Stanley Kubrick’s last film Eyes Wide Shut, was not only pretentious and overrated, it was a snooze. This flick is the last in a series of stylized personal projects for which the director became known. Given the mystique Kubrick acquired or cultivated, this posthumous flop is unlikely to damage the legend. For all the film’s textured detail, its yarn is threadbare and its subtext replete with clumsy symbolism. The screenplay consists of labored, repetitive and truncated dialogue where every exchange involves long stares and furrowed brows. “I am a doctor,” is Tom Cruise’s stock-in-trade phrase. An obscure campy hotel desk clerk delivers the only sterling performance. This is cold comfort considering the viewer is stuck with over two hours of Tom Cruise’s half hearted libidinous quests.
In defense of the math professor let me say that he has three degrees done at a well nigh impossible level of abstraction. The general practitioner has, for the most, one degree requiring few leaps of abstraction. I know I am missing the point. This is not about the professional food chain. But neither is it about what Len Blum of the National Post described in effervescent, stream of consciousness, indulgent prose: “Attraction. Flirtation. Seduction. Exploitation. Intimacy. Fantasy. Hurt. Revenge”. Because if it is erotica you seek, then the movie is as sexy as cold mutton.
Back at the party, Tom is besieged by two models that want him. These females also can’t stop writhing like randy rattlesnakes, their attempts at sexy more phero-moronic than pheromone inspired. Nicole in the meantime is doing her own hormonal hop with a Dracula look alike. Yes, the film is full of frozen, flat characters. As they coil around one another, intoxicated, Dracula applies his amorous solvent: “The charm of marriage,” he says, “is that it makes a life of deception absolutely necessary”. At this point Kubrick is defanged: He becomes a plagiarist who underestimates his audience, as Dracula fails to credit Oscar Wilde for the witty epigram.
No bash would be complete without the doctor coming to the rescue. Upstairs, draped over a chair ever so decoratively, languishes a victim of a drug overdose. She is nude and post coital. Tom runs ears, eyes and pulse checks and then proceeds to sit by the girl’s side, sans coffee or an intravenous something, until she is declared saved. The girl pulls through never to forget the good doctor and destined to return the favor in the next hour or two. She, the Madonna-whore, is another lumpen symbol in this film.
Tom’s journey to sexual and emotional maturation leads him to rekindle an acquaintance with a not-quite-doctor jazz musician. The medical school dropout tells Tom he is on the way to a regular gig where, when he peeks through his blindfold, his peripheral vision is filled with amazing masked naked females. Tom decides to gate crash the orgy. Why Tom becomes imperiled at the orgy is not quite clear. Maybe he annoyed a patron by doing his Überdoctor routine. But to the rescue comes a stranger with familiar protrusions. At this point it must be clear to all that this woman, the Madonna-whore, is toast.
In passing boredom I noted that the mask of one of the orgy attendants was a Guernica-like Picasso creation. No doubt the orgy could have done with some Guernica-like chaos (Guernica painted by Picasso depicts the bombing of that Spanish town by the Germans). The orgy, instead, is a fashion shoot, engorged with sexless perfect bodies locked in aesthetically pleasing unerotic positions. Kubrick’s morality play reaches an epiphany when, after a unconsummated visit to a friendly prostitute, Tom learns she has been diagnosed HIV positive. From across the girl’s seedy abode, a hood in a trenchcoat stares Tom down. This is a messenger from the orgy society, and the message? The penumbra of sex can kill.
I confess, the only other film by Kubrick I have seen was A Clockwork Orange, which I liked. In that cult movie the delinquent Alex, inspired by evil and infused with a love for great classical music, does very bad things. The modest moral I took away from Clockwork was that someone who loves Beethoven’s Ninth so dearly could not be all bad. Certainly listening to Ode to Joy was a lot more pleasurable than to Three Blind Mice, the minimalist score from Eyes Shut Wide.
©1999 By Ilana Mercer
The North Shore News
August 9