Monthly Archives: January 2020

  • Night Without Stars

    Anthony Pelissier (1951)

    The two leads are the best, though not the only good, reason for seeing this British romantic thriller, adapted by Winston (Poldark) Graham from his 1950 novel of the same name.  Shot in black and white (by Guy Green), the film is set mostly on the French Riviera.  Giles Gordon (David Farrar), a former lawyer and English expatriate, has retired there, after losing most of his sight in a shell blast during recent World War II service.  He meets and falls in love with Alix Delaisse (Nadia Gray), who currently works in a shoe shop but has a more remarkable past.  The widow of a French Resistance fighter, she’s mixed up with blackmail and black markets – according to sinister restaurant owner Pierre Chava (Gérard Landry), who warns Gordon off Alix for self-interested reasons too, claiming that now promised to him.  As the plot thickens, another and no less possessive man in Alix’s life comes to the fore – her brother Louis Malinay (Maurice Teynac).

    The protagonist’s eye condition, reflected in the title, gives distinctiveness to the early stages of the central romance.  Gordon’s not being quite blind makes his inability clearly to see Alix more tantalising.  Once his lack of sight starts to impede the progress of the story, he returns briefly to London for an operation; a no-nonsense ophthalmic surgeon (Clive Morton) fully restores the sight in Gordon’s left eye.   When he comes back to France and Alix, Gordon can now see just what he was missing.  At the same time, the shadows of her past and her murky present continue to obscure his view of who she really is …

    Best known for his work in Powell and Pressburger films (Black Narcissus, The Small Back Room, Gone to Earth), David Farrar is an authentic leading man.  He’s a strongly but not an aggressively masculine presence.  It wouldn’t be going too far to say that he has, as well as good looks, a natural nobility that is always unstressed.  Farrar may have lacked James Mason’s range but he’s good enough to bring that more famous contemporary to mind.  I don’t recall having seen the beautiful Nadia Gray, who was Romanian, in anything other than Fellini’s La dolce vita (where she famously performs a striptease at a party celebrating her character’s divorce).  Gray is physically very suitable to play the femme fatale of Anthony Pelissier’s film.  She’s a skilful actress too:  as Alix becomes more visible to Giles Gordon, so Gray builds a fuller portrait of a woman threatened with, and frustrated by, the various obstacles in her way to happiness with the hero.

    The script includes a fair amount of untranslated French dialogue.  This reinforces the sense of Gordon, who speaks only very basic French, being in an alien environment – and vulnerable there, especially for as long as he’s nearly blind.  In the early stages, the French are mostly characterised as exotically dodgy.  As Night Without Stars goes on and the traumatic legacies of Occupation emerge, the film’s attitude deepens into something more sympathetic.  There’s some primitive acting in smaller parts and a lot of spelling-it-out music (by William Alwyn).  A fairly conventional, though reasonably exciting, action climax overshadows the blink-and-you-miss-it happy ending.  But Anthony Pelissier gets, and keeps, going a good narrative rhythm and there’s sustained chemistry between the principals.

    22 January 2020

  • Bombshell

    Jay Roach (2019)

    The closing legends explain that those whose lawsuit brought down the Fox News CEO Roger Ailes in 2016 were the first group of women – ‘but not the last’ – to speak out against sexual harassment in the media.  Those behind Bombshell aren’t, however, the first film-makers to bring the events in question to the screen or even to dramatise them.  Alexis Bloom’s documentary Divide and Conquer: The Story of Roger Ailes appeared in late 2018.  In mid-2019, the miniseries The Loudest Voice, in which Russell Crowe portrayed Ailes (and for which Crowe recently won a Golden Globe), aired on American television.  In Bombshell, Ailes (John Lithgow) is relegated to a supporting role.  The director Jay Roach (his previous feature was the mediocre Trumbo (2015)) and screenwriter Charles Randolph might claim they’re the first to tell the story from Ailes’s victims’ point of view yet the arch ‘but not the last’ aside is apt in a way the film presumably doesn’t intend.  It’s little more than two years since the #MeToo movement went viral but the subject of sexual abuse and harassment in the entertainment industry now feels familiar, to say the least.  In that sense, Roach and Randolph’s title is already a misnomer.

    This mightn’t be a problem if Bombshell were a penetrating drama but it’s a shallow piece of work that depends heavily on #MeToo momentum  to give itself some.  Charles Randolph (with Adam McKay) wrote The Big Short (2015); at the start of Bombshell, Randolph seems minded to use the Fox news anchor Megyn Kelly (Charlize Theron) as a narrative guide-through-the-underworld similar to Ryan Gosling’s bond salesman in the earlier film.   Kelly’s narration is more or less abandoned, though, after her opening summary of Ailes’s contributions to the political success of a series of Republican presidents (Nixon, Reagan, Bush senior), and so on.  The Big Short was peppered with roguish explanations of financial jargon, both verbal and diagrammatic; there was plenty to read, as well as to watch, on screen.  The weak equivalent here is the succession of names of Fox News personnel that flash up whenever such characters make their first appearance in Bombshell.  In most cases, it’s also their last (and a fleeting) appearance.  Identifying these people seems like a means of obscuring the pointlessness of including them in the film at all.  (For non-American audiences, the names probably don’t mean much anyway.  I think Sean Hannity’s was the only one I recognised.)

