Every
once in a while some outlaw comes along to prove that movies can be something
else - not just a weary procession of prepackaged product but a spectacular
mode of personal expression. Steven Soderbergh is the prodigy of 1989 who
came up with sex, lies, and videotape, a fascinating and low-budget
exposé of some very strange modern relationships. It won the Golden
Palm (Best Film) and Best Actor Award for James Spader at the Cannes Film
Festival, and turned out to be one of the most successful and talked about
films of the year.
Steven Soderbergh's
writing and direction are frighteningly accurate, and he is irreproachable
in his love for his characters, all of whom are none too lovable. In this
premiere display of his cinematic prowess, he shows not just talent but
a degree of personal honesty rarely visible in film. Paying little attention
to civilized rules of cinema, and with a bit more than one million dollars,
he has somehow expressed all his hidden anxieties, and it's surprising
how much wisdom he displays while letting each character deal with the
unique quality of their misery. sex, lies, and videotape is an amazingly
brave film, especially when you compare its sexual values against against
any other American movie. In most films, the characters have lives,
around which their sex lives revolve. But in sex, lies, and videotape,
the characters have sex lives around which the rest of their lives revolve.
It's much closer to reality than most of us would like to admit.
Graham,
Ann, John, and Cynthia, the four main characters, have got so many hang-ups
that the film basically has no protagonist. There's not single character
whose struggle we can endorse whole-heartedly. Are we really expected to
identify with the woman who can't have an orgasm, or her sleazy husband
who has nothing but? Are we supposed to identify the the barmaid who is
secretly undermining her sister's marriage, or the guy who is only impotent
in front of other people? Though these individuals are all fascinating,
none of them are particularly appealing. We're left with nothing to empathize
with but the single thread they share in common, that life is a whirlpool
of compromises, full of pain and unique surprises. You can walk out of
this film feeling a little bit better about yourself; after all, if these
people can work out their problems, your problems should be a snap.
The performances
are all precise and masterful. As Graham, James Spader radiates benign
neurosis. In his previous roles in Baby Boom, Less Than Zero,
Wall
Street, and the underrated Jack's Back, he only scratched the
surface of the vulnerability he displays here. Similarly, Peter Gallagher's
work in The Idolmaker, Summer Lovers, and the vastly underrated
Dreamchild
didn't ever approach the ruthless callousness he demonstrates as John.
But it's
the women who are the real surprises. Though her modeling career was thriving,
Andie MacDowell was sure that her acting career was over when her entire
performance as Jane in Greystoke was redubbed by Glenn Close. But
after her astoundingly complex performance as Ann, she won the L.A. Film
Critic's award as the Best Actress of the year and immediately secured
the leads in two more films. As her sister Cynthia, Laura San Giacomo oozes
sex and sarcasm, a deadly combination. This is her first film, and with
it she won the L.A. Film Critic's award for the most promising newcomer,
plus several upcoming lead roles.
The plot
is laid out immediately through monologues, snappy guitar work, and incredibly
clever editing. The marriage of John and Ann Millaney is based on lies,
and Graham's life is based on truth and videotape - which cannon lie.
Only in
the world of AIDS would Graham's problem make any sort of sense. There's
peculiar sort of logic to a man who uses video instead of a condom as a
prophylactic against the plague of the decade, where any sexual encounter
may be your last. He's a sick puppy, and by the end, he actually starts
mixing up the tenses in his sentences, confusing real time with videotape
time.
Audio edits
take place moment before or after visual edits, causing vocal overlaps
that are curiously misleading. We hear Ann's voice say "Can I tell you
something personal?" while we're looking at her sister make love to her
husband. For one brief moment, it seems like Cynthia talking, but then
the film cuts to Ann in a restaurant with Graham, and we realize we've
been tricked.
This isn't
a mistake but a stylistic idiosyncrasy from a man in total control of his
art form. "You go through three phases trying to express yourself in any
art form," explains Soderbergh. "First, you imitate. Next, you begin to
document what you're thinking and feeling and use the crafts you've learned
through imitation. Then there's the third phase: taking the emotions and
feelings you've experienced - which are autobiographical - and creating
a fictional story with which to express them. That was the big leap for
me, because emotionally, sex, lies, and videotape is very autobiographical,
and yet nothing in the film actually occurred. And by being fictional I
was able to be clearer in what I was trying to get across."
What Soderbergh
gets across in sex, lies, and videotape is relationships that are
naturalistic and entirely believable, not to mention entertaining. He's
also remarkably perceptive for someone only 26 years old. How can Soderbergh
already have such a deep understanding of human nature and obsessive behavior?
It takes a peculiar sort of mind to come up with characters this uniquely
unhealthy. This is film that should have been made by Nicolas Roeg or Eric
Rohmer, some wise old foreign craftsman looking back on his personal life
with years of perspective. Either sex, lies, and videotape is a
fluke and Soderbergh is a madman, or we're got a lot of very interesting
movies to look forward to from his overripe brain.