VIRILITY RULES
By Nigel Andrews
From
Financial Times (London), 02.01.1992
The New Man, as we all know, is gentle, caring and Politically Correct. He helps
with the washing up and changes baby's nappies. He makes sure the goldfish has
fresh water, the dog has a good book and the cat is on a high-fibre vegetarian
diet. He croons his wife to sleep and then spends all night studying Dr
Spock.
We have to ask at this point: Where is the New Man in modern cinema? The film
heroes on video this month include Arnold Schwarzenegger stomping around futuristic
Los Angeles smashing everything and everyone in sight in
Terminator 2 (Guild);
Bruce Willis brawling and ladykilling across New
York and Europe in
Hudson Hawk (20:20); a whole lot of gun-toting blacks
blasting us out of our sofas in
New Jack City (Warner); and Gerard Depardieu
battering Isabelle Huppert into romantic submission in the French film
Loulou (Artificial
Eye).
Popular ideology likes the New Man. Popular entertainment loathes him. And video
culture may be part of the reason. With its stress on short-attention-span storytelling,
where every scene must pack a punch to keep the home viewer's finger off the
fast-forward button and his mind off the rival TV channels, video demands high-definition
heroes with no-nonsense virility.
The world sometimes makes penance for this by throwing charity money at a film
like
Dances With Wolves (Guild). But there is a deep and essential Jekyll-and-Hyde
duality in the simultaneous rise of the caring male in modern sociological fashion
and the Cro-Magnon super-hero in modern cinematic
fashion.
Indeed in today's movies the sensitive male must be surreal to be believed. He
must be the crazed, poetic, topiarising youth created by a mad scientist in
Edward
Scissorhands (Fox), where he is played by Johnny Depp in all-Gothic leather
as if he were Harpo Marx mugged by Kenneth Anger. Tim Burton's fantasia in small-town
America comes to us from the same
writer-director who gave us
Batman (Warners). In this, you recall, the
hero is a masked avenger by night (all-male superhero) and a home-loving fellow
by day (New Man), played by a Michael Keaton best-known previously for man-with-apron
roles like
Mr Mom.
In
Edward Scissorhands the New Man is a gentle, adorable freak. In period
guise he is much the same in Peter Medak's film of the Craig-Bentley case
Let
Him Have It (1st Independent), where Bentley is a sweetnatured fellow of
deprived IQ driven towards violence by his evil twin Craig. Medak builds a stylish,
moody picture of 1950s Britain in this true-life tale of travestied justice--Bentley
was hanged for a policeman's murder he neither committed nor probably abetted--and
he sharpens without caricaturing the contrast between the gangling, slow-witted
hero and his pintsize Mephistopheles pal.
As the sum of these films shows, the cinema has a wonderful counterbalancing
instinct. Every ideological posture that a new age brings provokes an equal and
opposite counter-posture. For every gentle chap brought shyly towards the centre
of action from screen left, his opposite is sent stomping in from screen
right.
Which brings us back to the Stone Age superheroes we started with. I have tried
to dislike
Terminator 2, with its preposterous superhunk throwing his
weight around post-nuclear L.A. But dear me, I would rather have Arnold Schwarzenegger
in this mad, mythopoeic, metamorphic form than Kevin Costner tending the winsome
Indians in
Dances With Revisionism.
I cannot so keenly recommend
Hudson Hawk or
New Jack
City: sometimes thick-eared machismo is just thick-eared machismo. But you
should try the European thinking man's answer to Mr Schwarzenegger, namely Monsieur
Depardieu. In Maurice Pialat's
Loulou our Gerard is not so much a New
Man, more an ageing hippie driven by Bachanialian demons. He sweeps a stunned-looking
Isabelle Huppert off her feet, pushes aside her maturer boyfriend (Guy Marchand)
and generally behaves as if he would not recognise Political Correctness between
the sexes if it fell down from the sky and beaned
him.