Film Review
Few would dispute that
Husbands and Wives is Woody Allen's most brutal,
most blisteringly authentic account of the breakdown of a romantic relationship.
Whilst making the film, Allen was experiencing for himself the trauma of
a relationship collapse and by the time the film was released, in the late
summer of 1992, his acrimonious separation from Mia Farrow had become old
news, tarnishing the reputations of both participants in a very public falling
out. It was Allen's clandestine affair with 21-year-old Soon Yi Previn,
Farrow's adopted daughter, that ended the couple's twelve-year long relationship,
but the fault lines had already begun to show before then. Few things
in life are more devastating to the individual than the experience of living
through a dying relationship, the slow and irreversible undoing of the bonds
of intimacy, and in possibly the greatest film of his 'mature phase' as a
filmmaker Allen convinces us what a painful thing the death of love is.
It's as if someone has snatched a treasured, essential part of your life,
scrunched it up and thrown it into the trash can.
In several of his previous films, notably
Hannah and Her Sisters
(1986), Allen goes out of way to convince us that he is not one who believes
in happy ever afters. Relationships are as much a matter of compromise
as commitment, and only those who are wilfully deluded or have the tolerance
of a saint stand a chance of being totally happy in a long-term relationship.
Yet, even if we admit this to ourselves, we are still all victims of the
cruel delusion of love which nature has created for the sole purpose of ensuring
the propagation of the human species. The one thing that the four central
characters in
Husbands and Wives share (before experience convinces
them otherwise) is that the perfect romance is available to all, if you are
prepared to go out and look for it. In the course of the film, these hapless
New Yorkers each come to realise the fallacy of this and end up accepting
a less ideal state of affairs, wiser although by no means happier in
the acceptance that true romance is pure delusion.
One of the two couples is played by Allen and Farrow, and you can't help
wondering how closely their own relationship is mirrored in that of their
on-screen alter egos Gabe and Judy. Tellingly, Farrow is the one who
drives the relationship onto the rocks, a 'passive-aggressive' who (according
to her embittered first husband) cleverly arranges things so that she gets
what she wants, with the result that Allen ends up being cast as the wronged
victim, the man who wisely pulls back from an ill-judged affair with a much
younger woman only to end up alone and badly bruised. It's surprising
that Farrow agreed to make the film, given that it is an obvious slanted
caricature of her own failing relationship with Allen. It looks as if Allen
made the film not so much as personal therapy
but as a calculated
attempt to keep the public, or at least his fans, on his side by casting
Farrow as the villain of the piece, the selfish, deceitful woman who can
never be satisfied. It is surely no accident that the character Allen
plays in the film is a wiser and far more sympathetic version of himself
- perhaps the man he wishes he had been in retrospect.
Jack and Sally - superbly played by Sydney Pollack and Judy Davis - are the
other couple in the film, a kind of control experiment against which the
collapse of Gabe and Judy's relationship is to be examined. Jack and
Sally's separation is more understandable than that of Gabe and Judy.
They are no longer compatible emotionally or physically and, in the throes
of mid-life crisis, succumb to the desire for one last great fling with younger
flesh. Both strike lucky and end up with their wish for a romantic
second wind being granted almost immediately after they separate. But
neither finds any meaningful satisfaction in their second taste of bachelorhood
- Gabe discovers that his dream partner is an empty-headed bimbo, Judy still
finds sex (even with a dishy Liam Neeson) nauseous. Gabe and Judy soon
realise that their sexless marriage, for all its imperfections, it is the
nearest thing to heaven they will find on Earth. They accept the compromises,
bury their delusions, and become once more the rock solid married couple,
just as their supposedly more rational, well-adjusted friends Gabe and Judy
decide that they must go their separate ways.
Throughout,
Husbands and Wives feels like a confessional piece, an
impression that can only be reinforced by the documentary-style passages
in the narrative (such as the over-done
cinéma verité-style
intro) and scenes in which the main players in the drama talk-to-camera and
try to shift our sympathies in their favour. It's not a film that Woody
Allen could have made unless he himself was being put through the mill of
a relationship meltdown and it is only because it rings so harrowingly true
that we avoid reading it as a cynical attempt by its author to re-write his
personal history in his favour. So much has been said and written about
the breakdown of Allen and Farrow's relationship that you hardly know what
is truth and what is fiction, but unlike the acres of gossip fodder served
up by sensation-seeking journalists in the messy aftermath of the couple's
separation,
Husbands and Wives has an unmistakable ring of truth about
it. It is the most crushingly tragic of Woody Allen's films and like
Mahler's Ninth Symphony (the piece of music it refers to in one memorable
scene) it leaves us with a heart aching with a profound sense of sadness
over the injustice of life.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Woody Allen film:
Bullets Over Broadway (1994)
Film Synopsis
Gabe and Judy are a happily married middle-aged couple living in New York
City. He is a respected writer and university professor; she is an
editor on an art magazine. When their closest friends, Jack and Sally, casually
announce they are going to get a divorce they cannot believe their ears.
Jack and Sally have been together for years and Gabe and Judy take it as
a personal affront that they should decide to separate without so much as
a by-your-leave. The truth is that Jack and Sally's marriage has been
a sham for many years and the only thing they can agree on is that the time
has come for them to part and make a fresh start. But when Jack immediately
hooks up with his 20-something aerobics teacher after splitting with his
wife, Sally becomes incensed and suspects her husband may have been cheating
on her before they broke up. As Jack experiences a new lease of life
with his much younger partner, Sally struggles to make a go of her affair
with Michael, a likeable colleague of Judy on whom the latter has a secret
crush. Meanwhile, Gabe finds himself attracted to Rain, a promising student
of his who is half his age and pathologically drawn to older men. Just
when Jack and Sally realise that they are much better off together than apart,
Gabe and Judy discover that their own relationship has run its course...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.