Friday, 20 September 2013

Baz is the man for a great Gatsby



Criticisms of two recent adaptations of great works of literature show how some critics have an idealized view of these books, or of characters within the books, and complain when the film doesn’t translate these versions accurately to the screen.  Anna Karenina and The Great Gatsby are both works of acute social critique, each clothed in a love story. 
I have written about Anna Karenina elsewhere (see A Tract for Our Times), so here I will stay with Baz  Luhrmann’s recent film  The Great Gatsby. 

Novels create characters, both on the page and in our minds.    Some of these fictional characters even find their way into our hearts, either as heroes and heroines, or as romantic figures.     Sometimes we can become rather fond of them.   When these ‘written’ figures appear on screen we may be able to adapt the physical image we had of them to fit the films cast, but if they are then portrayed on screen as essentially shallow we may feel cheated.  Daisy Buchanan and Jay Gatsby, for instance, may be bathed in a romantic light in our hearts and minds,   but a film maker, paying close attention to the text from which they sprang, may see, and portray them in a less flattering light.   We may be tempted to dismiss this interpretation rather than go back to the novel and question it.  And if the book has already been filmed with a more sympathetic eye for its main characters that our feelings of alienation from the new film may be reinforced.     The Great Gatsby was last filmed in 1974 with Robert Redford and Mia Farrow playing the leads, and the film was very much a tragic romance, starring two of the most popular romantic leads of the time.   This impression was surely reinforced by the romantic fallacy that ‘good looking’ people are also possessed of a good character.   Carrie Mulligan’s performance in Baz Lurhrmann’s new film may not suffer to much in comparison, but Leonardo Decaprio’s  seems to have suffered in some people’s eyes by being seen as less romantic than Redford’s and his morality  more open to question.   The essential question is, of course, which characterization is truer to the book?

And it is not only our moral sense of the characters that can be challenged, but also that of the book.  For instance, Baz ’s version of Gatsby has been criticized by Mike Betha, the film critic of The Philadelphia Inquirer, because it seemed to distort the values fans of the story hold so dearly.    I wonder just what those values might be?   Betha says that the film makes us ‘intoxicated by the partying of the second act, but leaves us with a hangover in the third’.    But I woud argue that this is exactly what Fitzgerald intended.   He wanted to show us the totally over-the-top excess of the Jazz Age, and of course he did so in his own precise prose style.    No Gonzo writing for him.    You can film his narrative, but not his prose.  So, as Todd McCarthy, of the Hollywood Reporter writes, given the immoderate lifestyle of the title character, (Luhrmann’s)  approach is not exactly inappropriate, even if it is at sharp odds with the refined nature of the author's prose.  Having  shown us the partying Fitzgerald then shows us the aftermath.   Gatsby is not a feel-good movie.   The hangover is his, literally. And he wanted to share it with us.   

If the values we hold dearly  are subverted by the film, whose values are they?  Surely not those of Jay Gatsby?     We will back come to Scott Fitzgerald’s values later, but first let’s stay with the difference between novels and films.

You cannot film prose. You can film dialogue and stage directions, but not the author’s voice.   In moderation, as in Luhrmann’s’  Gatsby, description can be turned into voice-over or even written soliloquy.  But  when the author uses a narrator, as Fitzgerald used Nick Carraway, the narrator is not the author.  McCarthy writes that   narrator/observer characters like Nick, or Stingo in Sophie's Choice, are almost always uncomfortable fits onscreen, especially when they're far more bland and naive than everyone else around them but still prone to making assessments and judgments about people actually living life rather than standing to the side of it.

We should be careful not to adopt the values and judgments of a narrator.   Nick may well hero worship Jay, be dazzled by him and want to hang on to his ‘values’. but Fitzgerald does not. This is not Nick’s story.  It is a story he tells, and tells it the way he sees it, the only way he can, but he is inevitably an unreliable narrator.    Some distance is necessary for perspective.   
It also needs to be said that films that are too ‘literary’ usually do not work well.   The 1974 film of Gatsby was a failure for many reasons, but one of them is that it had too much respect for the prose.    It tried to be as ‘cool’ as Fitzgerald’s writing, but what Fitzgerald was writing about was frenetic.    Some films fail because without the author’s voice too much is lost – think of  Doctor Zhivago.   Many swooned at Omar Sharif’s middle distance gaze, but that is not what Pasternak’s book was about.   Even the relatively successful adaptation of The Name of the Rose only worked well on screen because the narrative and characters Umberto Eco had invented were gripping enough to carry the film, even if the actual philosophical and theological baggage the narrative was designed to carry had to be jettisoned.    Very often the only real wisdom in a book is found in the author’s voice, not the characters’ voices.   Sometimes the characters and plot carry us through, as in The English Patient.   The major characters may be smart and clever, but apart from the bomb disposal officer Kip,  they have very little wisdom.   The wisdom is that of Michael Ondaatje.    The books that translate most easily onto the screen are plot driven thrillers and fantasies.    But every now and again a cinematic genius with a deep literary sensibility comes along, and John Huston gives us James Joyce’s The Dead.

