Monthly Archives: April 2019

  • Making Montgomery Clift

    Robert Clift, Hillary Demmon (2018)

    According to production notes on this documentary, which was screened at the BFI Flare festival, the directors/producers of Making Montgomery Clift intend ‘rigorously [to] examine the flawed narratives that have come to define Monty’s legacy’.  Robert Clift, the cinematographer and narrator too, is the great actor’s youngest nephew; Hilary Demmon, the film’s editor, is Robert’s wife.  (For clarity, I’ll call each member of the Clift family by their forename only.)  The central ‘flawed narrative’ is that Monty was tormented by his sexuality; and that this torment explains the alcohol and prescription drugs dependency that badly damaged his health and made him nearly unemployable in Hollywood in the last years of his short life (which ended in 1966, when he was forty-five).   At the start of his film, Robert describes his uncle as someone remembered less for his acting than for his unhappy personal life.  That may be true in the popular mind but is it how cinema-lovers primarily see Monty?

    Robert’s opening remark introduces a tendency of Making Montgomery Clift to look at things simplistically or one-sidedly.  On the matter of whether Monty was troubled by his sexual orientation, the film elides a distinction between his private and professional lives.  If Monty was conflicted and depressive, Robert seems to ask, how do you explain this home-movie footage that I’m showing you of a wonderfully exuberant, laughing young man?  The serious car accident in May 1956, during the filming of Raintree County, isn’t mentioned until quite late in the narrative.  His injuries were face-changing; for a famously beautiful movie star, they therefore threatened to be life-changing too.  In the event, the threat was minimised because Monty had always been attracted primarily to playing people whose situation and motives interested him;  in an early 1963 television interview with the journalist Hy Gardner, he cites his work in The Young Lions (1958) and Judgment at Nuremberg (1961) as his two favourites among all his performances.  It’s nevertheless a non sequitur when Robert, because these were both post-accident films, suggests that Monty’s choice contradicts the received wisdom that he struggled emotionally with the impact of the car crash.  Robert’s approach throughout contrasts strikingly with Monty’s own remark in a 1958 sound interview an extract from which is included near the end of Making Montgomery Clift.  Responding to a question about his alleged self-destructive nature that seems to demands a yes/no answer, Monty, in plaintive exasperation, insists that a person is ‘not just one thing’.

    This film’s chief asset is the wealth (to put it mildly) of home movies and audio recordings available to the directors, which they use to create a fluent, fast-moving narrative.  To describe the material simply as ‘archival’ doesn’t do justice to how singular much of it is.  The sound recordings are often the work of, and comprise conversations including, Robert’s father Brooks (Monty’s elder brother, 1919-86).  Brooks’s interlocutors, including Monty, were usually unaware that a recording was being made.  Robert’s mother Eleanor says about her ex-husband, with a mixture of embarrassment and regretful understanding, that ‘recording was what Brooks did’. It’s hardly surprising that, at one point, Robert gets preoccupied with his father’s obsessions almost at the expense of illustrating what Robert sees as his uncle’s true self.

    One of those obsessions included biographies of Monty, by Robert LaGuardia and Patricia Bosworth, first published in 1977 and 1978 respectively.  The LaGuardia book is dismissed by Clift family members generally as a muckraking misrepresentation of its subject.  The Bosworth biography is a more complicated matter, not least because, as Robert himself says, Bosworth has long been a part of the family’s lives:  now in her eighties, she’s one of the talking heads in the film.  Largely because of the LaGuardia experience, Brooks was in very frequent phone and written contact with Bosworth while she was completing her book.  He therefore felt a personal responsibility that the biography failed in important ways to deliver what he was expecting and that it confirmed, especially in retrospect, the idea that Monty struggled to live with himself.

    Monty and Brooks  have similar speech rhythms and the film-makers are determined to tell their story with minimal reliance on text:  they cut back and forth between images of the brothers as the conversations play and this visual cutting is so rapid that it distracts attention from the words.  It might have been better just to put the name ‘Monty’ or ‘Brooks’ on the screen to clarify who’s speaking.  On the plus side, the repeated insertion of brief clips from Monty’s Hollywood films, as a kind of analogy with events in his biography, works well.  Since the main focus of Making Montgomery Clift is on his life rather than his craft, the clips also serve as welcome reminders of what an extraordinary actor he was.

