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Bite Me
Neal Block on The Company of Wolves
Precisely
once during Neil Jordan’s sylvan pseudo-fairy-tale-period-piece
near-genre film The Company of Wolves,
the director throws in a bit of standard
monster-movie horror business in an attempt
to either lend a truly frightening visual
aspect to a film whose scares mainly hit
you in the bottom of your stomach around
two days later, or to compete with a string
of other, more standard werewolf films that
had been released around the same time in
the early Eighties. Whatever Jordan’s reasoning,
it doesn’t work.
Jordan, who had been a horror writer prior to directing this film (his second), inserts a series of wholly incongruous FX-based werewolf transformation shots into a scene that was doing just fine on atmosphere alone, and the effect is laughably admirable. A man returns to the wife he left on their wedding night, wandering back into the house
bedraggled and distraught, years later, to find his bride a remarried mother. His anger turns physical, and his face begins to slowly fall apart in a terrible plastic Dali nightmare that makes Jeff Goldblum’s final Fly transformation seem like children’s programming. The apple-red blood and sinew, the stop-motion skin-peel, the jerky facial reconstruction of his transformation into a werewolf all scream “Trying too hard!” in a film which otherwise trades in understatement and tends to avoid drawing obvious conclusions for its audience. Upon second viewing, it feels like a studio add-in for a product that maybe was deemed too obtuse for popular viewing. Yet it succeeds in highlighting both the successes and the faults of this highly ambitious and meticulously detailed production, one of the more interesting but least remembered chapters of the early Eighties boom in werewolf movies, which included, among lesser titles, An American Werewolf in London, The Howling, and Wolfen.
Deep in the woods, the aforementioned husband, his wife moaning for defloration on the palette bed in the rear of their cabin, suddenly walks out into the garden to urinate, leaving the woman confused and upset. Wolves encircle him in the front of the house;
he never returns to finish his newlywed duties, and his wife remains unfulfilled for years. This delaying of pleasure and of womanly transformation is at the heart of Jordan’s film, a parable (really, a lengthy series of short parables) that reimagines Little Red Riding Hood as a tale closer to its grim origins. Based on and clearly drawing its deepest influences from the stories of Angela Carter, whose feminist-horror symbology was an inspired if not completely functional partner to Jordan’s rich visual direction, The Company of Wolves pits its central teenaged character Rosaleen against the dangers of her own burgeoning womanhood, represented here by man/wolves who, according to her grandmother (Angela Lansbury), are “hairy on the inside.”
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Rosaleen
begins her journey in bed, upstairs in her
room at home, her older sister knocking
repeatedly on the door (on the other side
of which hangs a stark, lily-white dress),
while Rosaleen herself is fast asleep and
dreaming. Her sister is being chased by
wolves, followed through the woods, until
she’s caught, leapt upon, ripped apart,
devoured. Death dream transposes itself
onto Rosaleen’s reality; shortly we’re soaring
out of her bedroom window into the darkness
beyond it, into the woods. At this point
the film becomes a series of bedtime stories,
as this is all essentially a dream (but
not in that clichéd “it was aaaaall a dreeeaaaam”
way). Grandma spins tales, gives warnings,
instructs her pubescent charge to take note
of her surroundings, to never stray from
the path, and to be wary of men whose eyebrows
meet (in lycanthropic lore, a sure sign
of a werewolf). With this advice, which
Rosaleen both adheres to and ignores, the
girl begins her transformation from childhood
to adulthood, and Jordan rarely lets you
forget how monumental a change this is,
for Rosaleen, for Angela Carter, clearly,
and even for Jordan himself, hardly a teenaged
girl but respectful enough of his main character
to never underestimate her.
The majority of the film is a laundry list
of Freudian symbolism, including but not
limited to the color red representing, Sixth
Sense-style, blood, death, danger, and,
non-M.Nightly, menstruation; the shattering
of childhood toys; lipstick and a mirror
found in a bird’s nest; Terence Stamp as
the devil, chauffeured in a white limousine
by driver Rosaleen in a blonde wig, staring
wistfully into the eye-sockets of the miniature
skull he’s holding; and Rosaleen’s relationships
with males, both the childlike playtime
with an unnamed boy, and the dangerous,
violent kiss from a man whose eyebrows meet,
a man who kills her grandmother and encourages
Rosaleen to throw her protective red shawl
into the fire, as she won’t be needing it
anymore.
At times, the symbolism Jordan foists upon
you is like a giant Acme-brand mallet, poised
above you ready to strike as you zip by
underneath. Some of it is eye-rollingly
obvious; some abstract to the point of incomprehension.
At the end of the film, when a lone wolf
runs from the woods and jumps through Rosaleen’s
real waking-life bedroom window, destroying
her toys and shattering the dream-world
of the film, you suspect that a smart assistant,
when Jordan perhaps said something along
the lines of “We should have the wolf run
from the girl’s bedroom with the girl’s
lily-white dress clasped, shredded, between
his teeth,” said “Um, maybe, Mr. Jordan,
um, maybe that’s just a little too much.
Eh?” Thankfully the boldness of this imaginary
assistant, or the critical mind of Mr. Jordan,
basically prevents any serious lines from
being crossed, though they may be toed all
too frequently. The result is a werewolf
film that’s not really a werewolf film at
all; certainly not in the way that its early-Eighties
predecessors were, avoiding horror for a
more clinical observation of the myth and
its repercussions.
A recent touchstone for the adolescence/adulthood
theme that Jordan and Carter explored is
Ginger Snaps, a snappy goth-inflected
werewolf story that finds its main character
approaching the late onset of menstruation
while simultaneously turning into a wolf.
The story turns Jordan’s on its ear by representing
the female as wolf—something that, despite
the strength and wiliness of Rosaleen, The
Company of Wolves could scarcely imagine.
Both films demonstrate the untapped depths
of contemporary fairy tales and fables and
myths for cinematic exploration, and while
it would be difficult to claim that The
Company of Wolves is an exceedingly
important entry into Jordan’s oeuvre, it’s
not a stretch to claim it as one of the
cornerstones of recent werewolf movies,
a challenge both artistically and intellectually.
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