Juxtaposing the countless
slights that unhappily married people inflict upon each other with a
sociopolitical backdrop comprising petty crime and vandalism, the relentlessly
downbeat character study Desperate
Characters strives for a very specific mood of oppressive malaise. More
often than not, producer-writer-director Frank D. Gilroy, who adapted the movie
from a novel by Paula Fox, hits his target. From start to finish, Desperate Characters is intelligent,
mature, and severe. The film also benefits from strong performances—something
of a must since the cast includes only five major characters—and leading lady
Shirley MacLaine demonstrates admirable restraint while portraying a woman at
sea in her own life. That said, Gilroy’s dialogue borders on pretentiousness in
nearly every scene, and the lack of tonal variety makes the picture a bit of a
drag.
The rarified vibe of Desperate
Characters is epitomized by an early scene, during which someone innocently
asks MacLaine’s character how she feels. “Fatigue, anemia,” she responds. “All
the symptoms of irreversible loss.” It’s true that the people in Desperate Characters are all affluent,
hyper-educated intellectuals. Still, one wishes that Gliroy—who earned fame as
the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright of The
Subject Was Roses—had dug deeper into his bag of tricks, since the times
when he relies on visual metaphors instead of simply articulating everything
through dialogue add tremendously to the film.
MacLaine and Kenneth Mars play
Sophie and Otto Brentwood. She’s a book translator between projects who has too
much time on her hands, and he’s a lawyer in the midst of a separation from his
business partner. Over the course of the film, the couple deals with emotional
distance, the lingering effects of an affair, startling encounters with
gutter-level crime, and the heavily metaphorical presence of a bite from a
stray cat that may or may not be rabid. Gilroy presents the film somewhat like
a stage play, with extended dialogue scenes in tight settings. As a result,
much of the picture is quite arch. When Otto declares, without any evidence to
support his statement, that the aforementioned cat is not rabid, Sophie
retorts: “The American form of wisdom—no room for doubt.” Otto: “Do you hate
cats?” Sophie: “No, I hate you.” A very long vignette involving Sophie’s older friend
and the friend’s love/hate dynamic with an ex-husband makes for even slower
going.
All in all, however, Desperate
Characters basically works. At its best, the picture captures what happens
when people fall out of sync with each other, and the visual motif of New York
City in decline parallels the ennui pervading the story. It’s
also interesting to see a solid dramatic performance from Mars, whom most
moviegoers know for his comic work in Mel Brooks’ The Producers (1968) and Young
Frankenstein (1974).
Desperate Characters: GROOVY
Dreary, flat drama limited in scope and setting. The film open and closed without attracting an audience. Only a masochist could love this film. Frank Gilroy's From Noon Till Three (1977) is so much better.
ReplyDeleteThis seemed both very gloomy and very pointless to me ... I guess saying that MacLaine is "admirably restrained" in this, is one way of expressing that if she repressed 95% of her genius, spark, verve, and personality; that she can still play a depressed housewife just dandy ... But why bother???
ReplyDeleteJust saw this movie for the first time and it hit like a sledgehammer, especially towards the end. Otto is an absolute tyrant of a husband, whether he's casually telling Sophie to shut up or when he's raping her, "forcing himself on her" in the more polite parlance of the time. And the scene with him chasing the cat is absolutely horrific. As far as the "The American form of wisdom- no room for doubt" line, I'm pretty sure Otto responds with "Do you hate America?"
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