During his lifetime, it
often seemed as if no one was as invested in burnishing Norman Mailer’s
literary-lion reputation than Mailer himself. In between crafting major books
and taking bold political stands, he played the provocateur with public
appearances distinguished by obnoxious self-aggrandizement and sometimes
shockingly offensive repudiations of others. The notion seemed to be that it
was Norman’s world, and the rest of us were lucky to play supporting roles. And
that’s roughly the context for Maidstone,
the last in a trio of grungy independent movies that Mailer wrote and directed
from 1968 to 1970. (Nearly two decades later, he made the more conventional Tough Guys Don’t Dance, one of 1987’s
biggest flops.) Maidstone is a
textbook example of creative indulgence, a home movie with famous participants
and lofty ambitions. In its ramshackle way, the picture tells the story of
Norman T. Kingsley, a controversial filmmaker who runs for U.S. president even
as he casts his latest opus. Much of the picture comprises clashes between
Norman (played by Mailer himself) and his tempestuous brother, Raoul (Rip
Torn). Their conflict climaxes in a brawl that was reportedly improvised, with
the real-life Torn smacking his frenemy’s head with a hammer and drawing blood.
With all due respect, one can’t blame him for lashing out, because Mailer’s self-important
bloviating is as tiresome as his shapeless filmmaking.
Shot entirely at a posh
country estate in the Northeast, the movie comprises scenes of Mailer/Kingsley
boasting that he’s about to reinvent cinema (his new project is “an attack on
the nature of reality”), coupled with scenes of Mailer/Kingsley cataloguing the
nation’s political ills. Somehow important to expressing these themes are myriad
shots of topless women, plus dull vignettes of young ladies making out with
Mailer and/or Torn. In one scene, Mailer/Kingsley uses clichéd “jive” talk
while communicating with a black actress; in another, several characters wander
across a field while the soundtrack comprises nothing but a woman moaning in
sexual pleasure. True students of Mailer’s work might find resonant tropes
here, and Maidstone unquestionably
captures something about the experimental artistry of its historical moment.
Nonetheless, while Mailer likely thought himself the most interesting man in
the world, Maidstone proves he was
not.
Maidstone:
LAME
2 comments:
It would be worth it to see Torn knock out Mailer . . .
Full movie is on YouTube, very good quality. Well-nigh impossible to watch regardless. The scene of old lecherous Mailer interrogating the lovely sunny Joy Bang (MESSIAH OF EVIL, PLAY IT AGAIN SAM, CISCO PIKE)--is cringe-worthy and disgusting. Mailer evinces the worst artistic pretensions of the era.
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