Some releases from the year 1970 barely qualify
as ’70s movies, not only because they were filmed and/or completed in 1969 but
because the style and themes of the movies are tethered to the preceding
decade. Performance epitomizes this
conundrum even more than most 1970 releases, since the picture was actually made
in 1968 but not commercially distributed until two years later. Nonetheless,
because of the date on which it reached screens and because of important
connections to various threads of ’70s cinema—notably the picture’s status as
the directorial debut of English provocateur Nicolas Roeg—Performance merits consideration in this space. If I sound
reluctant to engage with this particular film, I have my reasons. Having seen Performance two or three times over the
years, I’ve always found the thing to be boring, indulgent, and silly. Yet at
the same time, I regularly meet intellectually formidable people who revere the
movie. So even though Performance is
not remotely to my liking, I acknowledge the film’s unique power over certain
discriminating viewers.
Produced in the UK and co-directed by Roeg, who also
served as cinematographer (his former profession), and Donald Cammell, who
wrote the bizarre script, Performance
depicts the collision of two unlikely characters. One of them is Chas (James
Fox), a thug in the employ of a London gangster; the very first scene gives us
a hint of his kinky inclinations, because he’s shown having a bondage-filled
sexcapade with a girlfriend. After a criminal scheme goes awry, Chas flees his
neighborhood for the safety of a different part of town, giving friends time to
seek a passport for his planned travel to America. Dyeing his hair and adopting
a fake name (the first of many games the film plays with identity), Chas seeks
lodging in a flat owned by Turner (Mick Jagger), a onetime rock star now living
as a recluse with two girlfriends, Lucy (Michele Breton) and Pherber (Anita
Pallenberg).
Whereas Chas’ old life was decidedly conventional—natty suits, short
hair, tidy grooming, and heterosexual dating—Turner’s existence blurs cultural lines. Not only does Turner seem willing to have sex with anything that moves,
but Turner also wears feminine clothes and makeup while lounging about his
house in a perpetually drugged state. Determined to remain out of sight from
the hoodlums who are pursuing him, Chas spends all his time with Turner and the
ladies, eventually sampling the household’s various carnal, hallucinogenic,
pharmaceutical, and sartorial delights. By the end of his time in the strange
enclave—which is decorated like a cross between an opium den and a
whorehouse—Chas has indulged in cross-dressing, drugs, and (perhaps) gay sex.
The “perhaps” in the preceding sentence brings us to the defining aspect of Performance, which is the disjointed and
surreal storytelling style Cammell and Roeg embraced not only here but also in
their subsequent films. (After this collaborative endeavor, the duo separated; Roeg
enjoyed a significant career, but Cammell remained a cult figure.) Right from
the start, Performance is filled with
tricky edits and shots that distort perception—sometimes it’s hard to tell when something is happening, sometimes
it’s difficult to determine exactly what’s
happening, and at all times, it’s anybody’s guess why things are happening. Especially when the movie gets completely
bizarre toward the end, with a drug-addled sequence of Jagger singing in
character to a roomful of naked gangsters while Cammell and Roeg splice in
shots from the past, the future, and who-knows-where, Performance becomes the cinematic equivalent of a drug experience.
All of this is compounded by a mind-fuck of an ending that combines murder and
the possible transference of identity.
I’m sure devoted fans of the movie can
defend Performance’s fragmented
storyline in at least two ways (by offering a linear explanation or by saying
that the movie explores themes that run deeper than linear understanding), but
for me, Performance still seems garish,
noisy, and overwrought. What I won’t argue with, however, is the notion that Performance is a film of ambition and
substance. Whether you dig it, therefore, depends on how effectively the
filmmakers seduce you into deciphering their narrative hieroglyphics.
Performance:
FREAKY