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The Girlfriend Experience
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The Sexual Interface
TV series that attempt to either remake or re-imagine
popular movies are a dicey proposition. Sometimes, the tele-version gets just
far enough away from the original – without entirely losing its overall flavour
– to work; that was the case with the Coens’ Fargo (1995) and the (so far) four-season series it has spawned.
At other times, the mission seems doomed from the
start: who even remembers Agnieszka Holland’s dismal, two-part rendition of Rosemary’s Baby (2014) in the shadow of Roman
Polanski’s 1968 masterpiece? Todd Haynes played the game smarter when he signed on for the five-part Mildred Pierce in 2011; the 1945 movie
version starring Joan Crawford was not so well known by then, and he also had
the alibi of revisiting, in greater detail, the 1941 source novel by James M.
Cain.
So-called art cinema is not immune from the lure of
such remaking for the small screen. Marco Bellocchio is in the process of
redoing Good Morning, Night (2003), his stunning
film about the 1978 kidnapping of Italian politician Aldo Moro by the Red
Brigades, as a series titled Exterior,
Night – but at least he plans to retell the tale from an entirely different
set of historical perspectives. As for the announcement that Olivier Assayas intends
to foist an Irma Vep series (based on
his 1996 film) upon
us, I cannot help but fret that it will be closer to a pale rerun of Call My Agent! (Dix pour cent, 2015- ) than the spirit of the Nouvelle Vague.
One case study, however, can begin from a statement of
absolute certainty: any season of The
Girlfriend Experience that you care to sample is far better than the rather
grubby 2009 film of the same title. The auteur of that shocker, Steven
Soderbergh, serves as executive producer on the three seasons, to date, of the
series. He had the excellent idea of handing over the writer-director reins to
up-and-coming figures: Amy Seimetz, Lodge Kerrigan and Anja Marquardt.
To be fair, the entire series spins out, thematically,
from the kernel provided by Soderbergh’s original movie. In our strange, modern
world, prostitution (even at its most expensive, high-class level) is no longer
simply about the exchange of money for sex. The girlfriend experience (no sign
yet of a boyfriend experience spin-off) is something weirder and more
complicated: transactional relationships (as they are named in season 1) that satisfy intimate and intense needs on
various levels, while maintaining a non-committal, strictly professional distance.
As a transaction that turns out to be mighty hard to define
or control, the type of escort arrangement we see in both the film and the
subsequent TV series also runs the risk of every kind of menace and betrayal.
That’s the somewhat attenuated thriller side of this narrative concept – especially
when the clients (male and female) include politicians, big business tycoons,
lawyers and media celebrities.
Like many a film noir, The Girlfriend Experiences hinges on knife-edge dilemmas of trust
and mistrust, the keeping or divulging of dark secrets. As a result, part of
season 2’s plot involves a witness protection program – but even that comes
undone under the force of ambiguous sexual desire.
Ultimately, The
Girlfriend Experience aims for something bigger than simply a sleek,
neo-noir variation on an old, generic formula. Its central topic is alienation. Not in the sense of Bertolt
Brecht’s famous alienation-effect in the theatre, or the more recent radical
idea (in Xenofeminist manifestos, for instance) that to feel alienated from
society is most likely the best way to be! Both of those concepts give a
positive spin to the idea of exclusion – since it enables a healthy, critical
distance from the norm.
No, Soderbergh and his collaborators return to the
aura of 1960s film classics such as Michelangelo Antonioni’s The Red Desert (1964), Polanski’s Repulsion (1965), Luis Buñuel’s Belle de jour (1967), Robert Rossen’s Lilith (1964)
and Alfred Hitchcock’s Marnie (1964) in
order to probe a sticky, disquieting yet sensual sentiment of overall dissociation: a state in which the mind
and the body, the heart and the head, self-centred pleasure and other-directed
altruism, are never quite in alignment.
