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Some Like It Hot
by Lauren Kaminsky
9 Songs
Dir. Michael Winterbottom, U.K., Tartan Films
Not since Deep Throat
have we had real porn that passed as a date movie.
The proof is in the venue: while an art-house
cinema is safe for hand-holding, a porn theater
is not. 9 Songs is one of the most sexually
explicit films to play in mainstream theaters
the world over, albeit with limited distribution—the
inevitable triple-X ratings it will receive here
and there will be indispensable free publicity.
It will go the “unrated” route in the U.S. this
summer, like Vincent Gallo’s Brown Bunny,
and it is destined to invoke tepid praise for
its bravery—the euphemism of choice for Chloë
Sevigny’s performance in Bunny. 9 Songs
is indeed brave, but for reasons unrelated to
cocksucking. This is a film that dares to take
the demands of the genre seriously, even if the
result stays firmly within the realm of pornography.
To follow through on the schizophrenic demands
of art-porn is to tread on a mine field of disappointed
expectations. But 9 Songs fearlessly soldiers
on, without pretensions to be something it isn’t,
and with such unapologetic frankness that even
its pitfalls deserve generosity. Happily, it has
its successes too.
With this economical DV portrait of a relationship
through sex—structured around nine songs performed
live—genre-hopping director Michael Winterbottom
adds another notch to his already impressive bedpost.
Winterbottom has a 14 feature-film oeuvre (plus
one in post-production) comprised of romance,
science fiction, war drama, costume drama, comedy,
and various combinations thereof. Clearly, this
is a director with commitment issues when it comes
to genre, maybe even a collector who wants the
satisfaction of exotic conquests. Whatever the
motivation, make no mistake about his intent:
this really is a portrait of a relationship only
through sex. From the first seconds of the film,
we are acquainted with Lisa (Margo Stilley) only
through her skin and her smell, which is how Matt
(Kieran O’Brien) remembers his former lover as
he flies over the barren Antarctic. He may have
loved her mind as well—the film doesn’t rule out
a deep emotional or intellectual connection—but
that’s not our concern. Later, we’ll find out
that Matt is some sort of researcher of Antarctic
ice, but who cares? The point is that he’s alone
among the vast frozen whiteness, a stunning visual
contrast to the close-up of sweaty sex we cut
to after all of 30 seconds.
A generation ago, pioneers of graphic cinematic
sex fought the good fight with films like Last
Tango in Paris (1972) and In the Realm
of the Senses (1976), a war that the libertines
clearly won. The sexual revolution—and the second-wave
feminism that provoked it—were imperfect, incomplete
historical struggles from which we continue to
reap the benefits, including a democratic feeling
of entitlement to individual sexual satisfaction.
Opponents of this individualistic whatever-floats-your-boat
ethos come from the right on the grounds of obscenity,
and from the left on the grounds of exploitation.
The right-wingers want to keep porn taboo for
the sake of impressionable women and children
who need to be protected from nipples; whereas
lefty anti-porn feminists (such as the late great
Andrea Dworkin) persecute porn to prevent the
sexual exploitation of vulnerable women and children.
Either way, women get screwed: With all of this
well-intentioned protection, neither opponent
of porn leaves much room for female desire. This
undoubtedly explains why it is so unpopular to
be anti-porn today; to disagree is to belong to
some ancient pre-postmodernism generation. Individual
sexual satisfaction is sacred, and there have
never been more socially acceptable ways to float
your boat.
Lisa clearly comes from this generation of sexually-empowered
post-feminist females; Matt is just old enough
to find it novel. Like Natalie Portman’s character
Alice in Mike Nichols’s Closer, Lisa is
a young American woman who escapes herself in
London and finds an English boyfriend with whom
to play house. The morning after what might be
their first night together, which began at a rock
concert at London’s Brixton Academy, Lisa gets
up early and makes a lame excuse to leave. A following
morning, he tries to make her breakfast, but she
insists that he pay attention to her instead,
sounding like a spoiled child. She seduces him
with “fuck me” vulgarism so rehearsed that you
can practically hear the quotation marks. The
scene is saved from triteness when Matt takes
over, moving her into the living room for oral
sex just below a photo of what appears to be Mohammad
Ali, accompanied by classical piano. The dappled
sunlight from an adjacent window combined with
a shot so close that we can see the pores and
imperfections in their skin makes the scene terribly
intimate and minimalist and sexy.
