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WSWS
: Arts Review
: Film
Festivals
2000 Toronto International Film FestivalPart 5
"The world is so complicated, who'd want to see it?"
The House of Mirth, directed by Terence Davies, based
on the novel by Edith Wharton
Little Cheung, written and directed by Fruit Chan
By David Walsh
9 October 2000
Use
this version to print
These are two thoroughly admirable films, in my opinion.
Terence Davies has directed a brilliant adaptation of American
novelist Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth, published
in 1905. It is the story of a young woman who is insufficiently
attuned to her own self-interest to abide strictly by society's
rules and is ground to pieces as a result.
Lily Bart, wonderfully played by Gillian Anderson, has limited
means and depends on the generosity of a dreadful, narrow-minded
aunt for her survival. The young woman squanders opportunities
to marry for money, because she dares to give some consideration
to the state of her own heart, and builds up debt in various ways,
including by gambling at cards. Through no fault of her own, she
incurs the wrath of those who are in a position to do her great
harm. Excluded from society, essentially cut out of her aunt's
will, Lily descends the social ladder. I have joined the
working classes, she explains to one of her old acquaintances.
Having been raised in genteel society, she is nowise prepared
for this sort of existence. Before long she faces the prospect
of mental and physical disintegration.
Lily is no paragon of virtue. She loves luxury and would do
a great deal to get it. She's a bit lazy. She has only a limited
sense of self; until she faces annihilation, she largely adheres
to the prevailing notion that a woman's chief purpose is to be
a lovely object. She would happily fit into society, but circumstances
and her own character make it impossible. Her failings
expose her to destruction. What can be said for a social order
that destroys a human being for being true to even a small portion
of her inner self? Wharton wrote about her own novel: A
frivolous society can acquire dramatic significance only through
what its frivolity destroys. Its tragic implication lies in its
power of debasing people and ideals.
The book seems to fall very generally into that category of
works, produced from the middle of the nineteenth century onward
(although one might include Charlotte Brontë's writing too),
that considered the fate of individual women who came up against
official morality and philistinism, books such as Madame Bovary,
Anna Karenina and Effi Briest. For their lack of
moralizing, as well as their social critique and their compassion,
I prefer Effi Briest and The House of Mirth.
Davies has chosen to embrace, unashamedly and successfully,
the emotionalism and tragedy of the piece. He paints a corrupt
and remorseless social universe. The work is a devastating indictment.
There is something inexorable about Lily's fate. From the first
moment at which she indulges in her own feelings, she is a lost
soul. In the end, she can only tell her would-be lover, Lawrence
Selden, who has also left her in the lurch: I have tried
hard, but life is difficult, and I am a very useless person....
Now I am on the rubbish heap. Few moments in recent films
have affected me more.
The sympathy for human difficulty that Davies exhibits in The
House of Mirth is remarkable and all too rare in cinema. Even
the inadequacies of some of the performances hardly matter. The
sincerity and depth of emotional detail are what count. Davies
feels things strongly and has the artistic sensibility necessary
to transform that into images. His loyalty to the text is not
that of a literalist, but he makes every effort to find ways of
representing its spirit.
Davies' treatment of the transition from Book One to Book Two,
for example, is extraordinarily evocative. Lily feels the ground
slipping away under her feet and has accepted an invitation, which
will prove her undoing, to cruise the Mediterranean on a friend's
yacht. We see a houseLily's aunt'sabout to be abandoned
for the summer, the furniture covered with sheets, mummified.
Tradition and conventional habits weigh like a nightmare on the
brain of the living. The camera dips into a flowing stream, glittering
in the sunshine. There's music throughout. The camera re-emerges,
so to speak, in the Mediterranean, also aglow.
The sequence manages to convey simultaneously a series of thoughts
and feelings, perhaps contradictory ones: the awfulness of Lily's
position; the essential beauty of life and nature; the passage
of time, with its inherently tragic aspect; bottomless desire,
which can never find satisfaction.
There are other touches. Davies takes even his villains seriously.
Sim Rosedale (Anthony LaPaglia), apparently meant to represent
the ambitious and somewhat shady nouveau riche Jew, ends
up almost a sympathetic figure. And the director knows something
about history too. He adds a fleeting reference, in the form of
an agitator addressing a street rally, to the Russian Revolution
of 1905.
