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Mozart In Love
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Love in Quotes
Mark
Rappaport has always enjoyed inhabiting other people’s autobiographies –
partly, no doubt, as he makes clear in his Mark
Rappaport: The TV Spin-Off (1980), to avoid having
to parade his own.
In
the 1990s, he was celebrated for his imagined self-portraits of Rock Hudson (Rock Hudson’s Home Movies, 1992) and
Jean Seberg (From the Journals of Jean Seberg, 1995), works that
mixed acted monologues with video technology effects.
In
2013, similarly styled evocations of the lives and times of showbiz celebrities
including Greta Garbo and Alfred Hitchcock filled his self-published collection (F)au(x)tobiographies – a follow-up to his The Moviegoer Who
Knew Too Much (2012, French edition 2008), which assembled essays he has
written since 2001 for magazines including Rouge, Film Quarterly, Cinéma, Heat and Trafic.
But
this line of investigation began much earlier in Rappaport’s career. Mozart in Love (1975, USA), his second
feature – in the remarkable string of off-beat, experimental narratives that
runs from Casual Relations (1974) to Chain Letters (1985) – takes off from
the deliberate anachronism of using modern props, performance styles and
attitudes to evoke the 18th century, romantic entanglements of the
young Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Rich La Bonte) with
three sisters, Constanza (Margot Breier),
Sophie (Sasha Nanus) and Louisa (Sissy Smith).
We
enter Mozart’s mind – he is fond of making grandiloquent statements like “music
is all, love is all” – and the minds of each woman, in turn.
The
film traces itself out like a diagram. Mozart falls for the eldest sister,
Louisa, but she does not love him back. The youngest one, Sophie, loves Mozart,
but this is a further instance of unreciprocated longing. The prodigious
composer ends up settling for the middle sister, Constanza.
The
rivalry, intended or inevitable, among the women leads first to separations and
later to reunions – but both the freeze-out and the reconciliation are
presented to us as weird tableaux of “acting out”, people unconsciously seeking
and taking up their roles in an age-old, pre-written tale.
They
suffer nobly, love honourably, die beautifully. Or, at
least, they think they do, in their
heads – and in the exterior projection of those mental images that Rappaport so
ironically and bitingly devises.
The
writing here – and the speaking of lines (mainly in voice-over) by actors – has
a unique quality. As always in Rappaport’s work, whatever the medium, the voice is both
singular (no one but him could have scripted it), and a cultural patchwork: his
characters express themselves in a confessional stream of consciousness that
evokes, all at once, classic Hollywood clichés, the self-help jive of therapy
television, and the thousand and one, convoluted justifications that arise from
an intellectual, cultivated milieu (so there’s even an occasional Woody Allen
echo in there).
The
self does not exist; it is an illusion, a construction, a weave from what
Roland Barthes once called the “innumerable centres of culture”. Rappaport’s
feature films of this period simultaneously evoke and undercut appeals to our
emotional response: they show how easy it is to get sucked into sentimental
clichés, while providing numerous doorways out of the trap.
The
melodramatic plot of rejection, pining and sacrifice in Mozart in Love may have its basis in reality, but everything else
is strictly stylised. (Rappaport, for instance, edits out a fourth sister,
Josepha, from the real-life story of the Weber family.) From his early shorts,
such as Mur 19 (1966) and Blue Streak (1971), Rappaport followed
his temperamental (as well as theoretical and artistic) aversion to any kind of
realism in cinema. In the case of Mozart
in Love (which has been restored thanks to the efforts of George Eastman
House), two historical periods – now and then – mutually alienate each other
and make everything strange.
Time-markers
of the 1970s – a stroll down a New York street, a drive in a car, a meeting in
a café – come to look just as odd as all the wigs, masks, costumes and exotic
backdrops that, in their mix-and-match combinations, signify the past.
In
the ‘70s, Rappaport developed a barrage of anti-realist techniques that he
refined from piece to piece. Filming most interiors in his own, New York loft
of the period (he has since taken up residence in Paris), he strips the
pictorial elements down to their essentials: a wall painted with one primary
colour (sky blue, lime green, pink), or covered in a decorative paper pattern; actors
in mainly static poses, occasionally breaking to reconfigure their arrangement,
shift the direction of their gaze, or produce a Brechtian-style
gesture. Above all, there is the use of blown-up photographs or projected,
moving images as backdrops, sometimes more eye-catching than the performers
themselves: elements of nature, like water or clouds, otherwise completely
banished from the artifice of the loft-set, make their sly appearance, between
quotations marks as it were, here.
The
camera position in these interiors is almost always frontal, theatrical;
Rappaport prefers the distance of wide, group shots and two-shots over
individual close-ups, and largely eschews editing for the sake of sustaining his
tableaux in long takes. (In an on-set report about Imposters for American Film by Jonathan Rosenbaum in 1979, available here,
Rappaport declared: “Since Casual Relations,
I use as little editing as possible, because I know the more you can get a
scene to work with the least editing, the more you’re really in control of the
situation.”)
The
images, like the verbalisations offered on the soundtrack, are also artful
collages woven from all over: Egyptian pyramids clash with a Fred
Astaire-trademarked top hat and tails – and the three sisters wear T-shirts
emblazoned with (respectively) a heart, a star, and lips with a cigarette
dangling.