    The documentary is not impartial – as the work of a blood relative (albeit one who never knew Monty:  Robert was born in 1974), you wouldn’t want, let alone expect, it to be.  Robert makes explicitly clear that, in matters Monty, he takes sides.  Robert is unreservedly negative about John Wayne (whom he ‘can’t stand’), for his behaviour on the set of Red River, and John Huston, for his treatment of Monty during the making of Freud and, especially, for triggering the aftermath:  Universal Studios sued Monty for making the shooting schedule so expensively protracted.  He eventually won the case but Robert blames Huston for bringing about a sharp increase in his uncle’s use of drugs and drink and, consequently, a deterioration in his physical and mental health.  This viewer instinctively sympathises with the tirades against both Johns yet Robert surely lays the blame for Monty’s final decline too squarely on Huston.   That 1958 audio interview (see above) makes clear that Monty’s self-destructive behaviour was part of his public image long before Freud.   His notorious difficulty in remembering lines – although he claims to have no problem learning good lines – also predates his bad experience with Huston.

    On the subject of Freud … It’s understandable that Robert wants to refute the predictable psychoanalysis, especially regarding Monty’s relationship with his mother, in which both the LaGuardia and Bosworth biographies, to different extents, indulged.  As a result, though, Robert eschews any kind of explanation of Monty’s (or, indeed, Brooks’s) personality or behaviour:  Monty’s sexuality (like Brooks’s recording mania) is just a fact of his life.  It must have made that life complicated, even so – not least because it seems the nature of Monty’s relationships was itself complicated.  Their mother tells Brooks that Monty was ‘homosexual very early’; Brooks says he was bisexual;  according to another contributor, Monty’s bisexuality meant that he slept with men but had loving, non-physical relationships with women.  It’s even harder to accept that continuing, necessary suppression in Hollywood of his sexual identity wouldn’t have taken a psychological toll.

    From an early age (and long before stardom), Monty was exceptionally independent and selective in his choice of roles.  He steered clear of studio contracts.  He insisted on script approval (he was a famous rewriter of his and others’ lines).  He turned down, among other parts, Joe Gillis in Sunset Boulevard and Cal Trask in East of EdenEven without Cal on his CV, Monty became famous for playing characters that, as interpreted by him, were emotionally vulnerable in an unusually expressive and unguarded way.  The tendency to conflate a Hollywood star’s screen persona and real-life personality thereby offered him a degree of protection denied to, for example, his near contemporary Rock Hudson.  Unlike Hudson, Monty didn’t have to get married as a front:  he readily cultivated the press characterisation of him as an actor so dedicated to his work that he didn’t have time for off-screen romance or social life.  There’s good reason to believe that he, in effect, exploited the concealment of his sexual identity to considerable creative advantage.  Yet this must still have involved a nervously wearing balancing act, at a time when the law dictated that a gay man couldn’t, even in private, rest easy.

    In the production notes that formed the BFI handout, Hilary Demmon says that she and Robert ‘kept asking ourselves, “Who else was Monty?”‘   The limitation of the film they’ve made is that they interpret ‘else’ as ‘instead of’ to the virtual exclusion of ‘else’ in the sense of ‘in addition to’.  Anxious to portray Monty as other than the queer icon/beautiful loser of pop mythology, they are disinclined to try to integrate different ways of seeing him.  Even so, Making Montgomery Clift is thoroughly fascinating and its makers’ motives are likeable.  A short part of the narrative covers the so far abortive attempts to turn Monty’s life into a biopic.  If or when it becomes one and the result travesties the protagonist along traditional lines, it’ll be good to remember this documentary.  It’s not only an absorbing piece of work; it’s a corrective in waiting.

    27 March 2019

  • Us

    Jordan Peele (2019)

    For those who’ve seen Jordan Peele’s Get Out, the title of his new film immediately suggests a pun – if you capitalise the second letter.  The pun is confirmed soon after the horror story of Us gets going.  In the California beach house where they’re staying, a family – a thirty-something, middle-class black couple and their two children – are terrorised by four extraordinary intruders.  ‘Who are you people?’ asks the bewildered paterfamilias.  The answer he gets is, ‘We’re Americans’.

