The Nation.



Dead Flowers

By Stuart Klawans

This article appeared in the October 9, 2006 edition of The Nation.

September 20, 2006

Does The Black Dahlia ever touch on a credible human reality? Yes--though it does so, paradoxically, during a few glimpses of the absent mystery woman. You see Elizabeth (Mia Kirshner) only as an image in various black-and-white films--screen tests, for the most part--that Bucky has located for his investigation. These are scenes of routine, unquestioning male domination. A man's voice, offscreen, insistently mocks and berates and insults Elizabeth, while she gives the camera all she's got: a flirtatious smile that won't hold, and a few transparently false stories that she hopes will make her impressive. In each of these little movies, the artifice breaks down. Elizabeth will keep telling a lie, knowing it's not believed, until she sinks down next to a radiator, where she begins picking at a run in her stocking. She is now talking mostly to herself, as a child does, while the man's voice, making fun of her and asserting an employer's prerogatives, reminds her that she's a full-grown sexual commodity.

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If you think of pornography in terms of power relationships, then this is a stag reel. It is a stripping down--even a kind of murder. And this is the one place where a character in The Black Dahlia steps out from the quotation marks and truly comes alive. You may understand, then, why De Palma feels he can trifle with the plot mechanics of fictitious crimes, having re-enacted a real crime right before your eyes.

That's the trick in The Black Dahlia--a good enough trick to make up for at least some of the longueurs, improbabilities and self-indulgent gags that trouble the movie's surface. There is, for example, a laboriously established but weirdly unrealized love triangle among Johansson, Hartnett and another police detective, a flashy wiseguy played by Aaron Eckhart. If the plot of The Black Dahlia were to be taken seriously, then the home of this threesome would be the film's emotional center. Instead, it's a place where De Palma drops in to visit from time to time. Eckhart, who is a slick actor when he wants to be, is directed to preen, scowl and rage like a bus-and-truck company's Snidely Whiplash, while Hartnett mostly gets to peer at the world through slits so narrow that he seems not to have eyes at all. Granted, Hartnett's character suffers from moral and practical blindness; but it's too much, the way his face (too prettily smooth to be a boxer's) is reduced to a contrast of pillowy lips versus hirsute brow, with nothing holding them apart except for a squint. Bucky's style in the ring is supposedly cold and analytical, but nothing in either the script or the performance hints at such shrewdness.

Hilary Swank would probably take him in one round, but she's stuck being the femme fatale. Scarlett Johansson wears a cloche hat and uses a cigarette holder.

So all right, De Palma's trick maybe doesn't make up for all of the longueurs, improbabilities, etc. Still, his moviemaking instincts are so strong, his habits of thought so incisive, that The Black Dahlia at its best is breathtaking.

Here's how he distracts you early in the picture: Hartnett and Eckhart are sitting in a car, staking out the cheap hotel where a thug supposedly holes up. As they wait, a crane shot takes you up the facade of the flophouse and over the roof, so that you see a panorama of the back street and the open land beyond it. There, far below you, a woman is walking by. Suddenly, she begins running along the street, screaming for help. A car is turning the corner, and the driver must certainly hear her, but he just picks up speed, ignoring her attempts to catch up. Though the camera is already in motion, you'd think it would pause on the desperate woman, or even change course and descend to her; but instead, as if acknowledging the heartlessness of the world, it just continues on its course, following the car back out to the main street, where the cops are continuing their stakeout. The pleas will not be answered; the running woman will get no help.

So the corpse of Elizabeth Short, newly discovered, is left in the tall grass behind the hotel. They were never wrong about suffering, the old masters.

* * *

I think you will recognize the characters in Kelly Reichardt's Old Joy. The slim, glum, eagle-nosed one pieces a living together in Portland, Oregon, listens to Air America and now, on the verge of middle age, is about to become a father. He is so self-involved that when he abruptly takes off for the weekend, leaving his wife to fend for herself at about nine and a half months, he thinks she's the one who should be more considerate: "I'm not going to enjoy myself if you're miserable about it." The buddy with whom he's traveling--thickly bearded, ginger-haired, balding--seems to have no purpose in life beyond getting his mind blown: at meditation retreats, at Big Sur bonfires, at adult-ed courses on topics he doesn't study (but is sure he understands). His shirt is misbuttoned over a pot belly; he shows signs of living in his van.

These are Mark (Daniel London) and Kurt (Will Oldham), whose brief camping trip up to the Cascades provides the sole action of Old Joy. Nothing could be simpler; nothing, apart from an early Warhol film, could be less eventful. And yet the immaculately photographed landscape works on you, as it opens up from industrial Portland to the mountains; the closely observed exchanges, which are so rambling and yet leave so much unstated, make the silences between Mark and Kurt echo with regret, longing, hope.

Old Joy is based on a short story by Jonathan Raymond, who wrote the adaptation with Reichardt. Peter Sillen gets credit for the beautifully evocative cinematography. In New York, the picture is playing at Film Forum through October 3.

About Stuart Klawans

The Nation's film critic Stuart Klawans is author of the books Film Follies: The Cinema Out of Order (a finalist for the 1999 National Book Critics Circle Awards) and Left in the Dark: Film Reviews and Essays, 1988-2001. His film criticism and reviews for The Nation won the 2007 National Magazine Award. When not on deadline for The Nation, he contributes articles to the New York Times and other publications. more...
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