A film-maker can allude to the author’s prose, with a voice over, or as Luhrmann does at times, by showing us Nick’s journal-writings on screen, but once again they are Nick’s thoughts we read, not Fitzgerald’s. So we need to see past Nick and Daisy and Jay in order to get to Fitzgerald.  But that does not mean that we cannot be allowed to be as entranced, for a while, as Nick is with Jay, and Daisy and Jay are by each other.   But their real romance existed only in their pasts, and they cannot go back there.    All innocence has been lost, not only that of these two iconic characters, but that of the Jazz Age itself, madly in love with itself as it was.
A mad, hedonistic party has to be filmed as such, and who better than Fuhrman, and his co-creator and wife Caroline Martin,  to do so.    This is the Moulin Rouge transplanted to Long Island.    Luhrmann is not filming these party scenes in ways that overtly criticize them.  He is filming them the way they must have felt to Nick, and leaving us to stand back and judge them.   It is our judgments and values that matter, informed by Fitzgerald’s prose, translated by Luhrmann’s images. 
So when I saw this film I expected to be caught up in the glamour, the totally over the top indulgence, and to see Daisy as wonderful, captivating,  and utterly adorable, to fall for Jay’s charm and line, to be caught up in his passion for Daisy – the only innocent thing about him. As David Edelstein of CBS commented, for all its polish, the book has a healthy American vulgarity that the genteel 1974 film with Robert Redford and Mia Farrow didn't get.   If you want deliberate vulgarity, look to Baz Lehman.   He knows how to deliver it with style.

But I also expected to taste the eventual disillusionment, the bitter dregs, to feel the hangover, to feel betrayed even, just as so many ‘mad young things’ were betrayed by the illusions of the times.   Fitzgerald did not write to praise the Jazz Age, but to bury it.  He and Zelda were also its victims, and Gatsby shows us why any of us might also have fallen for it, given the opportunity.   

Fitzgerald told his daughter Scottie that he had chosen literature as his pulpit and The Great Gatsby is a great political sermon, because its author understood how it all this came to be, and the price that wouold have to be paid.    Gatsby is prophetic, written before the Fall, as it were.     The fortunes that fed the 1920’s hedonism were scarcely more respectable than Jay’s money, even if some of them had the patina that a couple of generations endows.  It was not ‘old money’ in European terms, but old enough.    And did riches bring nobility?    Tom Buchanan’s character  suggests otherwise.    Did the gap in wealth bring about compassion for the poorer? Myrtle finds out that this is not the case.    Everyone is deluded, except Tom, who needs no illusions. 

Let us not forget that the riches of the late 1920’s and early 30’s crashed,  and that crash triggered fascism in many parts of the world, not just Germany.    Most of the reforming social and political movements are a reaction against injustice.   The uncontrolled Free Market Capitalism of the post late 19th and early 20c century triggered European Fascism. Fitzgerald saw that coming in Italy, in the early days of Mussolini.  Fascism was the hangover after the party, and it was a violent conflict because those who lost wanted scapegoats, and blamed the people who were never invited to the party in the first place.    As he wrote in a letter to Roger Berlingham in 1925.   (Italy) is  a dead land where everything that could be said or done was done long ago – for whoever is deceived by the pseudo-activity under Mussolini is deceived by the spasmodic last jerk of a corpse. 

Scott Fitzgerald was a political writer and Gatsby is not a love story.   It describes love, obsessive, ego-centric, nostalgic love, but the love story here is simply a vehicle, as it is in Anna  Karenina, for something much more meaningful, and deeply political.   If Baz Lehman’s film leaves us with a bitter taste in our mouths it means he has done his translation well.  

