Beyond the Multiplex

Torture porn, made beautiful

Beyond The Multiplex

Courtesy of the Criterion Collection

Aldo Valletti in Pier Paolo Pasolini's "Salò."

A year or so before he was murdered in 1975, the Italian Marxist poet and filmmaker Pier Paolo Pasolini declared that the time had come when "artists must create, critics defend, and democratic people support ... works so extreme that they become unacceptable even to the broadest minds of the new state." It sounds like a noble and/or foolhardy statement of artistic radicalism at first, and when you read it again it also presents an irresolvable contradiction. Broad-minded people must support works that even the broadest-minded people find unacceptable.

Between that public pronouncement and his death in a squalid Roman suburb -- apparently at the hands of a young male prostitute -- Pasolini put this impossible principle into practice in his final film, "Salò, or The 120 Days of Sodom," one of the most notorious works in the medium's history. Certainly the European art-film tradition, with its tendency toward elegant, ironic, highly aestheticized appreciations of human life, has produced nothing so dry and bitter, so viciously sarcastic, so nihilistic, so beautifully made and so well-nigh unwatchable. "Salò" takes place in that art-film universe of country houses, beautiful gowns and modern art, of chamber music and fine furniture and daring philosophy. All of it, Pasolini suggests, is a cynical con, a thin veneer of culture that sets the powerful free to rape and torture and kill the powerless.

"Salò" is now available in a lovingly-packaged two-disc set from the Criterion Collection, complete with three accompanying documentaries and a book of brainiac essays that's art-directed up the wazoo. (A 1998 Criterion release, later withdrawn due to copyright problems, attained fetish-object status on eBay, reputedly drawing bids as high as $1,000.) I suspect Pasolini would have loathed this development, which suggests that his film has been detached from the shock and horror that attended its original release and embalmed as a masterpiece. Then again, he might have cackled at the various levels of cruel irony involved, and mordantly pleased to learn that in the age of worldwide nonstop consumerism and media overload, of Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo Bay, the deepening nightmare of "Salò" has a strange new resonance.

Salo

At least officially, "Salò" is set in northern Italy in 1944 (the time and place of Pasolini's early adulthood), where Mussolini and his supporters had fled the advancing Allies and set up a short-lived Nazi puppet state informally known as the Republic of Salò, for the lakefront town where it was based. Various atrocities and outrages reportedly did occur under the Salò regime, but Pasolini imports into this setting the basic fictional elements of the Marquis de Sade's infamous "novel" -- it may be too grand a word -- "The 120 Days of Sodom," an interminable and monotonous saga of aristocratic cruelty and perversity, all conducted in the name of freedom from bourgeois morality. On top of that is a structure borrowed from Dante's "Inferno"; as the film progresses, Pasolini's physically and morally impotent fascists -- a duke, a bishop, a bank president and a magistrate -- lead themselves and their victims on an allegorical descent into hell.

What you see on screen in "Salò" is certainly bad enough, as the four aristocrats, unable to find any genuine pleasure in their depravity, urge each other to commit ever-worse atrocities upon a group of abducted children. But aficionados of films like "Hostel" and the far edges of Japanese horror have definitely seen worse. Pasolini always maintained that he abhorred the film's scenes of violence, but that they were necessary as the logical fulfillment of the social system he was excoriating -- that is, both the system of the literal fascist era and that of the homogenized, consumerist state he saw emerging in mid-'70s Italy, which for him were two sides of the same coin. It might be more accurate to say that Pasolini saw fascism and consumerism as two aspects of the powerful and evil urge to dominate inherent in human nature; as Marxist atheist homosexuals go, he was always an ardent Roman Catholic.

What remains profoundly upsetting and unsettling about "Salò" after 33 years is that the pornographic and scatological and violent images it depicts -- if you want a list of the specific outrages, find it somewhere else -- emerge in a context of such rigorous formal beauty. With lavish production design by Dante Ferretti (later a collaborator with Fellini and Scorsese), costumes by Danilo Donati, music by Ennio Morricone, settings in spectacularly decaying Italian villas and the most austere, gorgeous camerawork of Pasolini's career, "Salò" captures the Italian film industry at its postwar aesthetic height.

