In the spirit of spreading domestic pornology, I'm posting today a fragment of a scholarly analysis of 9 Songs. The piece is a part of an MA thesis entitled Eroticism and Pornography in Mainstream Cinema in relation to Postmodern Sexuality and written by a compatriot from the north-eastern part of the country. As a whole the work is a comprehendible exposition of titular concepts for neophytes, but it tackles nicely converging themes of sex, nudity and intimacy in two contemporary R-rated films. I've been intending to write something on this softer side of new extremism for some time now, especially pertaining to cinescapes of sterilized sexuality, but it's a pending project in my mind, one out of few. Anyway, the author of hereby presented excerpt has pretty accurately captured my tactile impressions of the movie and this must serve as a preliminary to my own input. The only copy of the text I possess is, alas, in Polish, so this is basically for my Polish confreres.
Postmodern Eroticism in 9 Songs by Adrian Milanowski
Sunday, August 19, 2012
Sunday, July 29, 2012
SEXUALIZATIONSHIPS via ARTERTAINMENT II
Today's mini-reviews are devoted to Fassbender porn.
Such a shame to believe in escape |
SHAME (2011). Mainstreaming weighty sexual themes is
by necessity trouble and Shame is the recent example that proves this judgement
true. In short, the movie centers on a lone New York corporate cog (Fassbender) who would enliven
the American Dream of consumptionist independence if not the psychological
distress resulting from sex addiction. Inasmuch as I admire the endeavor for
the minimalist beauty and the emotional tension, I can’t find the portrayal of
the protagonist convincing enough to either enjoy the film or find it engaging. The problem
is, of course, ideological framework which continually slips the character in
the direction of potential moral catharsis and salvation. Firstly, in a failed
attempt to build a relationship with his co-worker, he thoughtlessly throws away
his impressive porn stash, which is sort of derisory considering the short span
of the pair’s dating period and the implicit sweep of his addiction. Then, he
provokes a surprisingly mild physical assault after offering sex to a
non-single woman in a bar and verbally offending her boyfriend. Finally, he gets
a blowjob from a gay bar regular in a scene that has been stylized emotionally as
Dante’s seventh circle of hell, but you can tell from Cruising that far worse things happen in such places. All for vain,
but the concluding scenes of supportive binding between brother-sister supply a
glimpse of light in the dark tunnel of shameful sexaholism. Something is amiss
in the psychological delineation of Brandon. On the one hand he’s charmingly honest
and affirmative about his lifestyle, on the other he exhibits manic-depressive
symptoms, as in the noted above moments of erratic behaviour spurted by … what
exactly? The moral decline of his sister, the hypocrisy of his boss, the
oppresive and deepening loneliness? The titillating availability of all forms
of sexual release except through intimacy? His ambiguous past? In accordance to
his sister’s exculpatory pronouncement, Brandon is not a bad person, in fact
the furthest he gets to being lousy is through his egotism and solitariness,
but that’s too little realism to fill a half-and-an-hour of screening time. In
case one might discard the gravity of the subject matter on the basis of a shallow
plot line alone, the director illuminates the narrative by heavyhearted music. Fassbender’s
long, pale and pained physiognomy adopts sympathetic grandeur whilst he’s night
jogging to Bach, crying to a cheesy rendition of Sinatra (another tacit attack
on late capitalism!!! If porn, sex and money can’t make you happy in the city
of unlimited possibilities – what can?), or exchanging telling looks with a
beautiful soon-to-be slut stranger on the subway to Harry Escott’s orchestral score. All that
to make the audience realise that sex addiction is unmistakably a problem of
monumental proportions for the XXIst century generation of yuppies and generally for the
sophisticated middle-class. Not that I’m desensitized to the extent of spurning
the sublime aesthetics of the story. The subway scene is beautifully executed, the
sense of loneliness is depressingly close at heart , Fassbender’s performance
is flawlessly beyond axiological evaluation, and I couldn't hold sway of my dirty voyeristic little heart in the overstretched scenes of urinating and frontal nudity. Still, the movie neither shocked
nor surprised me, surely not with a
threesome and a homoerotic blowjob as the extrema of today’s male lecherousness.
Fassbender and Theron in W Magazine erotic fashion session [2] |
[1] The designation is not mine but I find its homopatriarchal simplicity disturbingly adequate in the context of the movie. See http://m15m.livejournal.com/23209.html.
[2] http://www.wmagazine.com/story/charlize-theron-michael-fassbender-prometheus-cover-story. You're welcome.
