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Rooney Mara and Cate Blanchett in Carol, directed by Todd Haynes. |
For the first half of
Carol it seems as if the director, Todd Haynes, is going to make it work. Haynes stepped into movies with one of the most
startling curiosities of the eighties, a short called
Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story populated by Barbie and Ken dolls, but at feature length
his movies always seem theoretical – and rigged – like a doctoral dissertation you can’t get behind because it scrambles any instinctual reading of the
material. That’s especially true of the project he returns to every two or three pictures, where he tries to replicate glossy Hollywood melodramas of the
forties and fifties but moves into the foreground the subversive qualities that (some say) directors like Douglas Sirk slipped into the margins of their
movies. Since I can’t take Sirk’s movies seriously, Haynes’ takes on them probably wouldn’t interest me much anyway. But he was certainly an entertainer,
and though he asked his audience to accept some stupefying plot points, God knows he didn’t try to pass theory off as drama. Haynes’ most highly regarded
film,
Far from Heaven (2002), defied common sense at every narrative turn. His plan was to set the movie in the suburban 1950s with a Jane
Wyman-type heroine (played by Julianne Moore, whose performance is the movie’s only saving grace) and give her a husband who’s a closeted homosexual and a
lover who’s an African-American gardener. It might have been an interesting proposition, but not if the gardener (Dennis Haysbert) talked like he’d just
time-traveled back from the twenty-first century and certainly not with Dennis Quaid as the husband. Haynes needed an actor who read as straight but who
could be convincing as a gay man, like Brando in
Reflections in a Golden Eye. (Or Taylor Kitsch in the second season of
True Detective, who
seemed to have based the early scenes in his performance on Brando in Huston’s movie.) Quaid is preposterously miscast – like, say, Michael Douglas
as Liberace in the TV movie
Behind the Candelabra – so all you get is the
idea of a straight man who’s secretly gay. And when Haynes throws in a
butch little girl and an effeminate little boy as Moore and Quaid’s kids, the obvious reversal of sexual expectations becomes dopey and childish. It’s the
by now familiar problem of drama that goes straight to the symbolic level before it’s been worked through on the narrative level.
Far from Heaven
flattered viewers by making them feel smart for getting what he was up to without engaging them in the storytelling.