From the Chicago Reader (December 19, 1997). — J.R.
Titanic
Rating *** A must seeDirected and written by James Cameron
With Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet, Billy Zane, Kathy Bates, Frances Fisher, Gloria Stuart, Bill Paxton, Bernard Hill, and Suzy Amis. I suppose there's something faintly ridiculous about a $200-million movie that argues on behalf of true love over wealth and even bandies about a precious diamond as a central narrative device — like Citizen Kane's Rosebud — to clinch its point. Yet for all the hokeyness, Titanic kept me absorbed all 194 minutes both times I saw it. It's nervy as well as limited for writer-director-coproducer James Cameron to reduce a historical event of this weight to a single invented love story, however touching, and then to invest that love story with plot details that range from unlikely to downright stupid. But one clear advantage of paring away the subplots that clog up disaster movies is that it allows one to achieve a certain elemental purity. This movie tells you a great deal about first class on the ship, a little bit about third class, and nothing at all about second class. According to Walter Lord's 1955 nonfiction book about the sinking of the Titanic, A Night to Remember, which includes a full passenger list, 279 of the 2,223 passengers were in second class, and 112 of them survived. But as far as Cameron's story is concerned — a love match between a footloose and penniless artist in third class, Jack Dawson (Leonardo DiCaprio), and a rebellious protofeminist woman in first class, Rose DeWitt Bukater (Kate Winslet), who's engaged to marry an unscrupulous zillionaire (Billy Zane) — the omission makes perfect sense, even though it establishes that there's no middle ground between the lovers.
To speak about the artistry of Titanic rather than its economics is to assume that the audience's pleasure counts for more than the investors' bank accounts — hardly the assumption that rules the current discourse about the movie. The five-page spread in the December 8 issue of Time magazine includes over three pages devoted to hand-wringing in the lead article, which is headlined "Was all the misery worth it?" That's followed by Richard Corliss's negative review, which occupies only two-thirds of one page and concludes, "Ultimately, Titanic will sail or sink not on its budget but on its merits as drama and spectacle. The regretful verdict here: Dead in the water." Then Cameron is allotted a final page to defend himself, though the obsession with the bottom line in the preceding onslaught forces him to devote nearly all of his rebuttal to production and business details rather than aesthetics. The package could easily have appeared in Forbes, Fortune, orVariety. Yet whose money and whose interests are actually inspiring all this nervousness? Considering the amount of abuse that this movie dishes out to the privileged first-class passengers, isn't it possible that this is what really has Time so hot and bothered?
But in terms of narrative streamlining and moral simplicity, Titanic is still a lot closer to Griffith and his era than it is to other 90s disaster films. The characterizations of heroes and villains, which appear to be drawn with the utmost sincerity, all seem cut from the same Victorian cloth as those in Griffith's melodramas — among others, there's the dreamy and selfless Irish-American artist-adventurer, the tempestuous and freethinking Philadelphia debutante, the snarling and brutal zillionaire fiance (with an improbable touch of Brando's Stanley Kowalski), and the fiance's sadistic and preying valet (David Warner). For better and for worse, this is a movie that appears to believe in what it's saying — and the lack of cynicism is refreshing. "One of the more trying legacies left by those on the Titanic," Lord notes in A Night to Remember, "has been a new standard of conduct for measuring the behavior of prominent people under stress" — a legacy that, ironically, can be found playing itself out in the pages of Time (where the rhetoric is no less moralistic than Cameron's). Lord goes on, "It was easier in the old days…for the Titanic was also the last stand of wealth and society in the center of public affection. In 1912 there were no movie, radio or television stars; sports figures were still beyond the pale; and cafe society was completely unknown. The public depended on socially prominent people for all the vicarious glamour that enriches drab lives." What tarnished that glamour, at least for subsequent generations, was the fact that, as Lord mentions earlier, "The night was a magnificent confirmation of 'women and children first,' yet somehow the loss rate was higher for Third Class children than First Class men." Cameron's Titanic is obviously a millennial statement of some sort, saying something about the present as well as the past, and the fact that he connects class with survival in both is entirely to his credit.
By beginning in the present — when the ruins of the Titanic, two and a half miles below the ocean's surface, are being explored in search of a fabled (fictional) diamond — Cameron sets up a framework that suggests a kind of science fiction movie about the past, with 1912 made to seem as remote as 85 years in the future, and with the wrecked ship seeming as otherworldly as a wreck encountered in outer space. This same mood was beautifully captured in Stephen Low's 94-minute Imax documentary Titanica (1991), which played in Chicago a couple of years ago — a film about the Canadian-American-Russian expedition that picked through the Titanic wreckage, at times suggesting an underwater 2001. Cameron's movie begins like a sequel to that exploration, complete with probing spherical "pod" ships flanked by searchlights, and conjures up the same atmosphere. But once the original owner of the diamond, the 101-year-old Rose (Gloria Stuart, a Hollywood veteran best known for her work with John Ford, Busby Berkeley, and James Whale), enters the picture and proceeds to narrate the 1912 story in flashbacks, much of the eeriness in confronting the past is lost. For one thing, Cameron insists on having everyone speak 90s dialogue; he clearly doesn't know how to make his characters speak 1912 dialogue without alienating the audience. And he makes the ludicrous decision to give the 1912 Rose a recently acquired collection of paintings ranging from Picasso's Les demoiselles d'Avignon and one of Monet's water lily canvases to familiar pieces by Degas and Cézanne, all of which presumably sank to the bottom of the ocean. Cameron can't resist referencing works we know to show us how prescient Rose was, making her in effect the soul sister of Gertrude Stein. (She's also hip to Freud, we learn in a scene that seems equally forced and improbable — though it also makes her seem progressive.) Still, a sense of awe about the mysteriousness of the past lingers, and the film's poignancy would be severely curtailed without it.
Given the religious overtones of this last phrase — reinforced when Rose adds a little later, speaking of Jack Dawson, "He saved me, in every way that a person can be saved" — it stands to reason that everything leading up to this grim conclusion would impart the same basic lesson. According to the press book, 32 percent of the Titanic's passengers and crew survived, and out of this number 60 percent (199 people) were first-class passengers and 25 percent (125 people) were third class. (The press book also tailors its facts, excluding the second-class passengers, and where the crew fits into this arithmetic is anyone's guess.)
Need Your Comments.....!
For University of Pakistan Study Material Sharing, Discussion, etc, Come and join us at http://4e542a34.linkbucks.com
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
Groups "Study" group.
To post to this group, send email to http://ca13054d.tinylinks.co
For more options, visit this group at
http://004bbb67.any.gs
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.