CAROL (2015)
Directed by Todd
Haynes
Weinstein Company,
118 minutes, R (nudity, sexual situations)
* * *
Carol has made just
about every Top Ten list for 2015 and quite a few critics have proclaimed it
the best film of the year. If the Academy Awards were solely about looking good,
I'd add my voice to the chorus. Todd Haynes' look at lesbian love in the 1950s
is absolutely stunning visually: full of dreamy camera angles, moody filters,
and lush colors that pop through what is, in essence, film noir shot in color. No
one has used red this effectively since Martin Scorsese in The Age of Innocence (1993), nor aimed the camera through rainy and
smudged windows so well since Taxi Driver
(1976, Scorsese again). Haynes uses the latter technique to
depict physical and emotional distancing and he uses it a lot, which is among
the reasons Carol is something less
than its surrounding hype. For a film about intense personal relationships, Carol often has a detached, even
antiseptic feel. It is also, oddly, rather conservative.
As in his 2002 film Far
From Heaven, a loose remake of a 1955 Douglas Sirk film, Haynes once again
revisits the repressed 1950s, this time for a somewhat more faithful rendition
of Patricia Highsmith's 1952 novel The
Price of Salt, though Haynes begins with a conservative twist that is at
odds with Highsmith's book: the meme of love at fist sight. In this case, pixie-like
retail clerk Therese Relivet (Rooney Mara) is instantly smitten when Carol Aird
(Cate Blanchett) makes a holiday purchase at her counter. Carol's red lipstick,
her stylish dress, and cool demeanor simply floor Therese. Two strokes of
luck: Carol absent-mindedly (or is
it Gaydar?) left her calfskin gloves behind and a to-be-delivered purchase allows
Therese to track her down. From there, a friendship blossoms that is really a
prolonged striptease, since it's rather (too) obvious that both women lust for
one another. Why not? Therese neither loves nor respects her controlling
boyfriend, Richard (Jake Lacy), and Carol's marriage to Harge (Kyle Chandler)
is on the rocks. It also helps that Carol has had previous lesbian
relationships, including one with her loyal friend Abby (Sarah Paulson). It
would be full speed ahead to bed were it not for the fact that Carol also has
an adorable daughter whom she loves deeply. Translation: it's complicated.
We are treated to subplots involving a road trip, the
pressures of bourgeois respectability, custody battles, and Therese's dreams of
becoming a photographer, but it's pretty obvious what must–at some
point–happen. This is a bit of a problem. Haynes depicts the 1950s through a
misty lens, which he extends to character development. There's not much
dialogue in Carol and most of what we
learn about any of the characters–especially Carol–is incidental. The intent, I
believe, was to have his protagonists mirror the buttoned-down nature of 50s'
society. But there is jarring inconsistency in the ways Haynes presents
Therese, Carol, and Abby as supremely sure of themselves; in essence, he has
interposed very modern mannerisms. More problematic still, in an age in which
gay people met in enclaves and communicated by code, he has Carol and Therese
making goo-goo eyes across rooms chockful with people who'd have to be encased
in cement not to read their signals.
Haynes is himself gay, but he was born in 1961. I mention
these things because it often seems as if Haynes wants to reinvent rather than
present the 1950s. In Far From Heaven,
for example, he imagined a 1950s in which it was possible for a husband to come
out, and a white woman could at least contemplate a relationship with a black
man. Neither would have been likely in Hartford, Connecticut, at a time in
which the Nutmeg State had one of the most active Ku Klux Klan networks in the
nation. Haynes celebrates his own sexuality, but he's also creating mythic
predecessors for his own post-Stonewall, post-Harvey Milk, post-Gay Pride
world. McCarthyism and the life in the closet appear more as backdrops, not the
defining Zetigeist; hence gay life in the 1950s is cast as love that needs to
overcome obstacles rather than the love that dare not speak its name. Carol is set in 1951, which is four
years before there is even an official lesbian advocacy group (the Daughters of
Bilitis). The fact that Ms. Highsmith wrote her 1952 novel under a pseudonym
ought to tell you how she found the
era.
History this is not! The good news? As mentioned, Haynes'
exteriors are gorgeous. Although they don't have nearly as much to do as they
should, both Blanchett and Mara are terrific, with Ms. Blanchett cementing her
role as the heiress apparent to Meryl Streep's chameleon-like inhabitation of
roles. Mara, though she looks a bit too much like Audrey Hepburn welded to
Audrey Tatou, is also very strong as Therese. Kudos also to Paulson, who plays
Abby as a font of defiance and inner resolve.
Bottom line: Carol is
gooey eye candy, but it's a good film, not a great one. Rob Weir
2 comments:
We finally saw "Carol", and I have to agree with a lot of what you said about the film. One glaring omission in the movie, I thought, was any reference to the difference in class between the two women. I found it difficult to buy a relationship between any two people -- gay or straight -- where that large a gap (one galavanting around in mink coats, one a clerk in a department store) wouldn't have become a major issue.
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