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ExposedRomance is porn and commentary.by CHRIS HERRINGTON Directed by Catherine Breillat Trimark Home Video Romance isnt just the sensation youve never seen: Unless youve gone out of your way for film coverage outside the publicity-machine-driven mainstream, its probably a sensation you havent even heard of. This controversial 1999 feature from French director Catherine Breillat has been hailed as the most sexually explicit mainstream film ever made, and on one level, Romance is indeed porn with production values and artistic aspirations. But dont rush to the video store expecting too much titillation. Despite its depiction of hardcore sex, Romance has an intentionally awkward, psychologically intense, dream state atmosphere that is quite similar to Eyes Wide Shut, another sexy movie that isnt as erotic as its reputation suggests though Romance isnt as well-made or interesting as Stanley Kubricks unjustly maligned final work. The films plot is bare-bones simple: A young French woman named Marie (Caroline Ducey, in a remarkably brave performance) is in love with her boyfriend, Paul, who, for reasons that are never spelled out, refuses to have sex with her. Frustrated, she embarks on a series of sexual liasons with other men, the nature of which (degrading? liberating?) are left to the viewer to decide. The film makes no bones about lingering on banal details of daily life that would cause a storm of outrage if screened at most American multiplexes: a man putting on a condom, a man ejaculating. In fact, one of the most progressive things about Romance may be its unabashed openness in showing the male body acting as a corrective to the usual double standard of conventional film nudity. This female-directed film is that rare erotic feature in which women are not merely, or exclusively, objects of the gaze. An enterprising critic at The Nashville Scene reviewed the film a couple of months ago, even though it hadnt been booked there and wasnt expected to be (Playing in town when hell freezes over read the listing atop the review). He used the film as an excuse to explore attitudes toward sex in American cinema and to dress down local film exhibitors for their conservatism. But, lo and behold, Vanderbilts Sarratt Cinema has come to the rescue, announcing screenings of the film (as part of a wonderfully bold and well-planned booking schedule) on February 24th to 27th, even though the video release is set for February 8th. So, if you want to see this film on the big screen the way it was meant to be seen you should probably trek to Nashville, because the same thing isnt about to happen here. Memphis is a city that has no independent or public alternative to the twin chain monopolies Malco and AJAY. Will Malcos forthcoming Studio on the Square make a substantial difference in the quality of local bookings? I sure hope so, but well have to wait and see. That this accomplished, provocative, and artistically worthy, if problematic, film hasnt received significant American distribution isnt merely a rebuke to the xenophobia and isolation of contemporary American film culture all worthwhile foreign films that are ignored here these days are that. But the de facto ban on Romance stands to expose and rebuke the infantilism with which American cinema treats sexuality. Romance cant be screened in commercial theaters, and Eyes Wide Shut has to be maimed by a bit of MPAA-driven, post-production butchering, but American Pie and Deuce Bigelow, Male Gigolo? No problem. Sex is an open subject for American art sorry, entertainment as long as it isnt treated seriously. Eyes Wide Shut was, in one way, an extended Hitchcockian cruel joke about a man who pursues sex and never finds it (think of Nicole Kidmans final shot punchline), while Romance follows the journey of a woman who pursues sex and finds it at every turn. The key difference of these similar films is that Kubricks Bill Harford (Tom Cruise) emerges a broken man, while Breillats Marie emerges triumphant. But Ill confess that Romances triumphant ending left me cold. The films denouement is disappointing in that it reinforces a tired notion of a battle of the sexes, and the films reliance on this conservative paradigm may mark a culture that, while more open than our own, is still, by most accounts, more pre- than post-feminist. As a work of art, Im not really a fan of Romance. Its hard to perceive of it as more than a stunt, but I think the stunt makes a point that is worth defending: That the incorporation of graphic sexuality into a responsible adult cinema is valid and worthy of open distribution and exhibition. Besides, the buttons being pushed here arent exclusively sexual: The hard-ons, cum shots, fellatio, and actual (at least it seems that way) on-screen intercourse that Romance flaunts may push the envelope, but the film climaxes with a real-life event even more natural, and more taboo. Youll have to see it for yourself, but, suffice it to say, in the history of cinematic money shots, Romances is enough to make Boogie Nights Dirk Diggler put his one special thing back in his pants and go home. You can e-mail Chris Herrington at letters@memphisflyer.com. |