It is entirely proper that such a major work, with its unsparing
criticisms, should provoke a response from within the establishment.
Stephen Holden in the New York Times calls the film funereally
gloomy, and generally criticizes it for failing to find
much fun either in the world portrayed in Wharton's novel or,
by implication, present-day social life. The English director's
vision of New York City in 1905, the Times critic
writes, is infinitely bleaker and more sterile, of course,
than the glittering Versace and Gucci-clad present. The characters
are too constricted by a punishing puritanical code of behavior
to have much fun; hardly a smile is cracked throughout the film's
glum 140 minutes. Leaving aside the fact that this description
is false, that there is a good deal of wit and humor in the film,
Holden is responding, with unerring instinct, to a work that is
potentially damaging to the status quo. He speaks for those who
are amusing themselves under the present conditions, those for
whom life has never been better. To such people a work like this
is indeed entirely incomprehensible.
Holden compares Davies' film unfavorably to Martin Scorsese's
adaptation of The Age of Innocence, which did a much
better job of evoking a warm tribal solidarity and comfort.
Davies was generous enough at a press conference in Toronto to
pay tribute to Scorsese's work, but, in reality, his film is incomparably
superior. Scorsese, with a far larger budget, trained his camera
largely on food, clothing and decor, and managed in the process
to miss three-quarters of Wharton's irony and savagery in a flat
and ultimately disappointing work. Davies shot the film in Glasgow,
in locales bearing only a passing resemblance to the New York
of the turn of the century, but concentrated on the emotional
and social truth of the work.
Press conference
In person Davies speaks with great intensity. At his Toronto
press conference, the filmmaker praised his performers for their
understanding of the text and their elegance. He went
on: You can't make an adaptation of a novel that is inherently
modern anyway more modern, it would just be silly. I mean,
what is the book about? The book is about what you look like and
how much money you've got. What's modern culture about?how
much money you have and what you look like.
I asked Davies if it had been his intention to make such a
deeply and rarely subversive work. He replied: The template
is always the original material, which is the novel. And the novel
is savage. I mean, these people are some of the cruelest you have
ever come across. If there is a subversion going on, it's from
the Edith Wharton. And so one simply tries to be true to that
and the tone. But also, there are times when you have to alter
it slightly. There are two separate characters in the film, for
instance: Gertie Farish and Grace Stepney. Separate, they're not
interesting; together, they are, because Gertie loves Lawrence.
And in the book, Grace doesn't. So if they're together it makes
them infinitely more powerful.
Because here is someone [Grace Stepney in the film] being
so cruel through Christian rectitude and Christian charity which
have no love in them. But it's sexual jealousy, which cannot be
admitted. That's incredibly powerful; it's incredibly modern.
We've all been in a position where we've loved someone who has
not loved us. Or we love someone and we don't know what their
feelings for us are. That's the worst possible position to be
in. Now, you could say: Do you love me or do you not?' Those
days you couldn't. Even now, even if you love someone and you're
not sure of their feelings, it's very hard to say: I love
you, do you love me?' It's incredibly hard.
But the savagery is in the text. And because it's this
wonderful era of wonderful manners and this pattern of civilization.
And these people would knife you as soon as look at you. And you
wouldn't know until after they'd done it. That's what's so astounding
about it.
Laura Linney (The Truman Show), who plays Bertha Dorset,
one of the women who does Lily in, responded to the intensity
of Davies' answers: This is the passion that you get on
a daily basis working with Terence.
Davies: It's called overacting.
Linney: No, it's called passion.
Later in the press
conference, actor Eric Stoltz (Lawrence Selden) returned to this
theme. I have to say on behalf of all the actors in the
film, none of us have ever quite worked with anyone like Terence.
He lived with the book for 15 years, so, when I came in to read
a part, he acted out all the parts. And when we got on the set,
he acted out all the parts. And I truly believe that Terence was
every role in the film.... He was so passionately involved in
the making of it that we all felt that we had to live up to his
imagination, which is boundlesshow he pictured us in the
roles. It was a challenge. A curious way to work. We were a lot
of surly American actors, we're pretty much used to doing whatever
we want. And he wouldn't stand for that. It was a great experience.
Replying to another question, Davies discussed his approach.
