Pieces of Masterpieces
Medea
Directed by Lars von Trier Written by Carl Dreyer, Preben Thomsen,
and von Trier With Kirsten Olesen, Udo Kier, Henning Jensen, Solbjaig
Hojfeldt, and Prehen Lerdorff Rye. Rating * * * A Must-See Sunday
Directed by Jonathan Nossiter Written by James Lasdun and Nossiter
With David Suchet, Lisa Harrow, Jared Harris, Larry Pine, and
Joe Grifasi.
Rating * * * A Must-See
By Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's been disconcerting to read, over
the past several weeks, of no fewer than four Hollywood projects
in the works that purport to be by and/or about Orson Welles.
Three of these are based on Welles scripts that he never found
the money to produce: The Big Brass Ring (an original with a contemporary
setting), The Dreamers (an adaptation of two Isak Dinesen stories),
and The Cradle Will Rock (an autobiographical script set in the
30s). Yet all have been extensively rewritten, and the fourth--as
recently reported by Todd McCarthy in Daily Variety--is a series
of whole-cloth inventions about the making of Citizen Kane, presumably
with a few facts thrown in, called RKO 281, written by Chicago
playwright John Logan. Why is all this money, effort, and media
attention being expended on "celebrating" Welles when
nobody is showing the slightest interest in making available unseen
Welles features like Don Quixote and The Other Side of the Wind?
I suspect it's because the prospect of a fresh, unseen Welles
feature is just as threatening today as it was when he was alive.
But the idea of a feature magically enhanced by the aura of Welles's
genius and executed by someone less talented is commercially irresistible.
Does this mean that when push comes to shove, the public doesn't
want to see a new Orson Welles film? I wouldn't say so, because
such a film, now as before, is an untried and untestable plunge
into the unknown, and how can anyone (apart from bankers) make
decisions about an unknown quantity? What it does mean is that
the people who want to see a new Orson Welles film--and Ihappen
to know quite a few--don't have a marketable demographic profile,
at least according to current industry wisdom. This same principle
of visibility also means that audience members either (a) complain
that there's nothing worth seeing at the movies right now or (b)
pretend that there's L.A. Confidential, which most of my colleagues
have been hawking like Wonder bread (and which I saw at Cannes
and loathed for its glib, familiar cynicism). Almost no one even
begins to entertain the possibility that there might be plenty
of other things around--admittedly lacking massive ad campaigns
and other media credentials--well worth seeing: Lars von Trier's
Medea, for instance, a video showing this weekend at Facets Multimedia,
and Jonathan Nossiter's Sunday, playing at the Music Box. ***
Writing in the 50s about Sacha Guitry's Royal Affairs in Versailles,
Roland Barthes noted that the use of stars enabled movies to popularize
history and history to glorify and dignify movies--a trade-off
enjoyed by cinephiles and historians alike: "For instance,
Georges Marchal passes a little of his erotic glory over to Louis
XIV, and in return, Louis XIV imparts some of his monarchical
glory to Georges Marchal." I suppose a similar sort of barter
might be taking place between various Hollywood hopefuls and Orson
Welles in the aforementioned projects. But I fear it will be Welles,
not these bozos, who winds up with the short end of the stick.