This confusing experience of alienation has only
become more complicated in the digital age. What the visionary British critic
Raymond Durgnat once diagnosed as the zeitgeisty “skin games” depicted in ‘60s
movies have now moved into the realms of text messaging, virtual reality, deep
fakes and other technologies showcased in the three seasons of The Girlfriend Experience.
As contemporary films from Michael Haneke’s The Piano Teacher (2001) to Julia Leigh’s Sleeping Beauty (2011) have shown, our
seemingly liberated or permissive 21st century society has created a
difficult-to-manoeuvre space in which once-cloistered pornographic
representations often model our everyday urges – and in which women,
especially, find themselves oscillating between the extreme poles of
empowerment and disempowerment, even victimhood.
As a TV project, The
Girlfriend Experience does not follow the same plot premise from season to
season.
The first season in 2016, handled collaboratively by
Seimetz and Kerrigan, tells the story of Christine (Riley Keough), a law
student supporting her academic pursuits through escort work. Like all the
seasons, it places the heroine inside a shadowy, cryptic network of employers,
best friends and assistants – a network that can fray apart at any moment. And
the once-restrained pictorial vision of Antonioni in the ‘60s, with its precise
architectural vistas and cold domestic interiors, has been expanded to include
an entire, oppressive environment of glass and neon, elevators and mobile
phones – all rendered in cool, monochromatic tones and set to the beat of an
indifferently bubbling techno music score by a team including Shane Carruth
(whose general collaboration with Seimetz later came to a dramatic,
much-publicised ending).
Both the writer-directors here were obviously chosen
on the basis of their previous feature work: Seimetz’s Sun Don’t Shine (2012) and, even more forcibly, Kerrigan’s Claire Dolan (1998) had already staked
out various zones of modern alienation. Indeed, virtually Kerrigan’s entire
film career, including the portraits of mentally disturbed men in Clean, Shaven (1994) and Keane (2004), has paid obsessive and
frequently poetic attention to states of acute dissociation.
Season 2 in 2017 launched a daring bifurcation:
Seimetz and Kerrigan took responsibility for entirely separate storylines,
which were then alternated week by week. Where Kerrigan’s half (starring Anna
Friel) delved into political and corporate power games in the style of the
first season, Seimetz’s contribution (starring Carmen Ejogo, with a surprising
role for Harmony Korine) struck out in bolder, more jagged directions that
anticipate her 2020 feature, She Dies
Tomorrow. I’ll give nothing away, but the ending of Seimetz’s strand is
especially unsettling.
Season 3, premiered in May on Starz, goes somewhere
else again. Anja Marquardt is known for her debut German feature, She’s Lost Control (2014), the story of
a female sexual surrogate and her therapeutic practice – another form of
transactional relationship. For her turn at the helm of The Girlfriend Experience, Marquardt provides an extraordinarily
complex mosaic of factors – posing the Big Question, until the last of the 10
episodes, as to how these factors will precisely interrelate.
Iris (Julia Goldani Telles) is a highly paid escort
for the enigmatic ‘V’ company and, simultaneously, a neuroscientist looking for
work in a tech start-up enterprise. In the former sphere of her life she is
adept at reading the emotional signals of male clients – while usually playing
a role of her own contrivance and sporting a colourful range of aliases, wigs
and accents, a little in the manner of Tippi Hedren as Marnie. Telles is
perfectly cast for this role: she can turn on a dime between spaced-out vacuity
and piercing-gaze lucidity.
In the tech sphere, Iris is part of a vast team
working on a grand Artificial Intelligence scheme: the creation of an entity
that can understand, predict and deliver on an individual’s innermost wishes.
Her dangerous, border-crossing move is to secretly record her escort sessions
in order to feed them, just as secretly, as data into the AI research.
The power-game thriller aspect of the series ticks
over well, if a bit repetitively, across the first six of ten episodes. There
are the suspect presences of several best friends (one in the escort business
and the other at the tech company), high-profile clients with access to Eyes Wide Shut-type aristocratic orgies decked out with
digital devices, and ominous figures following Iris wherever she goes.