One
might not imagine, from what I have said so far, that Mozart in Love is, predominantly, a film comprised of musical
performances. In this respect, it is unlike anything else Rappaport has made. Mostly
Mozart arias (selections from The
Abduction from the Seraglio, Cosi Fan Tutte, Don
Giovanni, The Magic Flute and The Marriage of Figaro), plus a little
Berlioz and Gluck thrown in for good measure – not to mention a delicious blast
of “Two Little Girls From Little Rock” from Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953).
Perhaps
influenced by the example of Jean-Marie Straub & Daničle Huillet’s The Chronicle
of Anna Magdalena Bach (1968), the arias are given to us in long, often
complete chunks – and then separated by short bursts of voice-over musing. The
film gives over so much time and space to this music not only for its inherent
pleasure as spectacle, but also because, on diverse levels, the lyrics seem to
have both emerged from Mozart’s personal experience with the three Weber
sisters (at times providing very lightly veiled re-enactments of autobiographical
material), and also now provide an excellent, further level of ironic
commentary upon how Mozart (and the culture around him) conceived of love,
marriage, sisterhood, and so on.
But
the musical performances, too, are made strange. In the first place, by being
mimed – and Rappaport shows us both a 12” vinyl record (label name: Angel)
being played, and an opening montage of the actors diligently rehearsing to
playback provided via humble tape recorders. In the second place – and more
decisively – with this playback frequently interrupted and replaced by the raw
audio track of real, untrained singing; a tactic that anticipates Werner Schroeter’s goading of Isabelle Huppert into trying her
hand at an aria in the recording studio during the making of his own,
remarkable, avant-garde tribute to opera, Love's Debris (1996). (Aside: although few names in the credits of Mozart in Love reappear in subsequent
movies, “live sound” guy Lawrence Loewinger has enjoyed a distinguished film and TV career working for Spike Lee and Abel
Ferrara, among many others.)
Rosenbaum
described Mozart in Love in 1979 as “virtually an equivalent to a guided gallery tour of
singing paintings” – but there is more going on than simply a Peter
Greenaway-style cinematisation of High Art icons. The
film belongs to a lively family of American works that pre-date the official
rise of indie cinema and its commercial networks that began with Jim Jarmusch’s Stranger Than Paradise (1984). Peter Wollen and other commentators in the art journal October in the early ‘80s called this pre-indie movement the New Talkies – partly
because so many words (and so much in voice-over) were usually involved.
Filmmakers including Rappaport, Yvonne Rainer, Babette Mangolte, Jon Jost, Michael Oblowitz, Chantal Akerman (in News from
Home, 1976), James Benning and (from an earlier
generation) Michael Snow all worked with extremely low budgets and made pieces
that were deceptively minimalistic: in the best cases, the films crackled with
ideas, provocations, and new ways of combining images, sounds, performances and
fragments of fiction. Their approach found comrades in many cinematic
undergrounds across the world.
Some of these films, frequently at feature (sometimes very long
feature) length, tended to fall – and this is especially true of Rappaport –
into what Rosenbaum (in his invaluable book Film:
The Front Line 1983) called “that dreaded no man’s land between the
avant-garde and the mainstream”. Later, in the post ’84 age of the indie (which
still reigns, more or less, today), certain strands of experiment were gingerly
retained – Hal Hartley’s droll style, for instance, seems to owe much to
Rappaport’s cool moves – but the full import of what was previously at stake was
largely lost.
This is what I mean. All the New Talkies were heavily marked, not
only by the oppositional, Marxist, feminist and queer politics of the 1960s and
‘70s, but also by the intellectual rise of semiotic and psychoanalytic theories.
Everything once deemed natural or commonsensical – from gender/sex roles and
the capitalist economy, to inner, subjective emotions and language itself – had
to be dismantled.
The heady mix of avant-garde technique and revolutionary theory
offered, for a brief but busy time, the best way to implement this program. But,
beyond the sometimes laborious or mechanical way that such theories were
applied to filmmaking, the combo of ideas and experimentation regularly
produced works that were funny, funky, challenging and durable.
Talk of the subject-in-process – the individual character (or
spectator) shifted through multiple identifications and positions, never
settling into merely one, conventional identity – was all the rage back then; but
the need for such a radical and fundamental shake-up has not disappeared with
the ebbing of a particular intellectual-cultural fashion or era. Many of these
films now await rediscovery.
To some viewers unfamiliar with this historical context, and the
rich intertext of films it produced, Mozart in Love may seem like a
communiqué from an ancient, distant, quite alien planet. Why such irony, such
mockery, such ambivalent love/hate for everything that opera (and romantic
cinema, literature or art in general) has bequeathed to us?
In the career of Mark Rappaport (and he has remained true to
this impulse since the 1960s), the diverse elements and levels – distaste for realism,
love of artifice, and that deconstructive, anti-ideological agenda – click
together with a rare vibrancy and aesthetic coherence. For him, the ideological myths
we internalise, the soap operas we live, have to be exposed and satirised –
just as the constructed illusion we call filmic realism has to be relentlessly
taken apart at every turn.
Fortunately
for us, Rappaport has been able to build something solid and lasting upon such
shifting sands of political and personal passion. Mozart in Love offers a handy checklist of the many acute, often
hilarious games of disenchantment devised by this ever-inventive artist.
© Adrian Martin January 2014 |