Tue 28 Jul 2009
Elegy [spoilers]
Posted by Haunted Typeboxer under Uncategorized
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Elegy, we’re told in the ending credits, is based on a Philip Roth novel called The Dying Animal. I haven’t read the novel, but I think the title is more apt and more honest than the one chosen for the cinematic adaptation. I suppose the producers thought that Roth’s title wasn’t marketable. Or that it might be too revealing of the story’s unexamined truth. Elegy is one of the most offensive and misogynist films I’ve seen in some time, made all the more so by its constant insistence on its own substance. It’s ironic that a film that chooses as its protagonist a man who deconstructs texts should be so unaware of its own subtext. Scrawling Roland Barthes across a blackboard as the film opens, Kingsley’s character namechecks the philosopher but leaves him there.
Not to ruin any surprises, but Kingsley seduces Cruz. They have great sex. He plays the jackass and then she disappears. Kingsley needs redemption for his whole life. His best friend dies, but that’s not quite enough. Kingsley must be redeemed by Cruz; she reappears stricken with breast cancer, asking him to redeem her body. That’s all he can redeem with her because that’s all she’s allowed: sickness and sex, a body that’s meant to be used (not just by Kingsley, but by us too). Sure, Kingsley’s friend (played predictably by Dennis Hopper in his perpetual role as philosopher) says that we never see beautiful women, never really see them. Except that film seems to want us to see her. In particular, it wants us to see her as a catalyst of change, as a turning point for Kingsley. Her body exists in the film as a kind of object lesson, her sickness a gift for the brooding Kingsley.
This wouldn’t be offensive if it was in some sense the film’s subject. But the film is less interested in examining the role of the female body as object of the erotic and morbid male imagination, then it is in giving Kingsley something to cry over, something to rise above. Instead her cancer is deus ex machina for his transformation. In essence her cancer never has a thing to do with her, but everything to do with him. The death narrative is just a sign for a kind of emotional connection that it never really earns. And Cruz is never allowed to get beyond the object. She’s a sex symbol in Act I, and even less at the end.




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