Monthly Archives: July 2016

  • Wings of Desire

    Der Himmel über Berlin

    Wim Wenders (1987)

    It has a very unusual storyline and a very distinctive look (at least in the monochrome sections which make up most of the film).  But the discrepancy between the technical sophistication of the images and the quality of thought behind the words is chasmal.   Cassiel and Damiel are two angels who watch over the denizens of contemporary Berlin (in other words, Berlin just before the Wall came down).  They are unable to effect big changes in the Berliners’ lives or – as we see in one sequence – prevent the most unhappy from ending them; but when a human being is touched by one of the angels, he or she feels an immediate (if transient) inner strength.  Damiel finds himself increasingly drawn – through his feelings for a French trapeze artist called Marion, who’s appearing in a circus in the city – to partake of human experience.  Well over two thirds into the film, he enters into real life, at which point the black-and-white film is replaced by colour (until this point there have been just a few, momentary colour shots).

    Wenders has said that the screenplay, which he wrote with Peter Handke, draws on themes in Rilke’s writings but this strikes me as cultural one-upmanship.   A Google search on Rilke quickly brought up some very apposite text (from one of his letters – ‘when people remained alien to me, I was drawn to things, and from them a joy breathed upon me … Oh, how I believe in it, in life’) but the themes in Wings of Desire are not as singular as imputing them to Rilke suggests.   It’s hardly unusual in mythology or literature for a non-human (like the Little Mermaid) to yearn for human communion.  It’s verging on a cliché for supernatural entities (like ghosts) to be shown as subsisting on a superior plane but in a life that is sadly attenuated.   We hear throughout the film lines from a ‘Song of Childhood’, written by Handke.   I don’t know if this was conceived as a homage to Rilke but what it has to say is familiar from elsewhere too:

    ‘When the child was a child,

    It was the time for these questions:

    Why am I me, and why not you?

    Why am I here, and why not there?

    When did time begin, and where does space end?

    Is life under the sun not just a dream?

    Is what I see and hear and smell

    not just an illusion of a world before the world?’

    The last part of that (short) excerpt gives away the carelessness of the any-existential-insight-will-do approach of the writing in Wings of Desire:  unlike the questions in the third, fourth and fifth lines, those in the last three are not the sort of questions which are asked in childhood.  In the early stages of the picture, I couldn’t work out who was actually speaking these words.  Quite soon, I realised it didn’t matter because anyone with anything important to say – whether quoting from Handke’s poem or reflecting on their life – talks in the same way.  I’m not saying it’s easy to write this kind of stuff; I do think that (as with the script for Last Year at Marienbad), once you’ve got the hang of it, you can keep going for a long time.   This is certainly what happens in Wings of Desire.  Marion, when she’s not on the high wire or dancing miserably alone in a club where Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds are playing, has a chronic case of this ontological incontinence.  The only counterpoint to the musings on existence is provided by the thoughts of Berlin commuters et al which the angels tune into.  These fragments are consistently significant and miserable:  if anyone in Berlin had a thought as believably mundane as ‘Must remember to pick up a pint of milk on the way home’, I was drowsing at the time.

    The mournful, alienated existence of the Berliners makes it hard to see why Damiel is so anxious to join the life of the city.  And since Marion maunders on the most relentlessly – as if determined to show who’s boss in a Franco-German contest in metaphysical gloom – it’s all the harder to see why she ignites this Sehnsucht in him.  Although you get an immediate lift when Wenders switches to colour, it’s short-lived:  it’s not hard to predict that life beyond monochrome, in his scheme of things, is unlikely to be life in Technicolor and so it proves.  What you also rightly suspect is that from this point onwards the film will begin to resolve itself as a story and that, in the process of doing so, will expose its naffness:  what’s gone before – lacking narrative shape or momentum but visually arresting and irritatingly hypnotic to listen to – has kept this under wraps.   When Damiel, in the real world, returns for another performance at the club in the hope of meeting Marion, they find each other (literally and metaphorically) in the adjoining bar.  They embrace and she launches into a monologue, for Damiel and the camera, which is no different from the internal monologues we’ve heard from her before – except that it’s even longer and heavier on baffling paradox and is supposed to be conclusive.  (It’s lazy writing to have Marion express herself in exactly the same way here.)  What she says raises more questions than it answers – questions like (1) what do you mean by ‘It is only now that I completely belong to you that I feel completely lonely’ and (2) does Damiel really think this kind of interaction is an improvement on being an angel?

