Film Review
A Roman Polanski film invariably offers something akin to a Narnia
experience. A seemingly banal yet strangely alluring opening, as
inviting as the doors of a wardrobe, draws us into a realm of the
imagination that becomes weirder and weirder by the minute. We
are disturbed, perhaps frightened by what we see, and yet, like the
brave child heroes of C.S. Lewis's famous series of novels, we have no
desire to retrace our steps and return to the world of everyday
experience. What Polanski shows us is a distorted version of our
own reality, a kind of burlesque horror show that exposes the more
perverse aspects of human relationships, and we emerge realising that
the real world is not so far from the dreamlike fantasy we have just
experienced. This is true of all of Roman Polanski's films but
none more so than his latest self-indulgent excursion into psychosexual
absurdity,
La Vénus à
la fourrure.
The most improbable thing about this film is that it did not spring
from Polanski's fertile imagination but is in fact adapted from the
stage play
Venus in Fur by
the American playwright David Ives, which was a massive hit on Broadway
in 2011. The play was itself inspired by a 1870 novella,
Venus im Pelz, by Leopold von
Sacher-Masoch, a liberated Austrian writer from whose name the word
masochism derives. Polanski's
film is the fifth to be inspired by Sacher-Masoch's book - others
include Jesus Franco's
Venus in Furs
(1969) and
Seduction: The Cruel Woman
(1985) by Elfi Mikesch and Monika Treut.
Polanski may not have originated
La
Vénus à la fourrure but it manages to be the most
perfect of distillation of his oeuvre. Its central theme,
domination of one human being by another, is one that has figured
heavily in the writer-director's films right from his remarkable debut
feature,
Knife in the Water (1962).
In Polanski's films, the prisoner-gaoler scenario often crops up, with
two very different characters locked together in a relationship of
mutual dependency, and the interesting thing is that we can never be
sure who has the upper hand in the relationship. It is a
situation which Polanski may himself have been very familiar with, as a
film director working with headstrong and seductive actors.
When the two characters in
La
Vénus à la fourrure are introduced to us, it is
clear who is the master and who is the underdog. The
self-important theatre director Thomas looks down on the wannabe
actress Vanda like a zoologist casting a supercilious glance over
something several rungs beneath him on the evolutionary ladder.
The common, unkempt, vulnerable Vanda allows Thomas to assert his male
authority, and he takes a sadistic pleasure in humiliating her.
But then, slowly, the table begins to turn and it is Thomas who becomes
Vanda's plaything. Watching the transformation of both characters
as the game of domination is played out is fascinating and disturbing,
and we cannot be sure whether Thomas is genuinely being controlled by
Vanda or whether he has a darker purpose in seeming to submit to her
will. Who is manipulating who? Who is the victim in this
little charade - Thomas, Vanda, or both? Or is it, us, the
audience, who is being deluded and controlled - by an unhinged filmmaker
revelling in the power of his art...?
It is telling that Polanski should cast his own wife, Emmanuelle
Seigner, in the role of the mysterious and seductive Vanda. It is
even more telling that Mathieu Amalric, the actor chosen to play
opposite Seigner, is made up to be a spitting image of Polanski as he
appeared in his mid-30s. You suspect that the director is playing
out his own personal fantasy, perhaps in an attempt to exorcise demons
that have long plagued him (as is so evidently the case in some of his
previous films, most notably
The Pianist). Seigner and
Amalric - who had appeared together previously in Julian Schnabel's
Le Scaphandre et le papillon
(2007) - are well-matched as cunning opponents in a long, drawn-out
psychological duel, constantly taking us by surprise as the balance of
power shifts from one character to another, taking us deeper and deeper
into the dark realm of human desire.
The story is one that Polanski has told, in various guises, many times
before. It is closest to his early black comedy
Cul-de-sac (1966), the twisted
relationship between a dysfunctional husband and wife (Donald Pleasence
and Françoise Dorléac) in a remote setting echoing that
which Amalric and Signer enact in Polanski's latest film. By
reducing the dramatis personae to just two characters and confining the
action to one location (a stage set and its environs in a deserted
theatre), Polanski finally has the opportunity to dispense with
superfluity and focus on what is so evidently the most intriguing
aspect of human nature - the desire to dominate and be dominated.
Along the way, he carves out one of his most enthralling and unsettling
films - a trip to Narnia you will not regret.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Roman Polanski film:
Knife in the Water (1962)