The text tells you everything and you try to keep in
mind its tone, which is important, and the look, and the feel
of it. But it's got to be cinema as well. Certain exigencies happen
simply because you have no money. For one sequence we needed an
Episcopal church. We shot in Scotland, they don't have Episcopal
churches in Scotland. We can't build one, we haven't got the money.
So what is the easiest way to tell you about a wedding. What do
all weddings have in common? They have photographs. Well, in those
days the image in a camera was upside down. So you see them upside
down ... I now pronounce you man and wife,' and they're
the right way up. It's witty, it's succinct. And it's cheap.
What's much more interesting is when the actors are doing
things to which you sometimes have to respond: No direction
today, just do it.' And that changes things more than you can
imagine. They'll look or they'll use a hand gesture or they'll
half do something, or forget something, and that's just magic.
You can't direct thatno one can. So that changes it...
You get into a room like the one we had [in the scene]
where Lily is pursued by Gus Trenor and Sim Rosedale. It wasn't
written like that. Suddenly we had to shoot it there. What do
I do? And I thought: well, I've got to use this gallery, because
the gallery makes it look conspiratorial. And I said: Will
you give me a half an hour?' And they gave me half an hour and
I came up with the shots that you see in the film. It's things
like that that you do on the spur of the moment, or you say All
we can afford to dress is this vector, nothing else.' But we need
this room completely full. So it changes like that. It changes
more in the editing. Because then, where do you cut? Do you cut
before she drops her eyes and before the doors open or vice versa.
Both of those things mean different things and that's when you
begin to discover the subtextthat's where the subtext really
emerges. That's when the film begins to sing, if indeed it does
sing.
So it's a long, constant organic processit doesn't
stop just with the script. That's only the blueprint. That's the
starting point. But that's got to be right, as right as you can
get it. And then, if you know what you want, you get onto the
set and suddenly they move in a certain way and you think: that's
much better. Instead of it being a three-shot, it's got to be
two, or it's got to be one. You have to keep at it all the time.
You've got to look between the lines of the text. They might do
something: Keep that in. Keep that in.' So you're looking
all the time, it's constantly changing, which is what it should
do. Where it stops is once you cut it and it goes in front of
an audience and there nothing you can do thenit's too late.
It's just too late.
Linney commented on the relative open-endedness
of Davies' script for The House of Mirth: The great
thing about a script like this is that it doesn't explainI
find that in a lot of movies you have actors explaining things.
And to me explaining is not acting. Explaining is explaining.
And there's nothing you can do when you're explaining something.
You can explain something one way or another; there are not many
forces going on within you at the same time. So we had a script
with a great deal left out, but it's actually what's there on
the page. For an actor, it's a good sign. The script, through
hint, through research, sort of fills in what else should be happening.
And then of course the other actor that you're working with does
most of that for you as well as the atmosphere in the playto
say nothing of the direction. But it's much more ... it's almost
more natural to do. It's easier for me to play parts like this,
to play parts that are more human in a way, then the more succinct,
on-the-nose pieces, which I think a lot of people are accustomed
to.
I asked Davies about the emotionalism of the piece and its
quality of grand opera.
He replied: My template were things like [Max Ophuls']
Letter to an Unknown Woman, which is a kind of opera. And
a marvelous, marvelous film made from actually not a very good
novella. You know you read it now, you think: how could he have
done such wonderful things with that novella? So there's that.
But there were some other references too. Like Marilyn Monroe
walking down the platform in the steam in [Billy Wilder's] Some
Like It Hot . And that's there too. I know
she does not have a bustle but it's there. And that kind of melodrama
I grew up with[Douglas Sirk's] All that Heaven Allows,
[Henry King's] Love is a Many Splendored Thing. I saw those
when I was 10 and 11. And of course, they sort of imprint themselves
on you. And they come out refracted, but it's part of it.
I asked whether he felt a good many contemporary films were
lacking emotional depth.
A lot of them are perhaps. Things that I can't explain,
like violence or swearing. I don't like violence because my father
was violent. I had enough of that when I was a kid. And when they
swear all the time, it's just monotonous. I don't think it takes
any talent to write fuck' all the time, quite frankly. But
these films are popular.