    How are the actors in a film where normal human possibilities are so rationed?  Bruno Ganz is meticulous but inevitably monotonous.   Once Damiel gets into the world, Ganz’s change of gear is almost too palpable (although very understandable):  when Damiel grins to find that his head is bleeding or drinks coffee or bites into an apple, I received it less as the character gratifying his appetite for sensual experience than as the actor’s relief that he could do something different and more easily expressive at last.  Otto Sander has a good sympathetic melancholy as Cassiel but Ganz is so much stronger a presence throughout that their partnership is very unequal.    Curt Bois, as an old man who wanders round Berlin remembering (and experiencing flashbacks to World War II), does the necessary – this isn’t exactly a compliment.  The blankly beautiful Solveig Dommartin was Wenders’s girlfriend at the time the film was made so perhaps it’s not surprising that he couldn’t see that her performance as Marion is both tedious and shallow.  When we see Ganz’s Damiel in colour, his face does seem transformed, and in a way you can’t quite fathom.  Until she starts talking in the bar, Dommartin too seems strikingly different from her monochrome incarnation but this isn’t, as it is with Ganz, a result of the actor’s craft; it’s more that her earlier characterisation was so superficial that it’s easy to erase.  Dommartin’s Marion is altogether a being much less substantial than the discarnate angels.

    Peter Falk, playing an American actor identical to Peter Falk who’s in Berlin to make a picture, is likeable in a way that none of the others is.  Given Wenders’s subject, it’s amusing (whether intentionally amusing I’m not sure) that the audience at Wings of Desire becomes so numbly detached that taking an interest in the people on screen gets to be highly desirable:  taking a leaf out of Damiel’s book, we long to attain the experience of film-watching that ordinary cinemagoers can enjoy.  Because Peter Falk is a familiar face and voice – and gets some humour into his lines – he soon acquires a magnetic warmth.  This isn’t the only thing in the film that works well as some kind of joke.  We have a clear, art history idea of what an angel looks like.  The appearance of Cassiel and Damiel is very different but equally standardised (long dark overcoats, pony tails); they look like people with a well-defined job to do.  And since Falk is playing ‘Himself’ and turns out to be an angel in human disguise, it will no longer be possible to look at a Columbo repeat in the same way.  These moments of light relief are rare, though, and were water in the desert for the NFT1 audience.  The few opportunities for laughter were seized upon desperately, uproariously – as when some German teenagers passed by Falk and decided it couldn’t be Columbo because of the moth-eaten coat he was wearing or, some time later, when Damiel became human and got a new set of clothes.  (That outfit did make me smile – its carefully assembled tastelessness really justified Wenders’s use of colour for a moment.)

    As we were leaving the BFI, Sally said, rightly, that it wasn’t my kind of film.  (I didn’t think it was hers either but she really enjoyed it – if not as much as the guardian angels car commercial that it inspired a few years ago.)  I don’t have the ability to appreciate the visual achievements of something like this – and the visuals aren’t enough to sustain me for two hours in the cinema.  I don’t like a surfeit of words when they’re spoken not by characters but by actors on behalf of film-makers.  I can get by without circuses in life or on screen.  But although I’m not naturally responsive to this kind of picture I still don’t think Wings of Desire is that good.   For example, when Wenders stages the circus or punk rock performance scenes and shows their audiences deep into the experience, it’s not convincing.  These sequences don’t have the texture of the real thing – they come over as the director’s unfelt idea of what it’s like going to events like these.  (Is that clinical unreality intentional?  If so, I don’t get the point.)  My stepson’s friend (neither he nor she liked the film) asked afterwards if Wenders directed Buena Vista Social Club – or was she confusing him with someone else?  I said I thought she probably was but that I didn’t know.  I see from Wenders’s filmography that I was wrong:  Buena Vista Social Club is a documentary he made about Cuban musicians.  Perhaps it’s only when he’s recording  rather than trying to recreate performance, that Wenders can convey the vitality of performers – he does so in Wings of Desire solely through the person of Peter Falk.

    4 October 2009

  • Win Win

    Tom McCarthy (2011)

    Paul Giamatti’s face is his fortune and his limitation, in terms of casting anyway.  The protruding eyes and the saggy jowls – the self-aware humour and dogged intelligence behind them – are distinctive:  it’s hard to think of any current film actor who does sad sack resilience as well as him.  Naturally empathetic, he’s uncomfortable playing someone meant to be dislikeable (viz The Last Station).   Giamatti enjoyed a great success on television playing President John Adams but lack of authority has been an essential ingredient of his best-known characters on the cinema screen to date.    Win Win begins with a back view of a jogger – an unremarkable, rather shapeless figure – who’s passed by two other runners, one on either side of him.   The man in the middle stops and Giamatti turns to face the camera.  The music we hear (by Lyle Workman) is wryly, weedily hopeful.   Then the writer-director Tom McCarthy moves into an accumulation of irritations and minor, it’s-gonna-to-be-one-of-those-days setbacks in the Giamatti character’s home and place of work.   The effect of these opening sequences is dispiriting:  the material feels predetermined and boxed in and there are still a hundred minutes to go.