What they want from Welles, it seems, is enough of his artistic
glory to dignify their own lack of ideas, but what these dim,
well-financed projects are supposed to give Welles and his legacy
is anyone's guess. Accessibility? Posthumous acclamation? Thanks
a lot, fellas. Some of these thoughts were prompted by von Trier's
Medea, a video production made for Danish TV based, after a fashion,
on a script written by Carl Dreyer with Preben Thomsen in the
mid-60s, in the hopes that Dreyer would get the money to film
it himself. The 46-page manuscript was subsequently translated
into English with the help of Elsa Gress and published in a catalog
for a Dreyer retrospective (which never made it to Chicago) edited
by Jytte Jensen for the Museum of Modern Art in 1988--the same
year von Trier shot his version of the script in Danish. This
English version is the one I've had access to. Gress explains
in her introduction that the script is based on Euripides' tragedy
"and follows his conception of the characters in all essentials,
while emphasizing the universal human features and reducing the
importance of the mythical material and the specifically Greek
apparatus." Dreyer planned to shoot his film in color in
Greece, and took a special trip to Paris to meet Maria Callas,
who agreed to play the lead, but no investors could be found for
the project. In 1969, only a year after Dreyer's death, Callas
wound up playing the lead in Pier Paolo Pasolini's Medea--which
took a very different approach to the same myth. To the best of
my knowledge, it was her only film role. Von Trier--a gifted filmmaker
and video artist and an even more gifted bullshit artist--claimed
to have been "in constant telepathic contact" with Dreyer
while executing the master's script; he also an-nounced, apparently
at the time of Medea's Danish TV premiere, that Dreyer "has
given...his approval, though not his heartfelt enthusiasm."
Even more circumspect is an opening title offering the following
disclaimer: "This is not an attempt to make another 'Dreyer
film,' but rather a personal interpretation which treats the material
with due respect and pays homage to a great master." Due
respect? The Dreyer-Thomsen script dictates that the film open
in "a circular arena, fenced in by a low stone wall and surrounded
by green meadows," backed by "a slope toward the sea
that is not as yet visible"; it's to be entered by a chorus
"dancing with rhythmical, stylized movements to the accompaniment
of recorders, string instruments, and kettledrums." The leader
is a veiled woman in black who exposes a face "which is luminous
white, as white as chalk" before she delivers the opening
speech, punctuated by the chorus's lamentation. How does von Trier
"adapt" this? By eliminating the arena, the stone wall,
the green meadows, the musical instruments, and the entire chorus,
lamentation included, and reducing the opening lines of the soliloquy--all
that he bothers to include--to a printed title. Skipping a couple
of other scenes, he then provides us with an opening of his own
invention: Medea (Kirsten Olesen) stretches out on the ground
while the camera rises above her in an accelerating corkscrew
pattern. More generally but no less crucially, Dreyer's radical
feminist take on this tragedy gets trampled under by all the distractions
of von Trier's three-ring circus; it's certainly suggestive that
while the script ends with a distant shot of Medea on a departing
ship, von Trier concludes with Jason writhing in his death throes.
Is this what the Facets press notes mean by calling this Medea
"faithful to the script," claiming that von Trier "retained
Dreyer's laconic dialogue and spartan style"? I suppose I
buy the laconic dialogue, but if anything ever committed to film
or video by von Trier, including Medea, is spartan, then--as critic
Elliott Stein once observed in a different context--"Take
Me Out to the Ball Game is the memorable life story of Soren Kierkegaard."
