| ABC
Reviewer Julie Rigg *****
Once Upon a Time, back in the seventies when women
began to get their hands on movie cameras again,
there was this desire to tell it like it really
is. Women were many other things besides glossy
and admiring objects of male fantasy; they were
ready to break out of the narrow roles to which
post-war filmmaking had consigned them. The apron-clad
Debbie Reynolds and Ava Gardner vamps were discarded.
There was ground to make up, and a world to explore.
Cinderella snorted, put on Doc Martens and went
out to find a better-paying job. When she could
afford them, she acquired a briefcase, a good suit
and her own mortgage.
Almost the last world to explore was that of the
psyche. Female lust could be admitted, but the dark
and dangerous impulses – the attraction to
dangerous men, the wish for revenge - never. When
women killed it was for self-defence, or to sacrifice
themselves for another.
What no one could account for was the surprising
persistence of female fantasies of falling in love.
The dream of perfect union, perfect fulfilment,
and living happily ever after.
There’s a very interesting group of films
which I think is beginning to address this puzzle.
Let's call them the 'anti-romance' films. In France,
filmmakers like Catherine Breillat who made Romance
and then A Ma Soeur have turned their attention
to the female psyche. In English-speaking cinema,
Jane Campion was among the first of the post-seventies
feminists to peer into the sometimes perverse female
psyche. Sweetie admitted female narcissism, repression
and the fiercest of sibling rivalries; The Piano
explored such things as woman’s protest directed
against her own body; sex as subversion, sex as
currency, sex for curiosity. Campion’s heroines
were always, in their own ways, lustful.
Some of these anti-romance films use genre to make
their points. Virginie Despentes’s Baise-Moi
used a splatter version of the road movie to rework
the 'rape and revenge' genre which, fashioned by
men, has usually combined titillation with high
moral ground (see, for example, Shekar Kapur’s
Bandit Queen.
Baise-Moi shocked because it exploited the sex
and violence conflation most women refuse because
it’s usually directed at us. But in this film,
pace Godard, the girls had the guns.
In The Cut, releasing here next month, is Jane Campion’s
most explicit film, yet about the craving which
will lead a woman to seek out sex with a man she
distrusts and even fears. She has compromised the
ending, and that’s a pity; but the critics
who misread it as a suspense-less thriller fail
to see that it's about sex first and fear second.
Female desire that is. Who was it said 'Perfect
love casts out fear'? Maybe it should be female
fantasy.
Some anti-romance films employ fantasy in the most
matter-of-fact register. Claire Denis’s Vendredi
Soir is an encounter between a woman stuck in a
monumental Parisian traffic jam, and a male stranger
who gets into her car. She spends the night with
him, and their courtship dance is delicate and fraught
as it always is. In the morning she walks away to
her new life without a backward look.
Now there is Gaylene Preston’s Perfect Strangers
in some ways the wildest anti-romance of all. Preston
is an accomplished New Zealand director whose last
three features have played out on a social canvas.
This film is different. The heroine is Melanie,
and she’s played by Rachael Blake in a performance
which fulfils – exceeds - all the promise
she showed in Lantana Melanie is not a good girl.
She’s wanton, and she’s bored. She works
in a fish and chip shop in a small town on the wild
West Coast of New Zealand. And she can have her
pick of any of the men at the local pub. One Friday
night she meets the perfect stranger there at the
pub. He’s tall dark, handsome and unusually
well mannered. He's played by Sam Neill.
'Your place or mine?' he asks. 'Yours,' she says,
'I already know mine.'
In the morning she wakes up to find herself at
sea. He’s sailed her away to her own little
island...and he knows all about her.
This film addresses a situation every women dreads
and most at some time have experienced. What do
you do when you find yourself in this kind of danger?
If you want to live, do you fight, or do you submit?
But that’s only the start of the story.
Perfect Strangers is a wild combination of thriller
and fable. It plays with our expectations of the
handsome prince fairy story, and the stalker story
as well. It has a great deal to say about the craving
for love, and its wellsprings. 'Falling in love,'
says Preston, 'is to fall into a kind of madness.'
I cannot tell you more about the story. But I can
guarantee this film will surprise you. It confirms
Rachael Blake as a magnificent actor, and Gaylene
Preston as a filmmaker at the height of her powers.
|