    The prologue of Us is set in 1986.  A television screen shows a series of commercials, including one for the forthcoming ‘Hands Across America’ benefit[1].  Peele then takes us into an amusement park on the promenade at Santa Cruz.  With both her parents (Rayne Thomas and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II) otherwise engaged, a young girl called Adelaide (Madison Curry) wanders off in the direction of the beach, noticing on the way a skinny, bedraggled man (Alan Frazier) holding a notice that reads ‘Jeremiah 11:11’[2].  Adelaide approaches a building emblazoned with an invitation to ‘Find Yourself’ and goes inside.  It’s a hall of mirrors, deserted except for her.  She’s frightened by the place even before she encounters a girl there who is the image of herself – but not a mirror reflection.   A brief follow-up sequence makes clear that Adelaide, though soon reunited with her parents, has been seriously traumatised by the experience.

    Three decades later, Adelaide Wilson (Lupita Nyong’o) is travelling with husband Gabe (Winston Duke), daughter Zora (Shahadi Wright Joseph) and son Jason (Evan Alex) to their holiday destination, a beach house that belonged to Adelaide’s recently deceased mother and is close to Santa Cruz.  Why the mother kept a property near the site of her daughter’s childhood trauma isn’t clear but Adelaide is very reluctant to return to the sea front, when her husband suggests they do so.  He gets his own way, though:  Gabe is easygoing and humorous but also determined to impress the Wilsons’ friends, Josh and Kitty Tyler (Tim Heidecker and Elisabeth Moss), and buys a small boat with that end in mind.  The Tylers have twin teenage daughters (Cali and Noelle Sheldon) and the two families meet up at the beach in Santa Cruz.  On the way there, the Wilsons’ car has to stop as a man is carried into an ambulance – we’ve seen him, and the notice that he’s clutching, before.  Arriving on the promenade, Adelaide is confronted by the ‘Find Yourself’ building still in situ.  A little later, she suddenly realises, during conversation with the tense, maritally dissatisfied Kitty, that Jason has disappeared, and she panics.  Jason soon reappears but, while on walkabout, saw a man in a red jumpsuit standing in the sand.   Blood is dripping from the hands of the man’s outstretched arms.

    Back at the beach house that evening, Adelaide tells Gabe, for the first time, about what happened in 1986 and that, throughout her life since, she’s had a growing fear that her double will track her down.  As the bedroom clock shows 11:11, the lights go off in the house and Jason comes to tell his parents there’s a family of four in the driveway outside.  When Gabe asks them to leave, they silently stand their ground before breaking in and attacking the family.  Each of the intruders wears a red jumpsuit and is the physical counterpart of one of the Wilsons.  Only one of them – Adelaide’s doppelgänger, known as Red – is capable of language, though she speaks with difficulty, in an eerily guttural voice.  It’s she therefore who delivers the ‘We’re Americans’ punchline.  Red also tells the tale of a girl who lives a happy life while her shadow self suffers.

    The Wilsons, it transpires, are far from the only American family with doppelgängers who want to kill them.  These entities are products of a government experiment, launched as a means of controlling people but abandoned before completion.  (In terms of both purpose and process, the experiment is described only vaguely.)  The alter egos, aka ‘the Tethered’, are consigned to a life underground, where they survive on raw rabbit and without health care, literally going through the motions of mimicking their overground counterparts’ behaviour.  Until, that is, Red organises their escape into the world above, where the Tethered evidently can act autonomously.  In the 1986 episode at the start, young Adelaide is wearing a Michael Jackson ‘Thriller’ T-shirt and there’s a succession of scary masks and zomboid images in what follows.  With the recent Leaving Neverland furore still fresh in my mind and Get Out at the back of it, I started wondering if Michael Jackson, the world’s most notorious skin-whitener, was somehow going to emerge as the villain of this film too.  He doesn’t, however, and the story, as a political allegory, is suggestive rather than specific.  Although their name may hint at physically abominable aspects of slavery in America, the community of the Tethered is not mono-ethnic.  The idea of a deprived, subterranean constituency bursting vengefully into reality is, almost needless to say, potently topical but Jordan Peele doesn’t elaborate the analogy.