Most of Pasolini's other films rely on naturalistic performances from proletarian non-actors, but in "Salò" he hires pros to portray his four central monsters with measured subtlety. As with the whole film, there's an element of parody here; these would be "humanistic" performances if these characters behaved in any way like human beings. It's French actress Hélène Surgère, though, who steals the show, playing an aging prostitute who tells Scheherezade-style pornographic tales in an effort to incite the men's erotic interest. Pasolini's script (written with Sergio Citti and the uncredited Pupi Avati) is arch and literary; his torturers sit around at night in their beautiful apartments, the walls lined with imitation Picassos and Légers, quoting Nietzsche, Maurice Blanchot, Simone de Beauvoir, Pierre Klossowski.

All this for a movie in which beautiful young boys and girls are physically and psychologically tormented, figuratively and literally made to eat shit. It's useless to make an argument for or against "Salò," and I'm certainly not here to tell you to see it. Arguably nobody should see it. If you decide to, you'd better have an idea what you're in for and what you hope to get out of it. (The film remains banned in Australia, and as recently as 1994 the proprietor of a gay bookstore in Cincinnati was arrested for selling it.)

Pasolini himself called the film "profoundly enigmatic" and added: "Not to be understood, or even to be misunderstood, is an intrinsic dimension of this work." I will tell you that it's definitely not an erotic or an arousing film (unless you're as sensually deadened as Pasolini's fascist aristocrats), and that it's a work rooted in fury and hatred, made by a man who loved his country and its people. I will also say that while "Salò" offers no redemption or escape from its hellish universe, there are a few glimpses of hope, a snatch of sunlight here or there suggesting that human life in the world can endure even this.

A few months after shooting the film's final images of torture and murder -- seen, terribly but mercifully, only through binoculars, while Orff's "Carmina Burana" and then a swing band play on the soundtrack -- Pasolini was run over several times with his own car, on the beach at Ostia. Mainstream Italian commentators saw a moral lesson in his death, as if Pasolini had fallen victim to the same rough-trade, sadomasochistic appetites seen in his film. A 17-year-old hustler named Giuseppe Pelosi confessed to the crime, only to recant in 2005, throwing the long-closed case into confusion. Others have suggested that Pasolini was killed by the Mafia, by a blackmailer or by neo-fascist thugs, or even that he orchestrated the murder himself as a final, Christlike artistic sacrifice.

If Pasolini's final film is a mystery, a calculated and outrageous act, so too was his life. Killed by a hooker or by nameless enemies, it comes to the same thing in the end. You can put his most offensive and indigestible work in a pretty box and sell it, but like the one boy in "Salò" who'd rather risk death by German bullets than submission to Italian overlords, Pasolini forever evades our grasp.

Posted in: DVD

Doc Hudson vs. Che Guevara

Beyond The Multiplex

Pixar

Doc Hudson, the "Cars" character voiced by Paul Newman.

Is that woman from Alaska still hanging around? I'm only sorry that cookie-and-pretzel impresario, sometime race-car driver and all-around masculine icon of our time Paul Newman won't be around to see her banished back to her split-level igloo, the one from which she can see Vladimir Putin's head rising, dirigible-like, over the distant Russian horizon. Well, I'm sorry about other things too, but I'm definitely sorry about that.

My unsupported and definitely unrequested political analysis, before we move on to the real news: If Barack Obama is indeed elected president, then Sarah Palin will indeed be the Republican nominee in 2012 -- and will go down in a Goldwater-esque coast-to-coast wipeout. Will she, like Goldwater, be the sparkplug who fires an entire new generation of American nutso crusaders? I'll get back to you on that one.

