Some Ken Russell movies
are consistently restrained and most of them are consistently crazy, but Mahler falls somewhere in the middle.
About half the film uses straightforward dramatic scenes to explore the life of
famed composer Gustav Mahler, who lived from 1860 to 1911 and contributed
significantly to the classical-music canon. Bits and pieces are tweaked for
comic effect, but most of these segments occupy the known universe. And then
there’s the other half of Mahler—the
one with the anachronistic Nazi imagery, the outrageous ethnic stereotypes, and
the shock-value sex and violence. Based on the totality of Russell’s career,
one suspects that’s the part of Mahler
that spoke most deeply to the filmmaker’s soul. Even though he’d gone for the
cinematic jugular many times before, once the mid-’70s arrived, he seemed
almost pathologically incapable of resisting puerile narrative impulses.
The
trajectory of Mahler’s conventional
storyline is fairly interesting, depicting how the young composer drifted away
from the anti-intellectual influence of his family by embracing lessons about
the beauty of nature. As the film progresses, Mahler (played as an adult by
Robert Powell) faces such familiar rigors as balancing creative endeavors with
paying gigs. He also endures humiliation from those who regard him as a
second-rate successor to Richard Wagner. Most troublingly, Mahler navigates a
complicated marriage to Alma (Georgina Hale), whom he unwisely takes for
granted even though he knows she has an extramarital suitor. Eventually, the
problems of Mahler’s life coalesce in the crucial moment when he converts from
Judaism for Christianity in order to secure a lucrative job.
This material
should have been sufficient, but Russell gilds the lily—and then paints the
thing bright, whorish red—with ridiculous dream/fantasy sequences. In
the most epic of these, which is staged like a comedic silent film complete
with title cards, Mahler wears an exaggerated Jewish-intellectual costume while
facing Cosima Wagner (Antonia Ellis), the powerful and deeply anti-Semitic
widow of Richard Wagner. Wearing a Nazi-dominatix costume, she whips Mahler,
makes him jump through flaming hoops, forces him to eat the flesh off a pig’s
head, and stands atop a mountain like a Teutonic demigoddess, a gigantic sword
towering behind her. Need it be
said that this silly film-within-a-film is such an excessive directorial
indulgence that it nearly derails the whole movie?
At least the film-within-a-film is amusing, just like the goofy visual reference that Russell makes to the Italian art film Death in Venice (1971), which featured an all-Mahler soundtrack. Incredibly, Powell retains his dignity throughout most of this film, delivering a credible performance as a diva who learns humility. Furthermore, Hale is spirited as Alma, and it’s hard to find fault with the soundtrack, which almost exclusively comprises selections from Mahler’s magnificent oeuvre.
At least the film-within-a-film is amusing, just like the goofy visual reference that Russell makes to the Italian art film Death in Venice (1971), which featured an all-Mahler soundtrack. Incredibly, Powell retains his dignity throughout most of this film, delivering a credible performance as a diva who learns humility. Furthermore, Hale is spirited as Alma, and it’s hard to find fault with the soundtrack, which almost exclusively comprises selections from Mahler’s magnificent oeuvre.
Mahler:
FUNKY
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