“Coffee?” she jumps up and says as soon as they’re
finished, leaving Matt crouched in a post-coital
fog. This shorthand is sufficient: Lisa takes
sex lightly, she gets what she came for—it’s all
just a game. The scenes that follow show her playing
in various states of undress, whether posing like
a cherub on the table, mugging in the bathroom
mirror, or snorting coke and dancing around the
apartment. We see her as Matt sees her, with amusement
laced with condescension. She is 21 and charming,
with the careless egotism of someone not living
her days in earnest, a trait often found in study-abroad
students intoxicated by the possibility of aping
lives they wouldn’t know the first thing about
living. Lisa lists the men she’s had from Colombia,
Brazil, Germany, and so on—what better souvenir
of worldliness and sexual maturity? Her evident
pride is pathetic; “How romantic,” Matt replies.
He may be romantic, but he’s also cunning enough
to keep his more tender thoughts to himself—or,
rather, to the past-tense voiceover that accompanies
much of the film. During an autumn weekend at
the seashore, he strips and runs into what looks
like freezing water, then turns to shout “I love
you!” back at Lisa on the beach. He may be in
danger of hypothermia or arrest, but he gambles
on the distance that makes it safe enough for
her to shout back, “I love you, too!”
These supposed confessions seem as self-consciously
borrowed from the anonymous arsenal of romance
as their bourgeois kink in the bedroom, which
gets no more naughty than stockings, stilettos,
and massage oil from The Body Shop. Maybe they
love each other, maybe they don’t. Neither Lisa
nor Matt seem terribly concerned with such anti-aphrodisiacs
as commitment and responsibility, but just because
we don’t see it doesn’t mean that it doesn’t exist.
Maybe they have fascinatingly complex emotional
hang-ups just waiting to be mined by pop psychology—and
maybe it’s none of our business. Our limited knowledge
of these characters is perfectly in line with
our relationship to them: exhibitionists are rarely
eager to impress you with their psychological
depth, and there’s only so much we can learn about
people by looking through their keyholes.
It is precisely this disregard for the internal
lives of our heroes that makes the sex between
them truly sexy. If we were privy to their insecurities,
then as voyeurs we would carry the burden of that
knowledge into the sex scenes, and while that
is good strategy for character development, it
isn’t erotic. 9 Songs wisely sacrifices
the former for the latter, ignoring the knee-jerk
compulsion to cover up eroticism with psychological
characterization in order to justify explicit
sex and make it respectable. This reflects an
insidious trend in contemporary film toward conflating
a film’s worth with its characters’ likeability,
in hopes that deep characters make the film deep
too. Whether or not we “like” Lisa and Matt is
totally irrelevant to whether or not we can believe
them as sexual partners who are authentic and
human and hot. Pornography requires an absence
of emotion in order to make room for us to project
whatever we want onto to the film. And this is
what Winterbottom does right where so many other
attempts at art porn fall flat: when you’re watching
sex in this film, you’re not thinking about anything
but sex.
Watching pornography in a dark room filled with
strangers carried a peculiar thrill; if at all
possible, see this film in a theater. The effect
on DVD is different, since nowadays we’re used
to porn being something enjoyed at home. Attending
a public screening of 9 Songs is a lot
like being at a concert, surrounded by strangers
enjoying the same private pleasure, a social activity
that feels simultaneously cultural and sexually
charged. It is precisely this erotic energy of
rock concerts that Winterbottom successfully taps
into by structuring his film around nine live
performances—including Franz Ferdinand, the Dandy
Warhols, and Primal Scream—all of which are so
compellingly shot from the bosom of the audience
that they feel every bit as sexy as the actual
explicit sex. This is the film’s greatest achievement:
by avoiding the temptation to pass off smut as
respectable art, 9 Songs is so saturated
with sex that even the odd, fully-clothed scene
feels illicitly, enticingly pornographic. |