Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Scarlett Johansson in Don Jon |
I always thought that pornography appealed to people for similar reasons; it indulges the mechanics of sex, its kinks and fetishes and its carnal veneer, but it doesn’t get curious about what gets people into bed together in the first place. There’s nothing particularly subversive about two people fucking. On screen, as in life, eroticism is in the drama of emotional risk. Don Jon opens with a promising romantic comedy mis-en-scène when Jon, disillusioned by one-night stands, tracks down Barbara (Scarlett Johansson), a woman whose refusal to go home with him after an evening of dance floor foreplay makes him think she can supply the depth he’s been missing. Their incompatible sexual fantasies – his based on pornography (which she abhors) and hers on weepy romantic pictures (which he disdains) – is the smartest and funniest idea in the film, but Gordon-Levitt doesn’t follow through on its romantic possibilities; instead he sells out Barbara by turning her into an exploitative prude. When Don Jon turns out to be a small-scale redemption story about a guy who learns to stop jerking off and fall in love – and to give up his porn junkie lifestyle – you realize the movie’s not taking any chances. It gives in to erotic phobias instead of dramatizing them.
As Barbara, Johansson shimmers with libidinous mischief in her early scenes. When she gets turned on by the sincerity with which Jon tries to please her, and even during their courtship, when she withholds sex from him until “the right moment” – when he’s agreed to sign up for night classes and take her to dinner at his parents’ – we see that she’s as hungry for erotic gratification as he is, and has found it on the only terms she knows how. But the movie quickly falls out from under her. It’s a cheap trick to create a character only to choke the life out of her – the movie condemns her for her conventional fantasies in order to prove that Jon, who learns to question his own values, has hidden depth – not only because it’s bad writing, but because it forces an actor to fight the material she’s been given or to be reduced by it. You can feel Johansson struggling against the writing when, at the hardware store, Jon offends Barbara’s class-consciousness and traditional sense of gender by trying to buy a mop, or when she dumps him for lying about watching porn (as though she’d discovered a secret stash of heroin in his sock drawer), neither of which situations are remotely believable, but there’s no way she can triumph over scenes this rigged. The full weight of the picture is against her.
Gordon-Levitt as Jon |
Warren Beatty in Shampoo |
No chance. As a director and a writer, Gordon-Levitt conspires against his own best instincts as an actor. The movie is a critique of the commodification of sex on screen, and the surrogates for romance the media tries to sell us. But the only antidote to objectification is subjectivity, the recognition that desire itself is real and can even be meaningful when the object of desire might be phony or amoral or corrupt. Don Jon is skittish and literal, and it skirts the question of why any of its characters gets turned on and what the stakes are for them when they do. By pathologizing their desires, it turns its characters into products. It's condescending. Jon is a cartoon naïf – this is an adult man who’s astonished to learn he doesn’t score extra points in confession for sexual integrity – and the audience is cued to instantly know more about him that he can know about himself. His parents, played by Tony Danza and Glenne Headly, are similarly frozen in a state of arrested development; his sister (Brie Larson) is so tuned out she spends every scene scrolling through her iPhone. I think this is the hip, twenty-something version of Allison Janney’s role in American Beauty as the suburban housewife who instructs the audience in how mindless and oppressive suburban life is by floating through the movie in a catatonic daze. (By the end of the picture, I felt much in her condition.) Don Jon knocks you over the head with its ideas about middle-class consumption – and by the time Brie Larson opens her mouth, in her final scene, to supply a moral, you wish you’d spent the movie on your iPhone, too – but it isn’t made in the same artistic bad faith as Sam Mendes’ and Alan Ball’s in American Beauty. Gordon-Levitt’s vice isn’t hubris but insecurity. His movie, like his character, seeks refuge in stultifying repetitions: it’s obsessive-compulsive.
– Amanda Shubert is a PhD student in English at the University of Chicago. Previously, she held a curatorial fellowship at the Smith College Museum of Art in Northampton, Massachusetts, working with their collection of prints, drawings and photographs. She is a founding editor of the literary journal Full Stop.
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