    The protagonist of Win Win is Mike Flaherty, a struggling New Jersey lawyer with a wife and two young daughters to support.  In the evenings, he gives his time to coaching a consistently hopeless high-school wrestling team.  Mike appears in court on behalf of an elderly client Leo, with early Alzheimer’s and who’s judged by social services unable to look after himself any longer.  Mike offers to become Leo’s guardian so that Leo, who has plenty of money, can remain in his house, as he’s anxious to do.   Mike is a decent man but he’s desperate too:  the real incentive here is the $1,500 monthly commission payable.  He can’t afford the time to look after an unsupervised Leo so once the court has granted Mike the guardianship, he moves the old man into a nursing home.   Then Leo’s teenage grandson Kyle arrives in town, having run away from home in Ohio:  he turns out to be a star turn wrestler and needs a roof over his head.  In due course, Kyle’s feckless, penniless mother Cindy, estranged from both her father and her son and just out of rehab, enters the story too.

    This isn’t, to put it mildly, original plotting and Tom McCarthy (The Station Agent, The Visitor) doesn’t improve matters by the way he conceives the people in the story.  They’re essentially ‘ordinary’ people:  the implicit condescension – and McCarthy’s ‘humane’, sympathetic treatment of them – is grating.  I was the only person in Screen 4 of the Richmond Odeon:  it may have been partly that unusual situation that made me restless, looking around the theatre and at my watch every so often, but I think it was also an expression of resistance to the film’s calculated smallness.  Yet McCarthy seems to be a much more nimble director of actors than he is a writer; and the cast is so good that they come close to alchemising Win Win.  Giamatti is in all respects the star of the show.  His skill and wit (and taste) transcend and illuminate the character he’s playing, make you feel that, if this actor were more facially nondescript, he could move closer towards the range of roles Gene Hackman achieved (and which Richard Jenkins deserves).

    Giamatti gets excellent support from Amy Ryan as Mike’s plain-speaking but totally loyal wife Jackie, Bobby Cannavale as his droll, anxiously extrovert buddy Terry, and Jeffrey Tambor, as the dyspeptic Vigman – an accountant whose business is next door to Mike’s and who’s co-coach to the wrestling team until Terry muscles in.  Burt Young (the brother-in-law in the Rocky films) is nuanced and strongly expressive as Leo; so is Alex Shaffer as Kyle, whose determined monotone is often very funny.   Kyle seems determined to say as little as he can (he swallows words and syllables wherever possible):  you come to accept this as more than adolescent elision – as part of Kyle’s wariness of letting anyone see into or get close to him.  (Shaffer, at the age of seventeen, really did win the New Jersey State Wrestling Championship in 2010.)   David Thompson (the timorous beanpole on the wrestling team) and Nina Arianda (Mike’s secretary) play more broadly but enjoyably too. Margo Martindale is, as always, good in a small role, that of Cindy’s lawyer.

    Tom McCarthy, having decided to make a film centred on unpretentious, law-abiding people, lacks the courage of his convictions.   I liked the way that Amy Ryan suggested the near-inevitability for Jackie of doing the right thing:  when Kyle arrives, she knows she and Mike can’t afford another mouth to feed; she makes clear her husband knows she knows but she takes Kyle in as a matter of course.  She’s convincingly incredulous too when she finds out what Mike’s done to prop up his ailing practice and augment the household income.   But McCarthy doesn’t give Paul Giamatti much opportunity – in spite of the fact that wrongdoing seems to be a novelty and that the Flahertys are churchgoing Catholics – to get across Mike’s guilty feelings about his exploitation of Leo:  this is just stored up for eventual use to bring events to a head.

    The appearance of Kyle’s mother is also impelled largely by plot requirements but Cindy, as played by Melanie Lynskey, injects a welcome tension into the proceedings.  It’s funds that Cindy’s after (or which she thinks will solve her problems) and you wish, like Mike, Jackie and Kyle, she’d go away:  as she knows (and says), she’s spoiling everything.  But she is so screwed up that you feel sorry for Cindy too:  Lynskey gives her a helpless brittleness that’s grippingly sad.  Once Cindy’s been paid off and departed the scene, Win Win settles down into a half-happy ending – and an effective closing scene.   Kyle’s aggressive feelings towards his mother cause him to blow his big chance in wrestling when she appears in the audience but, after she’s gone, he moves in with the Flahertys permanently.  He’ll stay on at school and try for college, even if it’s not on a sports scholarship.  Mike, lesson learned, lowers his sights in supplementing his salary.  He comes home from work in the evening, then puts on a clean shirt and tie to go out again.  We wonder where.  Cut to Terry, walking into a bar and ordering a drink.  Cut to the barman.

    24 May 2011

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