Juno where your children are?
So what about the women? How do they fit in with this trend toward macho malice and unabashed villainy? Badly. As in year’s past, they have been cast as helpless victims, distracted ditzes, co-dependent screw-ups, and deluded meddlers.
Although far from helpless, Marianne Pearl was the quintessential victim of demonic male violence when Al Qaeda beheaded her husband, Daniel. With self-conscious pathos, Angelina Jolie makes Pearl’s tragedy her own in
A Mighty Heart
. Despite a release of more than six months ago, audience antipathy to movies about the war on terror, and the shadow of Jolie’s overexposed ego, this film seemed pre-destined for a best-actress nomination before it even hit the screen.
More helpless but more authentic and moving is the dementia victim played by Julie Christie in Sarah Polley’s impressive debut film,
Away from Her
. On the one hand, the film compassionately dissects how mortality erases identity and how love perseveres nonetheless. On the other hand, it tells the familiar story of a damaged woman protected by a gallant man. Christie’s career-crowning performance will be up for (and will likely win) the best-actress Oscar. Oddly, though, Gordon Pinsent’s equally masterful performance as the formerly wayward, now chastened husband has been overlooked up to this point and, sadly, will continue to be when the nominations are announced.
Taking a more active role in her self-destruction, Marion Cotillard’s Edith Piaf in
La Vie en Rose
will warm the hearts of Academy voters eager to watch the spectacle of an irrepressible, supremely talented woman shrink into a booze, drug, and male-dependent husk over several decades. One more female loser in the best-actress squad.
But the list wouldn’t be complete without a woman who is not only victimized, dependent, and ineffectual but also has low self-esteem. Sounds like a role for Laura Linney in
The Savages
, as the would-be playwright and full-time fuck-up who resorts to lies, denial, and self-loathing to contend with her depressive brother (Philip Seymour Hoffman, outstanding again) and her gaga father.
But what about the spunky, sharp-tongued, and above all hip 16-year-old title heroine played by Ellen Page in
Juno
? Isn’t she a model of female independence? Sure, if you think it’s “hip” and independent for a 16 year old to destroy her life and those around her by having unprotected sex, getting pregnant, and not getting an abortion. (I could go on at length about the hypocrisies and phoniness of this movie and its hype — and I have.) Nonetheless, she’ll be nominated for best actress, as will the film itself for best picture.
Whenever the women in this year’s crop of female Oscar probables do show any independence or act for themselves, they’re usually playing a man, like Cate Blanchett as one of the incarnations of Bob Dylan in
I’m Not There
. Otherwise, the female characters’ actions are passive-aggressive or indirect or born out of ignorance and invariably invoke catastrophe. As with Amy Ryan’s slutty, irresponsible mother in
Gone Baby Gone
. Or
Atonement
’s 13-year-old Briony, played by the uncanny Saoirse Ronan, whose misapprehensions and fabulation ultimately lead to, it is suggested, the disaster of Dunkirk.
Will there be no Atonement?
Atonement — that’s something missing in this list of nominees. Not just the lushly produced, elegant, and inert adaptation of Ian McEwan’s novel, but any reference to the spiritual process itself. The Foreign Press and the Golden Globes might have awarded the film with “Best Motion Picture — Drama,” but Americans — critics and audiences alike — never warmed to the movie.
Nor did audiences flock to
The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
, though critics (myself included) loved it. Its hero, far from being Shiva the God of Death, is one of his victims, totally paralyzed and struggling to communicate with the world. How very 1989, when Daniel Day-Lewis in My Left Foot and Tom Cruise in Born on the Fourth of July battled it out for best actor as disabled heroes.
Well, maybe next year. Meanwhile, Julian Schnabel should get a best-directing slot for Diving Bell; after all, he’s an artist, and we know how demonic they are. Otherwise, the notion of redemption through art or suffering these days seems a lot less relevant, exciting, and award-worthy than the vicarious thrills of destruction, despair, and damnation.
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Peter Keough's Outside the Frame: //www.thephoenix.com/outsidetheframe