The literary academic Sarah Churchwell sees The Great Gatsby as a "cautionary tale of the decadent downside of the American dream". As she writes   "there seemed little doubt about what was going to happen, America was going on the greatest, gaudiest spree in history.  By the early 1920s, Fitzgerald  could already sense that "the whole golden boom was in the air – its splendid generosities, its outrageous corruptions and the tortuous death struggle of the old America in prohibition".   By 1924, he was painting an indelible picture of that new life, setting his new novel in 1922 (just after the "general decision to be amused that began with the cocktail parties of 1921"), in order to tell of "a whole race going hedonistic, deciding on pleasure.     It was borrowed time anyhow – the whole upper tenth of a nation living with the insouciance of grand dukes and the casualness of chorus girls." Less than five years after Gatsby was published, the market would crash, and the Great Depression fell like a curtain over the festivities.” (Sarah Churchwell Careless People: Murder, Mayhem and the Invention of The Great Gatsby Virago, 2013.)

Churchwell goes on to say that ‘the jazz age may have ended, but …nearly a century later, his cautionary tale has returned to haunt us, warning again of the perils of boom and bust, holding a mirror up to our tarnished world…. The historical irony is that Gatsby is destroyed because in his world money did not make everything possible – but in our world it increasingly does. Today the illusion of Jay Gatsby would not have shattered like glass against Tom Buchanan's "hard malice". : Gatsby's money would have insulated him and guaranteed triumph – an outcome that Fitzgerald would have deplored more than anyone.’  And later ‘Gatsby is destroyed by the founding American myth: that the marketplace can be a religion, that the material can ever be ideal.’

Churchwell knows that “for the most part Fitzgerald's prose is a kind of experiment in restrained extravagance.  Just as the style is nearly paradoxical in its ability to cut both ways, so are the novel's meanings. It is a celebration of intemperance, and a condemnation of its destructiveness.’

All this is very well said, but she dislikes the film because it dares the same paradox.    Luhrmann gives us both the illusion and the gritty reality, the celebration of intemperance  and the condemnation of its destructiveness, and he has to do so in visual ways, rather than literary.  

I do not think that literary critics are always well suited to be film critics.     They often value the wrong – by which I mean inappropriate – virtues,  and therefore make false judgments.   Literary critics love prose.   But film is not prose.   Prose ‘tells’, film ‘shows’,  so the quality of the telling must be translated into the quality of the showing.    I first spotted this critical bias thirty years ago when the critics scorned Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner.

Watching The Great Gatsby I though DiCaprio’s performance was perfect, catching the manic and the obsessive and the potentially violent alongside the naïve and utterly vulnerable aspects of his character.  Daisy is so underwritten it is hard to make her sympathetic, but Carrie Mulligan did her considerable best.     Joel Edgerton as Tom Buchanan – who Fitzgerald thought the best character he has written – see below -  was very good indeed, as also were Jason Clarke and Isla Fisher as George and Myrtle.   I thought Nick was played by Toby Maguire as well as such a passive character could be, and the framing device worked for me.   The meeting of Jay and Daisy (which again Fitzgerald thought was the best chapter in the book) was tender, tentative, comic and moving.    

The direction and design were as bold and outrageous as the times they portrayed, and brought the prose to life thanks to Baz and his co-Producer, Production and Wardrobe Designer (and wife) Catherine Martin.  The use of the 3D was the among the best I have seen, deliberately obvious in the opening credits and used to spectacular effect in some scenes but subtle otherwise.    The musical choices were brave and brilliant,  ranging from Beyonce singing Amy Winehouse’s Back to Black , through Jay-Z (writing under various pseudonyms),  Florence and the Machine, Lana del Ray,  Bryan Ferry, Jack White and Bono, to Cole Porter, Fats Waller, Jelly Roll Morton, W. C. Handy and George Gershwin, all under the musical production of Jay-Z and with the original compositions and orchestrations of Craig Armstrong.  

I end with this, from Roger Ebert, the late lamented film Critic of the Chicago Times, about the book, not the film.

‘(Gatsby)  is a celebration of intemperance, and a condemnation of its destructiveness. It is about trying to recapture our fleeting joys, about the fugitive nature of delight. It is a tribute to possibility, and a dirge about disappointment. It is a book in which the glory of imagination smacks into the grimness of real life. As Fitzgerald's editor Max Perkins wrote in 1925: it is "a story that ranges from pure lyrical beauty to sheer brutal realism". The hard facts of power and economics play out against the mythological promises of fantasy and ideology. Gatsby learns the hard way that being found out is inevitable, escape from his past impossible; but Nick beats a retreat back home, escaping back into his own nostalgic past. We find ourselves surveying the waste and wreckage after the party ends, but ready to carouse some more’.

I think ’s Gatsby is among the very best – and most accurate – translations of any book to the screen, and if anyone feels let down by I recommend they go back to the text and see what F. Scott Fitzgerald was really saying – and not just how he was saying it.