A QUIET PASSION
Directed by Terence
DAVIES
MUSIC BOX FILMS, 126
MINUTES, PG-13
★★★★
Fame is a fickle food
Upon a shifting plate
Whose table once a
Guest but not
The second time is set. —Emily
Dickinson
If, like me, you live anywhere near Amherst, Massachusetts,
you're likely to have one of two very strong opinions about native daughter
Emily Dickinson—you either worship the grass upon which she trod, or you're
sick of hearing her very name. I am a card-carrying member of the second camp.
I feel about Dickinson much as I feel about characters from the Brontes and
Jane Austen—enough with the tormented passivity and internalized repression.
Director Terence Davies and actress Cynthia Nixon have not only made me
reconsider Ms. Dickinson, they've sent me scurrying back to her poems.
The rejoinder to my impatience with Dickinson is, of course,
that women of her era (1830-1886) had few options. Davies subtlety shows us the
stultifying effects of being female in the 19th century. His is a
very European film in style, filled with pan shots and moments in which silence
speaks louder than dialogue. Though it might be hard for those weaned on action
films to watch, there are several scenes of domestic non-bliss in which the
camera slowly surveys a silent room in which men are contentedly reading and women
look at if they might devolve into boredom-induced madness or melt into the
patterned wallpaper upon which the lens lingers. Indeed, it's hard not to think
of Charlotte Perkins-Gilman in moments such as these. Where are the cultural
cracks through which non-conformists can escape? That's exactly the slant
Davies employs in his look at Emily Dickinson—one whose interstices, jumps, and
cuts are filled with snippets of her verse.
We see Emily as a rebel from the start—a woman fiercely
guarding her own soul and willing to stand up to the indomitable Mary Lyons to
do so—perhaps one of the reasons Dickinson only lasted ten months at Mt Holyoke
Female Seminary. Davies doesn't give us an eternally gloomy Dickinson. Young
Emily (Emma Bell) is light, clever, carefree, and saucy enough to bait her
pious, drear Aunt Elizabeth. This carries over as she enters maturity. If you
only know Cynthia Nixon from Sex in the
City, be prepared to be astonished; it would not surprise me if hers
supplants Julie Harris' as the definitive portrayal of Dickinson. Nixon gives
us a Dickinson who takes joy in other insouciant women, especially her sunny
sister Vinnie (Jennifer Ehle), her good-hearted sister-in-law Susan Gilbert
(Jodhi May), and the tart-tongued Vryling Buffam (Catherine Bailey), the
principal of a local school for girls. Bailey is a special delight. In the
film, she drops witticisms, snide comments, and wicked remarks like a female
Oscar Wilde. In fact, Dickinson's mid-life inner circle of female friends stands
in contrast to the Stygian outlook of elders such as her sad-sack mother
(Joanna Bacon) and of men drowning in their own impossible standards of honor
and piety: her brother Austin (Duncan Duff), a procession of stodgy ministers,
and her father Edward—expertly played by Keith Carradine, who finds it hard
always to play the stern paterfamilias and breaks expectations when least
expected.
This is far more than Life
with the Dickinsons. There is plenty of heavy stuff: Emily's obsession with
mortality and immortality, her desire for artistic acceptance, and her fury
over being better known for her gardening skills than for her verse, a
frustration she uses to batter editor Samuel Bowles (Trevor Cooper). And, of
course, there is Dickinson's storied descent into isolation, misanthropy, and
despair. What precipitated this? Well… that's the stuff of scores of
dissertations and no one knows for certain.
Dickinson scholars, I'm sure, will bemoan liberties in the
film. such as the conjecture that she was in love with a married minister, or a scene in which she is the interruptus to
her brother's coitus with Mabel Loomis Todd. Austin indeed had an affair with Todd,
but Emily never met the woman who later edited her poems. Non-Dickinson junkies
might be baffled at moments in which Davies telescopes time in ways that
require some pre-knowledge. It's certainly ambitious to tackle so much
biography in one film and, perhaps, inevitable that gaps will emerge. I can
forgive these, as Davies hands us a human Emily Dickinson whose sadness and resignation
are balanced by flights into humor, hope, and independence. Are these readings
too feminist? Too modern? Again, who knows? I want Davies' take to be true, and
it's to his credit that he moved a Dickinson Abstainer such as I. There's a closing
morphing sequence in which the (to-date) only authenticated picture of Emily
Dickinson slowly becomes the image of Cynthia Nixon. And so I shall henceforth
think of her.
Rob Weir
Postscript: The exteriors of this movie were filmed in
Amherst; the interiors on a set in Belgium modeled on the Dickinson homestead.
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