• "Scenes from a Marriage" 2021

    From septimus_millenicom@q.com@21:1/5 to All on Thu Mar 3 22:20:55 2022
    I waited in vain for the DVD of the HBO remake of
    _Scenes from a Marriage_ to come out. So streaming
    it is! It turns out to be amazingly well-structured
    and well-written, and the acting by Jessica Chastain
    is somehow even more stratospherically stunning than
    I have dared to imagine.

    A proper review should include a comparison with
    Ingmar Bergman's original miniseries. I have the
    Criterion DVD of the Bergman film, condensed from
    the TV series; one day I'll revisit it. I am still
    recovering from _Faithless_, the Liv Ullmann film
    shot from a Bergman script. It is a thinly disguised
    semi-autobiographical story about Bergman's own love
    life, the degradation and emotion torture that
    lovers like Bergman and his circle (film and theater
    directors, actresses) inflict on each other. It is
    well made, but the premise seems to be an excuse to
    unleash torture and humiliation on its characters.
    You can say humiliation is its main character. I
    will rely on the Wikipedia of the 1979 TV series
    summary to make a comparison.

    The 2021 "Scenes from a Marriage_ is refreshing
    because it seems to have substantially updated the
    characterizations. The gender roles are reversed,
    with the wife leaving the house-bound husband and
    the daughter. More significantly, they are given
    extremely interesting back-stories. I wonder if
    much of the credit doesn't go to the two Julliard
    School graduates Jessica Chastain and Oscar Isaac;
    Chastain in particular is famous for doing prodigious
    research to construct character histories.

    The story is set in snow-bound Boston, perhaps a
    nod to the Scandinavian source. Each episode begins
    with a break-the-fourth-wall segment that shows us
    actors entering the set, while the house exterior,
    shot on location elsewhere, also features prominently.
    The exception is the finale, where the artifice is
    highlighted at the end rather than the beginning,
    as if to lighten the mood. By then years have passed
    in the story, but winter never seems to recede.

    In episode 1 we meet Chastain's Myra, a corporate
    manager and one-time lady-of-action. She used to
    dance, do drugs in board rooms, date rock stars,
    but now appears stifled by husband Jonathan. She
    is uncertain about her pregnancy; we watch her
    emotional distress for an hour before learning
    about this physical change. (As we will find
    out, withholding critical information happens to
    be Myra's trademark.) With hardly any make-up,
    Chastain looks like the space-alien Yuk from
    _Dark Phoenix_, and is as much mysterious. In an
    ingenious bit of exposition also structured into
    Bergman's original, the episode starts with a
    student doing research on married couples.
    Through the interview, which the reticent Myra
    can barely sit through, we learn of her college
    friendship with Jonathan that has soft-landed
    into marriage. It has probably saved her life
    after her multiple failed relationships, but the
    unfortunate genesis sows the seed of its destruction.
    Her husband, a professor at Tuft University, is a
    gas-bag who confidently spews speeches at people.
    His eloquence is in stark contrast to Myra's halting
    sentences. We surmise that he seldom listens.


    Nevertheless, Jonathan tries to be sensitive and
    caring, and is especially close to the daugher.
    He must think highly of the marriage. When Myra
    returns from a business trip (she is always on
    travels) and announces she is moving in with her
    young lover Poti, he is blindsided, and tries to
    vernally bludgeon her into postponement. (In a
    miniseries with so many uncomfortable, naked
    conflicts, his behavior here may well be the most
    opressive.) Chastain give a heart-wrenching
    account of her desperate need to leave; her Myra
    alternates between tears and plantive cost-benefit
    analysis ("this is good for me"; "this is good for
    you"; but never "for us.") He tosses her aside to
    pack her suitcase in his ultra methodical way.
    It is telling that she is content to take off with
    a suitcase of randomly thrown-together designer
    clothes and high heels, while he is weighted down
    by the house, by his books, furniture, sundry
    belongings. Eventually he learns that his "friends"
    all know about her affair before he does. At
    last we see Isaac, who has coasted along stoically
    in too many recent films, show real anger.


    Episode 3 takes place months later. Myra has moved
    in with Poti. They have a child custody-sharing
    arrangement now. She returns to the house, physically
    transformed, dressed-to-kill, her lipstick blood-red.
    Her voice is now that of a corporate raider oily,
    melodic, cocksure. I have always pictured Chastain
    as Lady Jessica in _Dune_, and her natural, musical
    voice would have been the perfect model for the Bene
    Gesserit verbal persuasion trick! (Instead of the
    gutteral hissing used in all adaptations.) As usual
    Myra has something to hide. She seduces Jonathan and
    tries to convince him to move with her to London along
    with their daughter. Chastain gets to show off her
    calculating, manipulative side; indeed her character
    boasts that coworkers has complemented her for
    rediscovering the real Myra. The episode is also a
    showcase for Isaac, who discusses at length his strict
    Jewish upbringing (not in Bergman's original) and his
    sessions with his therapist (which was Liv Ullmann's
    thing). His admission of longing for Myra is
    shattering, even if one feels Jonathan is trading one
    modes of oratorial arrogance for another. It turns out
    he can keep secret too; Poti has texted him about
    his breakup with Myra and her London plan, sabotaging
    her element of surprise.

    Episode 4 is the climax. I'm a huge fan of Chastain
    and even I can't claim to have seen a performance of
    hers this mercurial. As he forces the divorce papers
    on her, she tries to engineer a reconciliation. She
    transforms from the take-charge manager in corporate
    armor to a pleading, pathetic child within an hour.
    Her make-up seems to slowly disappear in the darkened
    house too, regressing to the episode 1 look. Even her
    business attire is a farce; she has been fired after
    refusing the London promotion. When she reveals this
    latest failure -- the final collapse of her identity
    -- Jonathan cannot even bring himself to comfort her.
    The closest thing she has done in this vein might have
    been _Miss Julie_, which coincidentally was directed
    by Liv Ullmann! It is another career high for Chastain,
    another peak, signature performance. I still haven't
    recovered from that tour de force showcase. I probably
    never will.

    Episode 5 is a graceful epilogue which takes place
    another few years down the road. Improbably, the
    remarried Jonathan and the newly devoted mom Myra have
    partially reconciled and are having an affair. (This
    seems scarcely plausible after their cathartic, violent
    break-up, but this element is also in the Bergman
    original.) They revisit their Boston home, now sold
    and turned into an airbnb, and in the attic under the
    stars they wonder what might have been. The only
    complaint about the series is that the camera work
    and set design pale in comparison with those of Benoit
    Jacquot's _Suzanna Andler_, also adapted from a play.
    Chastain would be so utterly amazing as a Jacquot heroine!

    (for A.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)