I don't think I had completely grasped that Newman was gone, at the level of emotional reality, until I was sitting around with my 4-year-old twins on Saturday morning, watching "Cars" for about the 15th time, and came face-to-face with the fact that crusty Doc Hudson of Radiator Springs (aka Fabulous Hudson Hornet, the three-time Piston Cup winner) was his final role. Other people have remarked on this, I know, but what occurred to me while watching was that it's a damn fine role to go out on. OK, so he's playing a car and not a human being. But what a car it is -- a vintage Newman car-acter, you might say -- mistrustful, introspective and damaged, and beneath it all far more eager to give and receive love than he'd ever admit.

» Continued

From Cannes headliner to pay cable

Pleasure of Being Robbed

Courtesy Red Bucket Films

Listen to the interview with Red Bucket Films

It's possible and even likely that "The Pleasure of Being Robbed," the debut feature from 24-year-old director Josh Safdie and his pals in the New York-based film collective called Red Bucket, has already had its big moment in the public eye. You've never even heard of it, you say? Welcome to the 21st century movie business, people.

You see, after premiering last spring at the South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas -- where I and a lot of other people missed it -- Safdie's ultra-low-budget yarn about the adventures of a 20-something female sociopath leapt to sudden prominence as the closing-night film, and only American selection, in the Directors' Fortnight festival at Cannes. This is the festival formed by the French directors' society in 1969 in open rebellion against the Cannes main event; the festival that has helped launch the international careers of Martin Scorsese, Werner Herzog, Spike Lee, Jim Jarmusch, Michael Haneke, Sofia Coppola, the Dardenne brothers and many more.

It's a huge honor for any film to get that slot, not least a 71-minute overgrown short from an unknown American director who describes his budget as "way under $100,000," a picture shot on 16 mm film, guerrilla-style, in New York public spaces, without any of the required permits or clearances. (Perhaps Safdie paid for this karmically, since he says $30,000 worth of fancy Russian-made lenses, not covered by insurance, were stolen out of his car during filming.) It's notoriously difficult and expensive to shoot at the Central Park Zoo, for example, and I'm still not sure how Safdie managed an illegal scene there that featured two actors in cop uniforms and his star and co-writer, Eléonore Hendricks, in handcuffs. (Wait till you see the "special effect" in that scene. I'm saying nothing more.)

» Continued

Posted in: Interviews

Bill Maher vs. the "talking snake"

Beyond The Multiplex

Photo courtesy of Lionsgate

Bill Maher outside the Vatican City in "Religulous."

What if there was a religion, asks comedian Bill Maher, in which an all-powerful god from outer space decided to send his unborn son on a suicide mission to planet Earth? So this space-god impregnates a human female in some mystical, not-quite-physical fashion, and she gives birth to a baby who is both a human being and a divine incarnation, simultaneously the space-god's spawn and the space-god himself. (Oh, space-god also has a third manifestation, one that's totally invisible.) So space-god junior is born on earth destined to be killed, even though he's a space-god and therefore immortal.

As you've picked up by now, the religion Maher is describing is not imaginary, and in various forms and guises is professed by most people in the United States, including every president we've ever had or are likely to have in the foreseeable future. (I'm sorry, that's right -- one of this year's candidates is a Muslim.) In the acerbic late-night talk-show host's new movie "Religulous," made with "Borat" director Larry Charles, Maher keeps bludgeoning you with stories like these to make the point that the central story behind mainstream Christianity, when considered at face value and taken literally, sounds every bit as loony as the oft-derided tenets of Mormonism or Scientology.

» Continued

Posted in: Interviews

Indie film's ultra-realist overdose

Lance Hammer's film "Ballast," a critical favorite earlier this year at Sundance, begins with a remarkable shot, one of those shots that stick with you long after the rest of the movie has become a jumbled memory. A boy or young man in a down coat, seen from the rear, walks through the weeds into a flat, horizontal field, probably one where corn or cotton or soybeans are grown. From the coat and the light and the empty field, it appears to be winter, although part of the seductive power of "Ballast" is that elemental questions like where and when go unanswered. As the boy advances, a flock of scavenging birds -- likely a murder of crows -- explodes out of the field, and this almost painterly composition abruptly becomes a chaotic whirlwind.

» Continued

Chokin' on Chuck

Beyond The Multiplex

Fox Searchlight/Jessica Miglio

Sam Rockwell in "Choke."

