American Gigolo represents an important
bridge between the anything-goes ethos of the ’70s and the style-over-substance
extremes of the ’80s. Written and directed by Paul Schrader, whose crucially
important contributions to the groundbreaking aesthetics of the New Hollywood
include scripting Taxi Driver (1976), this sleek but slow-moving crime drama is half character study and half
murder mystery. The former aspect of the picture is infinitely more interesting
than the latter. By depicting and dissecting the life of high-priced male
prostitute Julian Kaye (Richard Gere), Schrader explores male fantasies of
conquest, power, and virility while also illustrating the ways that seeking
social status and wealth can drive people to compromise—or even
abandon—principles. There’s a certain electric charge to watching Gere, at the
apex of his youthful handsomeness, cruising around the chicest neighborhoods of
Los Angeles in an expensive convertible while decked out in perfectly tailored
Giorgio Armani ensembles as he moves from one surreptitious tryst to another.
Julian isn’t some brainless stud, after all; quite to the contrary, he’s a
sophisticate with an ear for language and an eye for art. Seeing as how Julian
also finds time for a personal love affair with the beautiful wife of a
powerful politician, his life has more than a little bit of forbidden-fruit
appeal, and that’s just the effect Schrader obviously wants.
The structure of
the film tracks a slow unraveling of Julian’s façade, because once Julian
becomes a suspect in the murder of one of his clients, the speed with which
colleagues and friends and abandon him is alarming. Turns out the only thing
holding Julian’s life together was his ability to avoid unwanted attention from
authorities. Alas, while there’s a powerful melodrama buried somewhere inside American Gigolo, Schrader becomes his
own worst enemy, both as writer and director. In terms of narrative, Schrader
smothers the story with murky subplots. Among
other things, the movie explores the power struggle between a madam for whom
Julian works regularly and a pimp for whom Julian periodically “tricks.”
Additionally, the film explores lurid fringes of Julian’s world by
depicting S&M-infused encounters and by dramatizing the availability of quick
cash for servicing male clients, a challenge for the heterosexual
Julian. By the end of American Gigolo,
the story has become convoluted and episodic, a problem exacerbated
by the underdeveloped characterization of Julian’s lover.
In terms of
filmmaking, Schrader lets the surfaces of the movie do s lot of the heavy
lifting. From Armani’s clothes to John Bailey’s stylized photography to Giorgio
Moroder’s disco/New Wave score, American
Gigolo anticipates the superficiality of the MTV era. Even the leading
performances are plasticine. Gere tries to hit angsty notes but ends up doing
more posing than performing, and Hutton is little more than a well-groomed
mannequin. (On the plus side, Bill Duke is formidable as Julian’s scheming
pimp, and Hector Elizondo is amusing as a dogged police detective.) Still,
there’s no question that American Gigolo
left a mark on popular culture, elevating Armani and Gere to stardom and giving
Blondie a No. 1 hit with the film’s theme song, “Call Me.”
American Gigolo: FUNKY
3 comments:
Your review is spot on , IMO. This movie is all show and no go...kind of like the Delorean automobile :) It's a real shame because it really seems like there was the potential for a real home run here :(
Taxi Driver was 1976.
Some people find him compelling, but I've always found Richard Gere to be a flimsy and unremarkable screen presence.
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