*** In fact, apart from patches of Dreyer's dialogue, Medea is
not at all like Dreyer, occasionally a bit like Ingmar Bergman,
and mostly like Orson Welles--the Welles, that is, of Macbeth
and Othello. I hasten to add that the two films have very different
styles, starting with the studio sets and long takes of Macbeth
and the disparate "found" locations and splintered montage
of Othello. But von Trier, like many a postmodernist music-video
maestro, never lets stylistic consistency get in the way of his
stockpile of effects. Insofar as there's any kind of dramatic
logic at all, Medea is usually framed like Lady Macbeth in Macbeth
and Jason (Udo Kier) like Othello in Othello. But the moment you
can forget about Dreyer--or at least reduce his contribution to
some parts of the dialogue--Medea becomes an exhilarating visual
feast, surpassing von Trier's Zentropa, The Kingdom, and Breaking
the Waves as an orchestration of visual enchantment. Whether von
Trier is turning a speech by Creon into a Wellesian offscreen
monologue to accompany a spooky trip through a dungeon; playing
a game of textures with flickering shadows, fabrics, flaming torches,
and naked flesh; or staging Medea's first extended monologue in
front of giant projected images of her sleeping children, there's
an undeniable Wellesian splendor to his mise en scene. How suitable
is this approach to the story of a woman who contrives to murder
her own children in revenge against Jason for ditching her? It
depends. Von Trier's style here is like a lawn mower that either
cuts cleanly through the material or gets stuck and creates grotesque
lacerations while spinning its blades heedlessly. A flamboyant
TV drama, this Medea is the reverse of Bela Tarr's demonically
single-minded Macbeth (compressed into two shots and materialist
to the core), and it's shallow and dilettantish compared to the
visionary stretches of a Bergman or a Tarkovsky. Anytime von Trier
can find a way to jazz up Dreyer's simplicity, he goes for broke,
substituting a pool of water for a mirror when Medea turns away
from Jason, or having her hang her two children--even holding
one of them up to tie the noose--instead of giving them poison
on the pretext that it's medicine. *** In short, the visual effects
in this Medea never quite annihilate the human drama, but they
periodically overwhelm it. This makes von Trier's video the opposite
of Nossiter's film in terms of strengths and weaknesses. The vulgar
lack of inhibition that marks von Trier's style at its best and
worst is comparable to Nossiter's compulsion to perfume Sunday,
a memorably scruffy portrait of Queens and of a powerful if gritty
love affair, with arty snatches of classical music, showing us
how sensitive he is and thereby alienating us from the story.
There's a wonderfully purposeful discontinuity in the way Nossiter
films his natural settings--sometimes the weather is quite different
from one moment to the next--but whenever the setting becomes
part of the story's metaphysical structure, its stylistic "program,"
it's as clunky as the tinkling Erik Satie in the background. (At
least when von Trier is pretentious, which is most of the time,
he isn't simply making the same pronouncements over and over.)
Yet Sunday has plenty of fine things to say about the everyday
routines in and around a men's homeless shelter, and even more
about an impromptu one-day affair between two touching middle-aged
washouts, a former IBM accountant named Oliver (David Suchet),
who leaves the shelter for the day to walk around in numbed isolation,
and an out-of-work English actress named Madeleine (Lisa Harrow),
recently separated from her manic husband (Larry Pine), who's
carrying home to her cluttered digs a huge potted plant she found
on the street. What brings these two lost souls together is seemingly
a case of mistaken identity: Madeleine addresses Oliver on the
street as "Matthew Melacorta," a famous English film
director who once auditioned her for a part she didn't get in
London; Oliver decides to play along with her mistake. But as
the action develops--crosscutting between Oliver and Madeleine,
who proceed to a Greek diner and to her house for drinks and sex,
and the men at the shelter, many of whom resent Oliver for his
aloofness--illusions pile on top of illusions, and who these people
are in terms of one another remains in constant flux. Oliver and
Madeleine tell one another stories that may or may not be true,
obscuring their real motives and identities, and eventually everything
and everyone in the story figures as a free-floating metaphor
for life's uncertainties. It's the oldest art-movie theme in the
book--illusion versus reality, masks versus identities. Nossiter
dutifully pursues it almost as if no one had ever thought of it
before, making Sunday generally pretentious whenever it slows
down to ask us to think. Yet it's moving, sexy, and even exalted
whenever it concentrates on the sensual reality conjured up by
Madeleine and Oliver--characters defined in terms of each other
rather than as sociological specimens or case studies, which they
also periodically become. Another way of putting this is to say
that the rich, juicy performances and sheer physical presences
of Suchet and Harrow periodically liberate Sunday from all the
metaphysical jive, including all the moments when the film wears
its style and theme on its sleeve. (Incidentally both these actors
are English, but given the script's tricky game plan, Suchet slips
in and out of that identity while Harrow remains English throughout.)
Part of this triumph of meaning over style is surely Sunday's
point, but it also suggests that, like von Trier, Nossiter is
capable of making only half a terrific movie. It's a half worth
keeping.
