This oddball Italian
production stars Elizabeth Taylor as a demented woman searching Europe for the
right man to murder her during sex. Yes, La Liz zooms way past the extremes of Suddenly, Last Summer (1959) and Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966),
playing one of the most unhinged characters of her long career. Alas, the
underlying material is so artificial that Taylor can’t fully exploit her
powerful commitment to investigating dark corners of the human psyche; instead
of incarnating a believably sick person, she ends up presenting a caricature of
sociopathic behavior. For instance, at one point Taylor berates a store clerk
in the following nonsensical fashion: “Who asked you for a stain-resistant dress?
Don’t just stand there looking like a chicken with one eye! Help me!” Later,
she sholds a would-be suitor who claims he needs to ejaculate daily as part of
his macrobiotic diet. (Yes, you read that right.) Taylor’s reply: “When I diet,
I diet, and when I orgasm, I orgasm! I don’t believe in mixing the two
cultures!” While there’s always camp value in watching Taylor ride the train to
Freakytown, The Driver’s Seat is so
humorless, repetitive, and sluggish that watching the movie is a chore.
Based
on a novel by Muriel Spark, the picture tracks the adventures of Lise (Taylor),
a European woman who embarks on a meandering quest that takes her through
several cities and several lovers. Lise is full of contradictions—even though
she periodically indicates that she’s on an urgent mission, she also makes time
for shopping excursions. Similarly, Lise courts various men, only to repel
their physical advances once she determines they’re not right for her purposes.
Lise is a mess, but not a credible or interesting mess. Periodically, the
filmmakers cut from Lise to interrogation scenes featuring one of her former
suitors. This element doesn’t work, either, partially because the temporal
relationship between the two narrative threads is murky, and partially because
the man being interrogated seems as bizarre as Lise. Since the filmmakers
forgot to provide pockets of normalcy amid the pain-freak stuff, there’s
nothing for rational viewers to grasp. Adding to the weirdness is the presence
of NYC art icon Andy Warhol in a supporting role, though his speaking voice was
jarringly replaced with that of an Englishman. So, even though Taylor devours
her role—and even though cinematographer Vittorio Storaro gives nearly every
scene some level of visual dynamism—The
Driver’s Seat ultimately becomes a heap of gruesome nonsense.
The Driver’s Seat: LAME
Thank you so much. I have never heard of this movie, but thanks to your review I have just got to see it.
ReplyDeleteI am slightly concerned though...with this, The Visitor, and Bugsy Malone in such a short space of time, I fear for your sanity. What next, The Holy Mountain, Lucifer rising?
Andy, take a good look around, I've been fearing for his sanity for a long while now. (And you've yet to see suggestions I've been making.) But luckily a Save the Tiger or a The Way We Were or a Fiddler on the Roof have a tendency to pop up from time to time.
ReplyDeleteDeep-immersion 70s cinema. Not for the meek. (I just wish there was a Facebook-style "like" button for both of these comments.)
ReplyDeleteyoutube has a great eight minute video of the more "weirder" moments...worth a look...
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HKMd_Te3nj8