Tuesday, 12 February 2008

2007_09_01_archive



consumption

I normally avoid movie theaters, finding a big-screen TV and Netflix

preferable to the ordeal that movie-going has become, but I was given

passes to the San Francisco Silent Film Festival (mille grazie to J

and CF) so I headed on over to the Castro Theater, which is smaller

than I thought it would be but just as bizarrely and extravagantly

ornamented as I had hoped, to see Nazimova in Camille. The sets and

costumes are by Natacha Rambova and are even more strikingly stylized

than the notorious ones she did for Nazimova's Salome, which were

based on Aubrey Beardsley; the Deco fabulosity on view here (the time

is updated to the 1920s) was all her own. Anything extravagant or

stylized makes some people nervous, and the speakers introducing the

film felt it necessary to caution us about what we were going to see.

There were still some condescending chuckles from the audience, but

that's a hazard of seeing silent films, even at a Silent Film

Festival. I don't really understand this: acting styles were different

in the early part of the twentieth century (more rhetorical, grander,

more theatrical, if you will, than cinematic) and it doesn't take too

much expertise to see who is giving a good performance in that style

and who is not. If you've grown up seeing Raphael Madonnas, would you

burst out laughing at your first Byzantine icon? You might find it

hard to adjust at first, but it's just a different means of

representation with its own standards. But people think it's a sign of

sophistication to laugh at silent movies. I don't think much of

"sophistication" for audiences anyway: the problem with sophistication

is that it's a series of accepted attitudes, and the need to stay

current with what is considered sophisticated can keep you from seeing

and feeling what is happening right in front of you. Nazimova does

have an explosion of hair and bee-stung lips (not too odd for a

courtesan), but she is also a great actress - just observe the

regretful little shake back into her life she gives herself as she

leaves her uncorrupted friend from the early days and goes back to her

silly party. Let's have some respect for the woman who studied with

Stanislavsky and when in America not only insisted on performing Ibsen

but made him big box office. Her Armand was Rudolph Valentino, just as

Four Horsemen was making him a star, looking appropriately dreamy and

sad. Nazimova's Camille dies alone, imagining Armand, clutching the

volume of Manon Lescaut he gave her. In my Camille mood I watched the

Garbo version a week or so later and Robert Taylor's Armand gives his

tactless under the circumstances. I had forgotten what a magnificent

actress Garbo is; her face is a poem and her eyes are epics and those

should be enough, but she gives us more. It's even worth putting up

with the egregiously awful Lionel Barrymore (as Armand's father) to

watch her. In some ways this 1936 version is farther from our tastes

than the 1921 film; I can picture a contemporary woman wearing

Nazimova's costumes, but not the absurd rounds of fluff that Adrian

inflicted on Garbo (her pastoral costumes, featuring hoop skirts and

yards of white lace, are particularly ridiculous, especially for a

woman who was supposedly raised in the country with the cows and

chickens). Robert Taylor also looks appropriately dreamy and sad and

then jealous, but it's all about Garbo. The only actor to come close,

despite the best efforts of Laura Hope Crews as the aptly named

Prudence, Camille's greedy realpolitik procurer, is Henry Daniell as

Baron de Varville. He's not exactly likeable, but you respect his

coldness and his strength. There's a scene in which Camille gets him

to pay her debts, and he knows it's so she can leave him and go to the

country with Armand, and he slaps her. It's a very emotionally complex

moment, and an impossible one in the movies these days, when hitting a

woman signifies ultimate villainy just as much as did the twirling

moustache of melodrama. (Not that I'm advocating slapping women, or

anyone else, but the idea that you never hit a woman is based on the

notion that all women are, by nature, smaller and weaker than all men;

it's a version of "pick on someone your own size." Since women in

movies these days, even period pieces, are all experts with sword and

fist, it seems an odd relic that they're supposed to be untouchable. I

saw one movie in which the bad guy slapped the heroine and we were

clearly meant to think this was the absolute worst, but since she had

just cornered him with her skilled fencing, why wouldn't or shouldn't

he fight back? There seems a basic confusion there.) And later on de

Varville and Armand fight a duel, and I knew that if the movie were

made these days the Baron's aristocratic bravery would be stripped

from him and he would have to be an abject coward on top of everything

else. For all the post-Code censorship of movies, they were realistic

about class and economics in a way that contemporary movies are not.

This is not like the Raphael Madonna versus the Byzantine icon,

because those are equally valuable means of representation and I'm

talking about a willingness to face up to the hardness of life versus

some deluded fantasy of entitlement. Somewhere after the tragic

"Women's Picture" we slipped into the smug self-delusion of the Chick

Flick, and it's not really to the credit of our ability to take in

some of life's complexity. The whole world and style of Camille may be

too alien for us anyway unless preserved in the music of Verdi

(somewhere Robertson Davies points out that nineteenth-century

theatrical styles can still be seen, but only on the opera and ballet

stages). Once I did see Camille performed live - when I was at

Berkeley, Charles Ludlam played the famous courtesan in his Ridiculous

Theater Company production, and that should tip you off that the play

was so far out of the mainstream it was avant-garde. The performance

was celebrated, and I sort of wish now that I had not left at

intermission, which I have only done about four times in my life. I

keep feeling I must have missed something. But it just seemed like a

fat man in a dress, and not a particularly memorable one (man or

dress) either. It wasn't done as camp extravaganza, but it wasn't

quite done straight (pardon the expression) either. Maybe I'd have a


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