynamite on screen and worth catching. They just deserved a more nuanced screenplay.
BACK TO THE FUTURE PART III (1990)
Reviewed by Jerry Saravia
After the dark overtones of "Back to the Future Part II," "Part III" (filmed
back-to-back with the first sequel) returns to the lightness and simplicity
of the original. It settles in the Old West as its setting and dwells on
relationships rather than complicated paradoxes (though I admit to liking the complications of Part II). No, it is not superior to
the original but it is vastly entertaining and funnier than the second film.
"Part III" begins precisely where the last film left off. If you recall,
Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) went back to 1955, encountered his double, and
tried to convince Doc Brown (the 1955 counterpart) that he needs to get back
to the future. Doc faints and Marty tries to revive him. After some nifty
explanations, Marty decides to go back to the Old West but he needs his
time-traveling DeLorean, which of course proves unavailable. Apparently,
Marty and Doc discover that Doc's 1885 counterpart died at the hands of a
gunslinger over a matter of money owed. We see the tombstone and they
eventually find the Delorean left in some mine, nicely preserved. Thanks to
Doc's help, Marty manages to go back to 1885, meet his Irish grandparents
(played by Fox and Lea Thompson), gets shot at at a bar where he does the
"moonwalk," gets nearly hanged, and meets up finally with Doc Brown who saves
Marty from evil cowpokes. Lo and behold, Marty is ready to take Doc back (or
forward rather) to 1985 when he sees that the DeLorean has a ruptured fuel
line and thus lacks the ability to go 88 miles per hour - the necessary
mileage to travel through time. Doc comes up with a brilliant plan - have the
DeLorean pushed by a train going at the requisite speed. There are some funny
complications such as the bridge where the train will be passing through had
not been completed, the trains of that era did not necessarily go so fast,
there are the gunslingers, particularly one who wants Doc's hide, and a more
novel complication: Clara (Mary Steenburgen), a schoolteacher, has taken a gander at Doc and finds that they share the same love for Jules Verne. Love at
first sight, indeed, and it will cause problems for those who travel from one
time period to another.
If "Part III" has a major star performance, it is Christopher Lloyd who
succeeds in finding all the right notes of lunacy and lovestruck innocence in
Doc Brown. He is a madman who has found his inner peace in the good Old West,
a place to spend his retirement years as he indicated in "Part II." The sweet
love scenes between Lloyd and Steenburgen also have the right balance of
chemistry and comedy ("I've never, ever, met a man like you before," says
Steenburgen). In many ways, especially due to the casting of Steenburgen, the film is a hark back to the wonderful 1979 charmer, "Time After Time" which also had a sweet love story at its center.
Lloyd clearly steals the show from Michael J. Fox, who is left in the desert
winds in practically a supporting role. Interestingly, McFly was lectured
about life by Doc in the first two films whereas here, he helps Doc
understand that love can be lost when meddling with the future and the past.
I still wish the filmmakers gave Fox more to do rather playing second banana
to Doc. And the final scenes involving Marty's wandering girlfriend, Jennifer
(Elisabeth Shue), and some business about playing "chicken" will only serve
to confuse those who are not fans of the original two films.
As directed once again by Robert Zemeckis and co-written by Bob Gale, "Back
to the Future Part III" is still loads of fun, a high-powered comic adventure
that utilizes the Old West setting for several, blink-and-you'll-miss
in-jokes and some desperate gags (like Marty stepping on some horse dung or
mimicking the "You talkin' to me" line in front of a mirror). But the
silliness and momentum keep one's interest and never flags. The performances
all hit the right notes and the ending is a stunning surprise with a
wonderful visual gag that echoes the original. Not as rich or as weighty as
the original, or as frenetic as the sequel, but it is a deft blend of comedy
and adventure overall guaranteed to leave you in high spirits.