Maybe the secret to adapting Chuck Palahniuk's novels into movies is not to take them so damn seriously. If David Fincher's "Fight Club" became a problematic monument in American film history by outdoing its source material in paranoid portentousness -- and by overwhelming it with cinematic technique -- then actor-turned-director Clark Gregg's adaptation of Palahniuk's "Choke" (which I covered briefly from Sundance last January) takes an entirely different approach. Pretty much dumping any effort at high-minded social satire, Gregg's "Choke" is a fantastical sex farce, and a highly amusing one at that, without being the least bit momentous or memorable.

Speaking as a reader who's barely able to tolerate Palahniuk's prose even at the Barnes & Noble page-browsing level, I think this is a terrific idea; the writer's loyal fans may feel differently. One thing all parties can probably agree about: As Victor Mancini, the thoroughly unredeemed sex addict and con artist who is the roguish hero of "Choke," Gregg has the perfect leading man in Sam Rockwell. There's no American actor who does queasily-weaselly-lovable the way Rockwell does, and making this beyond-implausible script work demands a careful balancing act between Victor's odious behavior and his evident charm.

» Continued

Angelina, Mickey Rourke and disco madness

Beyond The Multiplex

Courtesy New York Film Festival

Top row, from left: images from "Happy-Go-Lucky," "Che," and "Four Nights with Anna." Bottom row, from left: images from "Changeling," "Wendy and Lucy," and "The Wrestler."

Like any institution closely identified with New York City -- the Yankees, the Times, the Metropolitan Museum, the scum-sucking financial establishment that has ruined all of our lives and our children's as well -- the New York Film Festival makes a pretty easy target for crusading anti-elitists of all stripes. A young freelancer for the New York Press just enlisted in this venerable tradition, expending thousands of words on an earnest, rambling article whose point seems to be that Lincoln Center's annual September festival caters to a graying, affluent, high-culture audience that's not relevant to younger filmgoers. In other breaking news, the sun turns out to be an enormous ball of flaming gases, 93 million miles away! And Francisco Franco is still dead!

Maybe it's not fair to beat up an article in a struggling alt-weekly that bears no signs of having been edited or even read before publication ("The Film Society [of Lincoln Center] was founded in 1969 and nearly 20 years later, it continues to offer ..."), but this rises well above spouting hoary cliché and reaches the realm of laboriously restating a universally accepted truth. Complaining about the NYFF's hoity-toity atmosphere and superannuated customer base is a journalistic genre unto itself, and one to which I've made my own contribution.

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Coppola, Spielberg, Hammer Films and you

Beyond The Multiplex

A scene from Robert Altman's "McCabe and Mrs. Miller" -- high on the list of embarrassing holes in my movie-watching résumé.

I'm back from vacation, I know you're excited. I went tidepooling with my kids and pretty much had the computer turned off -- was there some big news in the business pages or something? Maybe I shouldn't have sold all those millions of Morgan and Lehman shares the day I left. What a big uproar!

I'm crazy-busy this next couple of weeks with the 46th edition of the New York Film Festival, that creakily lovable high-cultcha institution that kicks off the fall movie season in thoroughly anachronistic style. Full preview and loads of updates to come.

Just a few tidbits before I dash over to Lincoln Center: I have yet to weigh in on the new HD-ready "Coppola restoration" of the "Godfather" trilogy -- possibly the most-anticipated DVD in the medium's brief history -- but blogger/critic Glenn Kenny has been busy studying it, and has multiple reports.

» Continued

Wayne Wang isn't missing

Wayne Wang emerged on the film scene 25 years ago with "Chan Is Missing," a glorious and mysterious black-and-white indie made on 16mm film and almost no budget in San Francisco's Chinatown that opened the doors on a world few non-Asian Americans had ever seen. In some ways it was a classic story about an immigrant community wrestling with issues of assimilation and cultural difference; the film's shaggy-dog plot exposed various political, linguistic and generational tensions among Chinese-Americans. But "Chan Is Missing" also recalled both the French New Wave and San Francisco's long tradition as a location for atmospheric mysteries and noir films.