    Peele’s follow-up to Get Out has been keenly anticipated and, in ways that matter, hasn’t disappointed.  Us opened in cinemas across the world only last week and has already taken approaching $175m (it cost $20m to make).  The critical reception has been largely positive:  the Rotten Tomatoes fresh rating currently stands at 94% from over 400 reviews, which include some lavish praise.  More than that, there’s a great deal of interest online – from the video gaming website Gamespot to The Washington Post (‘Let’s tackle 11 lingering questions about Jordan Peele’s latest hit’[3]) – about what the movie means to say.  I feel a spoilsport in admitting I find some of these Us interpretations more engaging to read than the film is to sit through.  Get Out was a strong and, in my experience, an unusual horror movie:  the horror derived more from the story told than from visually explicit detail, which Peele used sparingly.  The balance in Us is very different.  Once the horror is underway here, it doesn’t really stop – as a pessimistic state-of-the-nation metaphor, perhaps it can’t really stop.  The result, though, is monotonous mayhem.  The protracted struggle between the Wilsons and their doubles took me back to watching Jurassic Park.  I wanted the raptors to go away not because they were alarming but because they became boring.

    Us prompts plenty of questions, some of which Peele answers through the revelation late on of what happened when Adelaide first met her replica in 1986.  In the hall of mirrors, Red knocked Adelaide unconscious, left her trapped in the underground complex and took her place in normal life.  Adelaide, in other words, actually is Red and vice versa (I’ll continue referring to them by the names of who we think they are for most of the film …)  This at least explains why Red, unlike the other red suits, has the power of speech.  It possibly explains too why Adelaide didn’t fight too hard to prevent the trip to the beach at Santa Cruz or react to the sight of the Jeremiah man in the ambulance.   There was still plenty I didn’t understand, though.   For example, since there’s no suggestion that Gabe, Zora and Jason have had a prior experience comparable to Adelaide’s, how do they accept as unquestioningly as they seem to do that their attackers are their shadow selves?   (Thanks to watching lots of other horror films?)  Or is the idea that they’ve all at some point in their lives been taken over by their dark sides?  That, though, would de-answer the question of why only Red can speak – and it isn’t the implication of the worried look Jason gives his mother at the very end, when her true identity has been revealed to us (though not to Jason).

    The Washington Post piece quotes Peele as follows:

    ‘I’m trying to serve whatever your appetite is, but ultimately I’m trying to give enough context to be able to discuss and hypothesize about more.  When it’s all wrapped up neatly and perfectly, it alleviates the fear.  I don’t want to do it.’

    That’s his creative right and reactions to Us confirm his sound audience-pleasing instincts:  the appetite to ‘discuss and hypothesize about more’ seems to be verging on insatiable.  Peele isn’t so ready to acknowledge, though, that eschewing ‘neat’ storytelling is also a means of letting him do what he wants – and, more often than not, of helping him achieve increased instant impact.

    Some of that impact, in retrospect, feels a bit of a cheat.  The Tylers and their daughters are murdered by their doubles (not a great tragedy:  the family, being materially privileged and white, are revolting anyway).  The Wilsons, having slain (in the case of Gabe) or seen off for the time being their own nemeses, then kill the Tylers’ killers.  In the short breathing space that follows, they turn on the television to discover that murders by the Tethered are taking place across America, with the murderers joining hands to create a vast human chain.  Peele shows part of the chain and shots of the carnage though he gives no indication of what action the civil or military authorities are trying to take in response.  He then reverts to concentrating on the Wilsons for another set of violent showdowns with their remaining doubles and the Adelaide-Red reveal – until the film’s closing, aerial shot:  the Hands-Across-America-type chain of Tethered stretches over the landscape.  This would actually have a stronger sinister charge if Peele hadn’t shown the chain previously.  The final image’s chief effect is to remind you of Gabe’s earlier, amusing and reasonably accurate description of the red brigade as looking like ‘some kind of fucked-up performance art’.

    The acting in Us isn’t the kind I much care for – simply because the performers are interpreting characters almost continuously in extremis.  That said, Lupita Nyong’o plays the protagonist with authority.  It makes sense too, given who she really is, that Adelaide, from an early stage, sometimes has a distinctively unhuman, doll-like look.  The grounded-in-reality Winston Duke complements Nyong’o well.  The film’s unsurprising but accomplished music is by Michael Abels.

    26 March 2019

    [1] According to Wikipedia:  ‘Hands Across America was a benefit event and publicity campaign staged on Sunday, May 25, 1986 in which approximately 6.5 million people held hands in a human chain for fifteen minutes along a path across the contiguous United States.  Many participants donated ten dollars to reserve their place in line; the proceeds were donated to local charities to fight hunger and homelessness and help those in poverty’.

    [2] ‘Therefore thus saith the Lord, Behold, I will bring evil upon them, which they shall not be able to escape; and though they shall cry unto me, I will not hearken unto them.’

    [3] http://tinyurl.com/y432gb94

     

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