[2] http://www.wmagazine.com/story/charlize-theron-michael-fassbender-prometheus-cover-story. You're welcome.
Tuesday, March 27, 2012
COSMOPOLIS
"Sex finds us out. Sex sees through us. That's why it's so shattering. It strips us of appearances. I see a near naked woman in her exhaustion and need, stroking a plastic bottle pressed between her thighs. Am I honor-bound to think of her as an executive and a mother? She sees a man in a posture of rank humiliation. Is that who I think he is, pants around his ankles and butt flung back? What are the questions he asks himself from this position in the world? Large questions maybe. Questions such as science obsessively asks. Why something and not nothing? Why music and not noise? Beautiful questions strangely suited to his low moment. Or is he limited in perspective, thinking only about the moment itself? Thinking about the pain.[...] Days like this. He snaps a finger and a flame shoots up. Every sensitivity, all his attunements.Things are ready to happen that normally never do. She knows what he means, that they don't even have to touch. The same thing that's happening to him is happening to her. She doesn't need to crawl under the table and suck his dick. Too trite to interest either one of them. The flow is strong between them. The emotional tone. Let it express itself. He sees her in her wallow and feels his pelvic muscles begin to quiver. He says, Tell me to stop and I'll stop. But he doesn't wait for her to reply. There isn't time. The tails of his sperm cells are lashing already. She is his sweetheart and lover and slut undying. He doesn't have to do the unspeakable thing he wants to do. He only has to speak it. Because they're beyond every model of established behavior. He only has to say the words." "Say the words." "I want to bottle-fuck you slowly with my sunglasses on." (22-23)
On the occasion of the loungingly approaching premiere of Cronenberg's Cosmopolis (hyped-up for the virilized role of still annoyingly deadpan Pattison)- an excerpt from Don DeLillo's 2003 original masterwork. Despite the major leading role inconvenience in this one and his recent glossed over A Dangerous Method, I still hope DC will return in some style to the ugly assymetries that speak their own art.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
LOVE IN MOTION
Mindfuck of the week is the newest music video from SebastiAn, directed by Gaspar Noe, and featuring an under age Dutch child-model of name Lente Tresor. The rumor has it that it got banned from youtube 3 times and now it's back, proofread against pedo-content by a scads of youtube experts who decided that, for now, it's not child pornography after all. I bet they'll change their minds soon yet again since you might get fooled by looking at the off-set photos alone. The video is presumably to be read in the context of the recent awarness raising amongst the French public on the damaging influence of the lolita entertainment industry on little girls' psyches. Tresor prances around in her pink room, wearing devil horns, while being filmed by a little boy (her brother?) with digital camera. In a slightly more aggressive manner, she reduplicates the sexuality of minor performers launched into 5-minute stardom by the cyber media. Her smudged face carries the seriousness of the 10-year-old French supermodel of haute cauture Thylane Blondeau while the kitschy poses bring to mind an average minor youtube female artist aspiring to the title of the pedo-mascot of the month. Excluding herself , since she's sort of cuddly and innocent when she sings those pop covers in her sweet cacophonic voice. Love in Motion reminds me at points of Noe's other works, especially Enter the Void and We Fuck Alone where juvenile orphan protagonists are also enclosed in nauseously shifting interiors, left alone with artificial toys of sensual self-annihilation ad infinitum. At the very least, the video is Noe's grim wink at the unconditional greviousness which surrounds debates about the safe sexual development of contemporary children. I can't help but recall James R. Kincaid's superb Erotic Innocence: The Culture of Child Molesting in which he notices that with the end of archetypal notions about female chastity, the child has become the last vestige of innocence for radical purists which, in the context of our times, has led to a paradoxical situation: "[t]he laughing child has been replaced in our cultural iconography by the anxious, fretting child - really, a grotesquely sexy little adult. Not a kid, a not a companion, not an ally; just an unhappy undersized thing, tormented by being cast in terms that allow it no room to move: the child is the sexual being whose essence is that it has no sexuality at all."[1] All at once playful and sexual, tiredsome and restless, ridiculous and grave, Tresor is an avatar of those schizoid beings whose very appeal is their prismatic sexuality.
[1] James R. Kincaid, Erotic Innocence: The Culture of Child Molesting. Durham University Press: Durham and London,1998: 282-283.
Here's Love in Motion:
[1] James R. Kincaid, Erotic Innocence: The Culture of Child Molesting. Durham University Press: Durham and London,1998: 282-283.
Here's Love in Motion:
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)