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THE DANISH GIRL (2015)
Directed by Tom
Hooper
Focus Films, 119
minutes, R (nudity, sexual themes)
* * *
The Danish Girl
released at a time of new frankness over gender dysphoria, but it's hard to
imagine it will do much to advance the cause of social acceptance. It tells the
story of Lili Elbe, who in 1930 underwent what is thought to be the Western
world's first male-to-female sexual reassignment surgery. It's a fascinating
tale featuring luminous cinematography, but clouded by a muddy script.
Einar Wegener |
Einar/Lili in life |
Would that Redmayne had Vikander's range. He's exceedingly
androgynous normally, so it's not that hard to cross dress and physically pass
as a woman. What we don't see is a whole lot of contemplation or conflict. It's
as if we go from stockings to the knife with little in-between other than a
crash course in how to act female. Of that—oh dear! I think the word
"fay" (and "fey") might have been invented to describe the situation. We see
Redmayne aping peep-show girls, staring at his penis-tucked-away nude body in a
mirror, and other such activities, but his mannerisms are more those of a
swishy late 20th century gay man than they are those of an early 20th
century female. He also seeks to go back and forth between Einar and Lili, but
this often plays like Sibyl and Dr. Jekyll go voguing.
Lucinda Coxon's script doesn't help matters. Viewers should
be aware that the script was based on a novel
by David Ebershoff, not a biography. Any time one sees the words "based on
a true story," skepticism is in order. So let's set the facts straight (pun
intended). Biographers believe that Einar and Gerda probably had a lavender
marriage. In the film, Lili rebuffs advances from Henrik (Ben Whishaw) who
recognizes her as Einar in drag. No such character existed, but fragmentary
evidence suggests Einar would have welcomed such an assignation. Nor was there
any such character as Hans Axgil (Matthias Schoenaerts), Einar's childhood
friend/flirt and Gerda's alleged post-Einar lover. Gerda painted Lili, bur she
was best known for lesbian erotica and was probably lesbian or bisexual. (She
remarried after her marriage to Einar was annulled, but to an Italian pilot, not
a Danish art dealer, and it was brief.)
The worst deception concerns Lili's death. In the film she
dies after a second operation to fashion a vagina. Not so, nor was Gerda with
him after his original penectomy. Lili had four operations, the last of which was fatal:
a uterus transplant. The idea at the time was that Lili could become a
biological woman capable of childbirth. We are still miles from that
possibility and, today, only one born a woman can undergo what is still
experimental surgery. All of this is to say that The Danish Girl pulls too many punches because it's serving a 21st
century agenda, not retelling 1931 history.
Filmmakers are, of course, under no compulsion to produce
historical works. My regret is that neither Hooper nor Redmayne cast enough
magic to cover their ahistorical tracks. This isn't a bad film, just an average
one. Given such extraordinary material, it should have been more than just a
single breakout performance (Vikander) and pretty surfaces.
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