Woody Allen’s myriad
remarks over the years that Stardust
Memories is not an autobiographical movie are at least slightly disingenuous,
the understandable backpedaling of a popular artist who was perceived as
slighting his fan base. After all, Allen plays Sandy Bates, a neurotic
comedy-movie auteur enduring an existential crisis after audiences turn on him
for experimenting with drama. Any resemblance to Allen, who followed the
crowd-pleasing Annie Hall (1976) with
the dour chamber piece Interiors
(1977), is purely coincidental. Yeah, right. Allen’s disclaimers
notwithstanding, Stardust Memories is
an extraordinary exercise in public self-examination. Questioning the purpose
of filmmaking and the value of humor in world seemingly zooming toward
destruction, Stardust Memories
skillfully integrates jokes, melodrama, romance, and what might be called
spirituality. (One must tread lightly there, given Allen’s endless
proclamations of atheism.)
Even the rapturous black-and-white images of Stardust Memories have a metatextual
kick, since audiences embraced the monochromatic cinematography of Allen’s
previous film, Manhattan (1979), broadly
seen as his return to comedic form following the failure of Interiors. Like so many other things in Stardust Memories, the repetition of a
trope from a prior film defines Allen as an artist not only willing but eager
to wrestle with the potentialities of tropes by applying them to varying forms
of subject matter. If black-and-white images mean such-and-such in X context,
what do they mean in Y context? It’s all about digging deeper and asking more
problematic questions. Whereas Allen’s beloved “early, funny” movies mostly
eschew cinematic style in favor of gags and narrative speed, Stardust Memories represents the apex of
an evolution that began with Annie Hall.
While life itself is ultimately Allen’s main subject, with Stardust Memories he fully integrates the complications of his own
reputation into his repertoire, and he does so at the very same career moment
when he assumes full command of cinema as a storytelling medium.
While all this critical-studies significance is a lot of weight to
drop onto Stardust Memories’
shoulders, the movie can bear the burden.
Filled with insights and ruminations and witticisms, it’s a singularly alive piece of filmmaking. Once again, Allen and cinematographer Gordon Willis create striking imagery, and once again, Allen pulls terrific work from an eclectic cast. (Watch for Sharon Stone, making her movie debut, in the opening scene.) Presented in a somewhat freeform style with more than a few touches of classic European arthouse cinema, Stardust Memories explores the fictional Sandy Bates’ life from myriad perspectives. Even as he juggles romances with challenging Daisy (Jessica Harper) and comforting Isobel (Marie-Christine Berrault), Sandy contemplates ghosts from his relationship with a troubled woman named Dorrie (Charlotte Rampling). More pointedly—since Allen spun a similar romantic web in Manhattan—the Sandy character allows Allen to ask what audiences expect from him, and why audiences resist change in his persona. In the picture’s most famous scene, aliens from outer space remind Sandy that his greatest gift is being able to make people laugh, and that humor may well contribute more to the human experience than Bergman-esque ennui.
Filled with insights and ruminations and witticisms, it’s a singularly alive piece of filmmaking. Once again, Allen and cinematographer Gordon Willis create striking imagery, and once again, Allen pulls terrific work from an eclectic cast. (Watch for Sharon Stone, making her movie debut, in the opening scene.) Presented in a somewhat freeform style with more than a few touches of classic European arthouse cinema, Stardust Memories explores the fictional Sandy Bates’ life from myriad perspectives. Even as he juggles romances with challenging Daisy (Jessica Harper) and comforting Isobel (Marie-Christine Berrault), Sandy contemplates ghosts from his relationship with a troubled woman named Dorrie (Charlotte Rampling). More pointedly—since Allen spun a similar romantic web in Manhattan—the Sandy character allows Allen to ask what audiences expect from him, and why audiences resist change in his persona. In the picture’s most famous scene, aliens from outer space remind Sandy that his greatest gift is being able to make people laugh, and that humor may well contribute more to the human experience than Bergman-esque ennui.
Left unresolved, of course, is the question of
whether Sandy (or Allen, for that matter) can reconcile his clashing artistic
impulses. Witness the incredible highs and lows of Allen’s subsequent output,
wherein he has tried to merge what he does well with what he simply wants to do well. Like Bob Fosse’s
extraordinary All That Jazz (1979), Stardust Memories is part performance
review and part psychoanalysis. Not everything in Stardust Memories works, since Allen periodically succumbs to the
very pretentiousness that disgruntled fans perceived in Interiors, but Stardust Memories
is an essential chapter of the Woody Allen story. It’s also among the nerviest
statements a popular American artist has ever made, a declaration of
independence from expectations and preconceptions.
Stardust Memories: GROOVY
2 comments:
It bears pointing out that both All That Jazz and Stardust Memories are derivative of or, if you like, "inspired" by Fellini's masterpiece 8&1/2. And Allen may have chosen to shoot Stardust Memories in black-and-white because 8&1/2 was filmed in black-and-white.
Also, a film about a comedy director wanting to change course and make serious movies was first explored by Preston Sturges in the classic "Sullivan's Travels" - a director Allen holds in high regard.
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