The problem with a lot of adaptations of period pieces
is that they're played as if they're modern. And the women can't
play them like that because they weren't modern. If you're in
Jane Austen you can't play her as if you're in the 1990s. You
should be playing those women as 1815 because that's what they
were. And it's idiotic to play them any other way. And in a way
makes them much more parochial and much less interesting. But
I don't know, perhaps I'm old-fashioned. I look back to an era
where things like that, even schlocky things like All That
Heaven Allows, were at least well crafted. And I like all
that, but that's part of it too.
Little Cheung from
Hong Kong
Little Cheung (Xilu Xiang), written and directed by
Fruit Chan, is another film about which I have only good things
to say.
Chan was born in Canton, China, in 1959 and moved to Hong Kong
with his family at the age of 10. He attended the Hong Kong Film
Centre and has assisted a number of other directors on their films.
His own features include Finale in Blood (1991), Made
in Hong Kong (1996), The Longest Summer (1998) and
Durian Durian (2000).
A little boy in Hong Kong, in the months leading up to the
reunification with China in 1997. His father runs a restaurant.
They have enough money to employ a Filipino maid. His grandmother
is one of his best friends. She was a performer in the old days.
Little Cheung, who delivers take-out orders from the restaurant,
meets up with Fan, a mainland girl living illegally in Hong Kong
with her family. She's in more desperate economic straits.
The film, like some of the best east Asian works, has a wealth
of detail. It obsessively recreates a physical and mental world.
A single street in a single neighborhood in Hong Kong. One local
critic suggested the film captures the city in all its nakedness
and cruelty. Gangsters, brothels, lower middle class desperation,
poverty. Little Cheung pisses in the drinks he delivers to obnoxious
customers.
Everybody is struggling. But, the film's narration suggests,
everything's done for money. Money is a dream. Everyone
has a racket, a scheme. Even the kids.
Little Cheung loves his grandmother. And he loves Armi, the
Filipino maid, with whom he has more contact than he does his
own parents, who are busy night and day at the restaurant. The
filmmaker nearly takes a page out of Douglas Sirk's book. Sirk,
in Imitation of Life, changed the focus of his film from
the travails of a career-minded actress to the much sadder story
of her black maid. Little Cheung takes a right turn at
least temporarily and considers Armi's fate. When she leaves,
Little Cheung is inconsolable. Later we see her at an evangelical
Christian revival, that heart of a heartless world.
The murky issue of China and Hong Kong arises. Fan, whose family
has fled the mainland for economic reasons, is an ardent little
nationalist. She dreams of the day when Hong Kong will be
ours. Meanwhile she receives harsh treatment, along with
other families, at the hands of Hong Kong officials. In a chilling
scene, reminiscent of the deportation of the Jews by the Nazis,
undocumented children are called by name to the front of their
classrooms and dragged out of school, hands raised above their
heads, on their way back to China. The film implies that both
regimes are rotten and inhuman.
The world is so complicated, who'd want to see it?
somebody asks at one point. The filmmaker, for one. He shows us
things that are complicated, and painful, but quite beautiful
too. Little Cheung's father punishes him for looking for his long-lost
brother, who's disappeared into Hong Kong's underworld, and for
giving cakes to Fan, so she won't go hungry. The boy takes off
and hides from his family. His mother tells her husband reasonably
enough, If you beat them, they run away.
When Little Cheung's father catches up with him, he stands
the boy on a stone pillar in the street and pulls his pants down.
The humiliation is complete. Little Cheung responds by singing
at the top of his voice: My heart is broken ... My luck
ran out ... Only God knows my true pain.
In the end, Fan is deported and, through a mix-up, Little Cheung
chases after the wrong vehicle. She thinks he's abandoned her.
That was the end of our friendship. Her face as we
see her sitting in the police van is unforgettable. I loved this
film too.
See Also:
2000 Toronto International
Film Festival - Part 1
Who makes up the artistic vanguard today?
[25 September 2000]
2000 Toronto International
Film FestivalPart 2
Without flinching
Bye Bye Africa, written and directed by Mahamat-Saleh Haroun
[28 September 2000]
2000 Toronto International Film FestivalPart
3
Why are these women escaping?
The Circle, directed by Jafar Panahi, screenplay by Kambozia
Partovi, based on an original work by Panahi
[2 October 2000]
An interview with Jafar Panahi, director
of The Circle
[2 October 2000]
2000 Toronto International Film Festival--Part
4
Children in the mountains
A Time for Drunken Horses, written and directed by Bahman
Ghobadi
[5 October 2000]
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