Some
Call It Loving: the movie that dares to show what
happens when a beautiful young woman awakens from years of slumber to discover
the crass realities of the early ’70s. Some
Call It Loving: the movie that dares to explore the life of a fabulously
rich (and fabulously narcissistic) jazz musician who uses his mansion as the
stage for a life lived as a kind of avant-garde performance art with an erotic
edge. Some Call It Loving: the movie
that dares to ask the question, “Will I always be your jellybean?” If all of
this sounds bewildering, there’s a good reason why—the deeply strange Some Call It Loving is best described as
an arthouse treatment of a B-movie concept.
Meticulously crafted and yet at the
same time quite inept—much in the same way the film is both pretentious and
sincere—this movie commits wholeheartedly to characters and events that exist
far outside the spectrum of recognizable human behavior. However, it’s not as
if Some Call It Loving provides an ingenious
metaphor representing some foible of the species. Quite to the contrary, the
picture unfolds like an anthropological study of people who are so odd that
they might as well be aliens from outer space. Compounding the weirdness, Some Call It Loving is made with the
leisurely pacing and pictorial beauty of a European auteur piece.
Giving an
alternately somnambulistic and whiny leading performance, Zalman King plays
Robert, a gentleman of leisure who wanders through a carnival until he
encounters an exhibit promising a real-life “Sleeping Beauty.” She's Jennifer
(Tisa Farrow), a lovely young woman who, according to her keepers, has been
unconscious for years. Bewitched, Robert pays the keepers $20,000 for Jennifer,
bringing her to his mansion. Instructed that she will wake if not consistently
sedated with drugs, Robert cuts off her supply. Upon regaining consciousness,
Jennifer accepts her new surroundings as if they’re normal, whereas the
reaction one might expect is utter horror at being turned into chattel.
Robert woos Jennifer with weird rituals, often involving his live-in companion
Scarlett (Carol White), hence myriad scenes of role-playing and theatricality.
(In one bit, Robert actually controls a curtain behind which two women perform
a sapphic dance.)
The film’s dialogue is as absurd as the accompanying dramatic
events. Consider this riff from Scarlett: “Yes, I can understand. I’ve always
understood. I’ve always understood because I love you. And when a woman loves a
man, there’s no limit to her understanding.” The punch line? Two minutes later,
Scarlett concludes the scene by saying, “Then maybe I don’t understand.” (That’s
okay, honey—viewers are just as confused.) Woven into this bizarre narrative,
which one fears was conceived as an offbeat romance, are pointless scenes featuring
Richard Pryor as Robert’s drug-addicted best friend. Although Pryor’s appearances
are high points because his acting is full of believable pathos, his scenes
feel like they belong in a different movie.
Directed by James B. Harris, whose
sporadic output includes a number of gritty genre pictures, Some Call It Loving benefits from
gorgeous cinematography. Italian DP Mario Tosi shoots the whole movie with
gauzy frames, languid camera movies, and vividly colorful lighting patterns. Accordingly,
it's tempting to peer deep into the movie’s mysteries and search for something
resonant. Good luck with that.
Some
Call It Loving: FREAKY
No comments:
Post a Comment