The mirror and the scene have yielded to the screen and the network. Obscenity begins when there is no more spectacle, no more stage. We no longer partake in the drama of alienation, but are in the ecstasy of communication... Jean Baudrillard
"I wondered if a memory is something you have or something you've lost"
'Another Woman'
is an example of life as deception, that to go on living we must
deceive ourselves on more than one level and that some of us have a
larger capacity to do this than others. Sometimes we awake from these
little deceptions, sometimes it takes a great trauma or event for us to
awake from the greater deceptions and sometimes the mirror of someone
else's life is enough.
Anyone who appreciates the films of Woody Allen is likely to include Manhattan, Hannah And Her Sisters and Annie Hall in
their list of his best films. Over the next
few weeks I'd like to suggest some more unlikely candidates,
starting this week with Another Woman and following with one or two controversial
choices.
Another Woman is a bit of a departure
for Woody Allen, it's a quiet and thoughtful musing on love and regret
in late middle-age. Perhaps Allen was reading Proust and thinking about
Ingmar Bergman. Bergman's long-time collaborator Sven Nykvist is the
cinematographer here. To an extent Allen's own stylistic voice is
somewhat muted, although usual themes of love and neurosis are present;
comedy is not the prevalent driving force here. Some will find the film
deeply moving others may even find it boring for the same reasons. It is
not one of Allen's better known works but it features a masterfully
understated Gina Rowlands (best known for her work with John
Cassavettes) and a sad, dreamy and watery-eyed Mia Farrow.
Rowlands
plays the part of Marion Post a university professor who rents an
apartment adjoining a psychiatrists office while working on a new book.
She overhears a session in the psychiatrists office with a heavily
pregnant and suicidal woman, Hope (Mia Farrow) and is drawn to the
woman's story.
She becomes something of a voyeur
initially but then begins to reflect on her own life, her marriage to
Ken (Ian Holm) and another earlier love interest, novelist Larry (Gene
Hackman). The conversations she overhears help reveal to her the
cognitive
dissonance she has lived with many years, the denials she has sheltered
and the illusions she has fostered. She comes to realise that apart
from her step-daughter who idolises her, she has both knowingly and
unknowingly manipulated and hurt many of those close to her, and is seen
by those in her periphery as often quite calculated.
Rowlands reminds me of a combination of characters, Ellen Burstyn in Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore
and for some reason Liv Ullman. Perhaps it's the Bergman influence.
Rowlands was not the original choice for the lead part and although she
is more well known for playing manically intense psychologically driven
characters in her husband John Cassavette's films, here she gives one of
the performance of her career, quiet and understated.
"For here there is no place that does not see you. You must change your life.
"
In one of the best scenes in the film, Marion reads
Rilke's 'Archaic Torso of Apollo' from a book of poetry her mother once
owned. She finds the line "you must change your life" underlined and her
mothers teardrops staining the page. It underlines the film also.
Another Woman
is an example of life as deception, that to go on living we must
deceive ourselves on more than one level and that some of us have a
larger capacity to do this than others. Sometimes we awake from these
little deceptions, sometimes it takes a great trauma or event for us to
awake from the greater deceptions and sometimes the mirror of someone
else's life is enough.
I saw The Untouchables for the first time tonight. Bond always gets the best lines and the Oscar is well deserved even if his mastery of a Boston Irish accent sounds suspiciously Scottish
Robert De Niro's depiction of Capone is comic, verging on camp, but definitely a classic role. It's surprising how much his part in the film was ridiculed at the time by Roger Ebert. I think of the part as a precursor to his later more comic work and alongside his role in Brazil it's a bit of light relief after the epic Once Upon A Time In America. A few years later a fellow 'serious actor' Al Pacino, would play an equally comic cartoonish Italian-American bad-guy role in Dick Tracy.
Kevin Costner playing the moral lynch pin, is very much the same part he would replicate for JFK.
The homage to Battleship Potemkin is a nice touch, but it's dramatised in such a way that it's more of a Naked Gun type spoof. The obvious homage was drawn out almost as laboriously long as the classic scene in Battleship Potemkin.
There is one particularly superb piece of incidental music scored by the legendary Ennio Morricone, 'Al Capone's Theme' really captures the comic subtleties of De Niro's Capone. The melody is an impish play on Gangster clichés, recalling the incidental music from The Godfather, it takes the stereotype turns it inside-out with the huge 80s reverb drums, funky bass and synthesizer. Morricone must have been familiar with De Palma's Scarface as there is something of Giorgio Moroder's insidious Scarface theme in there as well.