Along with Jim Jarmusch's "Stranger Than Paradise," Alex Cox's "Repo Man" and Spike Lee's "She's Gotta Have It," Wang's "Chan Is Missing" was a touchstone of the early-'80s independent-film explosion and announced the arrival of an intriguing new talent. All four of those filmmakers, one could argue, have had erratic subsequent careers, and Wang's may be the most peripatetic of all. I was friendly with Wang in the late '80s in San Francisco and even worked with him briefly, writing publicity material for "Life Is Cheap ... But Toilet Paper Is Expensive," a confrontational picture shot in Hong Kong that I still, perhaps perversely, consider his best work.

» Continued

Posted in: Interviews

No country for human beings

Here's the right word to describe Joel and Ethan Coen's star-studded, pack-of-maroons spy comedy "Burn After Reading": It's patchy. Of course that sounds like I'm dismissing it, but I don't exactly mean it that way. The film is hilarious in patches, shocking in patches, utterly convincing in patches and close to brilliant in patches. As with the much-laureled "No Country for Old Men," the Coens seem to be Mixmastering themes and elements of their earlier films; there are traces of "Fargo," "The Big Lebowski" and "Blood Simple" in the DNA of "Burn After Reading." But those comparisons aren't likely to benefit this work of lightweight inside-the-Beltway misanthropy, which possesses neither the morbid, cinematic gravity of their better crime films nor the absurd delirium of their best comedies.

One could sit here and intone, film-critic style, that the Coens don't know anything about the world of Washington espionage professionals (most of the movie was actually shot in New York, with Brooklyn brownstones doubling for Georgetown) and that the movie's devoid of any likable or sympathetic characters. But since when have either of those factors been relevant to these guys and their peculiar and hermetic career? As we heard earlier this year at the Oscar ceremony, the brothers once made a Super-8 film at the Minneapolis-St. Paul airport called "Henry Kissinger: Man on the Go." And I for one would love to see it.

» Continued

Torture porn, made beautiful
Pasolini's "Salò" blends fascism, de Sade and upscale art cinema into the most notorious film in the medium's history. Watch it at home!
Doc Hudson vs. Che Guevara
Paul Newman's crusty, kid-friendly, oddly classic final role (as a car). Plus: Film-world eggheads battle over Soderbergh's unconventional "Che."
From Cannes headliner to pay cable
Why is the exasperating and delightful "Pleasure of Being Robbed" -- a breakthrough American micro-indie about a charming female sociopath -- barely getting released?
Bill Maher vs. the "talking snake"
The HBO host and comedian talks about "Religulous," his onslaught against the religious idiocy that threatens to deliver America to Sarah Palin and her fellow "space god" worshipers.

Wayne Wang on "A Thousand Years of Good Prayers"

What I'm Reading

NYFF. Ashes of Time Redux.
GreenCine Daily, 2008.10.08
Hulu Streaming Bush Doc Crawford (Variety.com *)
Thompson on Hollywood, 2008.10.07
QED's Bill Block Makes Big Bet on Oliver Stone's W (Variety.com *)
Thompson on Hollywood, 2008.10.07
I paid to see "An American Carol"... (Glenn Kenny)
Some Came Running, 2008.10.07
NYFF 46 (2008): Chouga, Four Nights With Anna, Bullet In The Head, shorts (noreply@blogger.com (Vadim))
The House Next Door, 2008.10.07
American Idiots: An American Carol (noreply@blogger.com (John Lichman))
The House Next Door, 2008.10.07
Shorts, 10/7.
GreenCine Daily, 2008.10.07
Ford Tough (Glenn Kenny)
Some Came Running, 2008.10.07
Lola Montes (Chris Wisniewski)
Reverse Shot, 2008.10.06
Afterschool (Michael Joshua Rowin)
Reverse Shot, 2008.10.06

About Beyond the Multiplex

Andrew O'Hehir's independent film blog offers reviews, news and interviews. Subscribe to the podcast through iTunes or RSS.

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