    The title also means to evoke the alternative definition of ‘bombshell’:  that’s clear from the film’s theatrical release poster, dominated by the flawless faces and blonde hair of its three stars – Theron, Nicole Kidman and Margot Robbie.  This aspect of the double meaning plays out curiously.  Bombshell’s Oscar nomination for make-up and hairstyling (by Kazu Hiro, Anne Morgan and Vivian Baker) is deserved but the movie’s parade of media women who, almost without exception, are perfectly groomed and coiffed is slightly unnerving.  It’s not just the presence of Kidman – who plays the Fox morning-show host Gretchen Carlson, the prime mover in suing Ailes – that brings The Stepford Wives to mind.  One gets the point that, in an industry shaped by the male gaze, having to look good is a career requirement for a woman that it isn’t for a man.  But I wasn’t sure how intentional it was that Charlize Theron’s Megyn Kelly, in particular, suggests a glazed automaton.

    Theron mostly speaks her lines with a determined, almost eerie calm.  This quietness (which, on the evidence of YouTube clips, exaggerates the composure of the real Kelly’s voice) is no doubt meant to give the impression – as Meryl Streep did so comically well in The Devil Wears Prada – of a successful woman who doesn’t need to raise her voice in order to be heard.  The narrative of Bombshell shows that such female self-confidence is wishful thinking.  Megyn Kelly comes to realise she needs to join forces with Carlson and other women, and speak up.  Even so, Theron’s persistently android quality makes Kelly an odd sort of victim-heroine-on-a-journey-of-enlightenment.  As the more variously ill-used Gretchen Carlson, Nicole Kidman is comparatively sympathetic and layered but somehow anxious too.  She seems always to be checking her performance.   An early shot of Carlson having a sandwich as she watches a television screen is a sign of things to come:  Kidman acts the act of eating.

    The men in Bombshell tend to be either shaggily unremarkable (Mark Duplass, as Kelly’s husband Douglas Brunt) or plausibly impersonal (Mark Moses as Fox co-president Bill Shine) or, in the more significant roles, physically grotesque.  Casting as Ailes an actor the audience is used to seeing play far from obnoxious characters sounds promising but John Lithgow is encased in so much prosthetic that he’s virtually disguised anyway.   (The real Ailes appears on archive footage during Megyn Kelly’s scene-setting introduction.)  Alex the Droog as Rupert Murdoch sounds even better and Malcolm McDowell doesn’t disappoint visually.  Those merciless blue eyes are unmistakable – besides, this is a case where imposing a real person’s looks on an actor with a very different facial structure pays dividends.  The deep furrows in Murdoch’s face, transplanted onto McDowell’s, not only create the look of a prizefighter who’s had a long career.  They thereby also serve to confirm the original’s moral brutality.  It’s a pity McDowell’s uncertain tone and accent are less impressive.

    Allison Janney, although, like Lithgow, she’s undercover in a wig and make-up, registers in the small role of Ailes’s lawyer Susan Estrich.  In spite of the relentless naming on screen of ‘real’ people who enter and exit in a matter of seconds, two of Bombshell‘s more important characters are inventions.  The sensational true story turns out not to have the dramatic chops it needs so Charles Randolph makes up people to represent Relevant Issues and help things along.  Kayla Pospisil (Margot Robbie) is an ambitious new hire at Fox, working with Carlson until she gets a job with news-show host Bill O’Reilly (Kevin Dorff), another serial harasser.  When he sacks her, Kayla gets drunk and sleeps with another member of O’Reilly’s team, Jess Carr (Kate McKinnon).

    The morning after, Kayla denies being gay.  Jess is both a closet lesbian and a closet Democrat, with Hillary Clinton posters on her bedroom wall.  (She’s working at Fox because she couldn’t get a job with a more politically congenial employer.)  When, a bit later, Kayla is getting called up to Ailes’s office to lift her skirts, she tells Jess, who says she can’t get involved.  Kayla too feels she needs to keep quiet for the sake of her career – until Megyn Kelly, now preparing to break her own silence, persuades her otherwise.  This subplot, though it bulks out the script, is largely schematic yet Margot Robbie lifts it.  With the freedom of not having to imitate a well-known real person, Robbie has more emotional energy than her co-stars but there’s more to her impact than that.  Her big, glamorous features seem to overpower Robbie’s thinly written character.  This almost chimes with Kayla’s symbolic function in the story – as a young woman struggling, in a man’s world, with the implications of her physical allure.

    Roger Ailes died in May 2017, a few months after Murdoch fired him.  By the time Ailes died, Bill O’Reilly’s media career had also sunk under the weight of sexual harassment lawsuits brought against him.  By the end of 2017, the Weinstein scandal had broken.  Bombshell celebrates a triumph of #MeToo action before the hashtag even existed but there’s a major evasion in the film’s closing implication that the tide has turned irrevocably against powerful men who, in word and/or deed, do women wrong.  Trump does appear on screen – in an interview, in which Megyn Kelly takes him to task for comments he’s made publicly about women.  (This is a splicing of actual and mock news footage – that is, the real Trump and Charlize Theron’s Kelly.)  Jay Roach seems to think this is enough to show what sort of creature Trump is but it’s not.  Bearing in mind the GOP’s traditional animal emblem (or even his political unorthodoxy), you might think of Trump as the elephant in the White House.  He’s certainly the elephant in the Bombshell room.

    21 January 2020

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