Equal parts intellectual,
provocateur, and sensualist, British cinematographer-turned-director Nicolas
Roeg built a singular filmography during the active years of his career. (As of
this writing, he’s semi-retired.) Known for his downbeat themes, fragmented
storytelling, and startling depictions of sexuality, Roeg made a number of films
that divided audiences, with advocates praising his inventive artistry and
detractors labeling him a pretentious voyeur. As in all things, the truth
probably lies somewhere between those extremes. In any event, while Roeg’s most
celebrated works include Performance
(1970), which he codirected, and Don’t
Look Now (1973), the deliberately unpleasant Bad Timing occupies an important place in his ouevre. A challenging
narrative puzzle that builds steadily toward one of the creepiest sex scenes in
the history of mainstream cinema, the picture is unapologetically obtuse and
unrepentantly adult. Sometimes known by the extended title Bad Timing: A Sensual Obsession, the movie explores a dark place
where carnality and madness intersect.
Singer/actor Art Garfunkel stars as Alex
Linden, an American professor living and working in Vienna. Alex is introduced
at a hospital where beautiful young American Milena Flaherty (Theresa Russell)
has been admitted for a possible suicide attempt involving drugs. Police
Inspector Netusil (Harvey Keitel) interrogates Alex about Milena, deducing that
they’re lovers and suspecting that Alex knows more about Milena’s circumstances
than he’s willing to share. Roeg presents the storyline as a complicated
mosaic, jumping between different periods of the Alex/Milena relationship in
order to paint a portrait of a love affair gone wrong. In scenes depicting the
couple’s early courtship, the uptight Alex finds Milena’s impulsiveness and
volatility exciting. Later in their relationship, he becomes judgmental and
possessive, resenting that she’s married to an older man named Stefan Vognic
(Denholm Elliot) and screaming at her whenever he discovers she’s taken another
lover. All of this culminates on the fateful night of Milena’s overdose, when
Alex’s twisted devotion manifests in grotesque behavior.
Bad Timing is powerful in fits and starts, even though long
stretches are dull because they comprise awful people yelling at each other.
Worse, the detective angle never quite works, and Keitel’s performance is
artificial and mannered, whereas everyone else strives for naturalism. Garfunkel
channels something grim and savage with his understated performance, so whenever
Garfunkel’s character lets his unsavory side show, the effect is bracing.
Russell, who subsequently married Roeg and starred in several more films for
him, attacks scenes vigorously and lacks inhibition, which helps smooth over
the bumpier aspects of her performance. Bad
Timing is not as effective as it could and should have been, because the
chilly aesthetic created by Roeg and writer Yale Udoff keeps viewers a safe
distance away from the psychological brutality occurring onscreen. Every so
often, however, the movie lands a body blow and leaves a nasty mark.
Bad Timing:
FUNKY
No comments:
Post a Comment