When Iris’ sneaky, double-dealing plan goes south, the
power balance between the various characters shifts in unexpected ways.
Meanwhile, there’s a lot of solemn talk concerning identity, individuality, avatars,
algorithms, the shuffle function on devices that “keep us wanting more”, perfection,
flaws, mirror neurons, and erotic desire: “The object of desire is a foil”, we
are cryptically informed (intriguingly, the sex scenes here are presented far
more discreetly than in previous seasons).
In the opening episode, a particularly bold stylistic
ploy brings these highfalutin matters to life: for quite a long while, voices
and thoughts are disconcertingly split from the mouths and faces that utter or
contain them. There is also a spectacular “chicken run” incident that scrambles
our unfolding sense of reality/fantasy levels: those sudden transitional cuts
that deposit you in another situation altogether, with no explanation of how we
got to here from there … the modern culture of dissociation loves this matter-of-factly
spaced-out technique.
Marquardt has, however, an ace up her sleeve: Iris’
father (played by Charles Edwards) is suffering from early-onset Alzheimer’s,
and it may be the case that both her and her sister are in line to suffer the
same. At this point, The Girlfriend
Experience enters a veritable neural network with a bunch of
contemporaneous films including Natalie Erika James’ impressive Relic (2020), Sally Potter’s odd The Roads Not Taken (2020) and the Canadian horror movie Flashback (aka The Education of Fredrick Fitzell, 2020).
What we are witnessing across this network is a wild,
collective speculation on the possible intersection of dementia, multiverses,
digital “second worlds”, reincarnation, and Black
Mirror-style cautionary fables about algorithmic projections. (Hervé Le
Tellier’s 2020 novel The Anomaly has
already whipped this network into an amusingly self-conscious, Calvino-esque
loop.)
I love the turnaround moment in some contemporary
horror-thrillers – I believe the underrated The
Entity (1982) was the first to do it – when the action happening nominally
in reality (such as the haunting of a house) is strategically shifted to an
artificial laboratory setting, so that the re-enactment or restaging of psychic
and supernatural trauma can be scientifically documented and studied under
proper conditions. This is exactly what happens in The Girlfriend Experience, too, once Iris agrees to have sex with
specifically selected subjects – while all participants are wired up to a bank
of monitoring computers. Iris’ alarm eventually goes off in her head: will she
become, finally, just a ghost in the machine? It’s another variation – this
time in the mode of science-fiction melodrama – of the losing-control dilemma.
As you may be able to tell by now, Marquardt’s season
of The Girlfriend Experience takes
some sharp left turns and covers quite a bit of ground. Ultimately (no spoilers
here) the philosophical core of humanity, according to this fanciful drama, may
not turn out to be libido, after all. Maybe Freud was wrong. Is the essence of
individuality something else, entirely? Something like … memory? And memory’s
preservation, its archiving, beyond the existence of the individual who
remembers? (Memory-curators are sure to become the next set of villains in this
unfolding genre.)
Yet this musing, too, opens onto another plateau of
fantasy: immortality, now, means to (somehow) never disappear or be forgotten,
to never deteriorate. (The Roads Not
Taken also takes up this particular chant – which always seems to be the symptom
of, or compensation for, something else left unspoken. Human mortality and
perishability – not to mention the darn unreliability of digital back-ups –proves
to be still such a bummer!)
All this in The
Girlfriend Experience amounts to a reflection for a world that may consider
itself post-psychoanalytic (Isabel Millar’s Lacanian-flavoured The Psychoanalysis of Artificial
Intelligence [2021] should be required reading), but has yet to trace a
clear or meaningful path through the increasingly dissociated sensations coming
at us both from within our brains and bodies, and from complex, external
stimuli. It’s all an interface problem.
By plumbing the depths (and surfaces) of modern
alienation, the three seasons of The
Girlfriend Experience place us right inside the mystery of that interface.
© Adrian Martin 28 June 2021 |