Delta
of Venus Movie Review:
Zalman
King is probably the most "famous" of the soft-core
film directors. Oddly enough, he is also one of the worst,
by far. He first came onto the scene as producer and writer
of Adrian Lyne's 9 ½ Weeks, a vulgar excuse for an
erotic romance, complete with humiliation and sado-masochism.
He graduated to director with such so-called classics such
as Two Moon Junction, Wild Orchid, and the Red Shoe Diaries
series on Showtime. This time out he tackles Anais Nin with
a film version of Delta of Venus.
Well, actually I just told a naughty little fib. If Zalman
King recreated Delta of Venus, then I'm a serious rival
to Roger Ebert. What this movie has to do with Nin's famous
erotic anthology is beyond me. Sure, there are numerous
cute references to content in the stories, including a visit
to a clairvoyant, an opium-induced orgy, and the discovery
by fisherman of a dead beautiful woman (King omits, perhaps
wisely, the necrophilia portion of that tale). The main
character is named Elena, and I think I remember an Elena
somewhere in the book. And a major plot point is based loosely
on an event in Nin's life. But make no mistake, this is
a Zalman King production; any usage of Nin is for the sake
of laziness, or at least uninventive homage.
During the eve of World War II in Paris, a struggling writer
(Audie England) meets Lawrence (Costas Mandylor), an apparently
controversial and famous writer apparently modelled after
Henry Miller. The two meet at an extravagant party for Lawrence,
and he entrances her by a recounting of a strange party
turned orgy of sorts. This turns her on a lot, of course,
and soon afterwards, embark on a short-lived sexual affair.
Short-lived, because just before he leaves for his book
tour, he visits a prostitute, and Elena runs into the two
as they engage in heavy petting right there on the sidewalk.
As with any unoriginal movie involving romantic partners,
there is a fight, and a bitter parting, which even a fool
would know is merely a set-up for the climax, where they
will of course meet again.
After the parting of Elena and Lawrence, Elena grows more
financially desperate, unable to get even the most tedious
of writing jobs. (I don't know about you, but don't you
think that, even in the 1930's, when people were at their
most desperate and would have dearly loved an escape, that
there would have been a market for cheap and tawdry paperbacks;
hey, the movies did pretty well at the time!) She is then
offered a very odd proposition; an anonymous individual
wants someone to write erotica for him, offering three cents
a page.
Elena jokingly protests for about, say, ten or twenty seconds
worth of screen-time, before diving into the project, and
soon becoming obsessed by the need to write the sexual experience
as accurately and as vividly as possible. And, as they all
say, experience begets wisdom, so, besides writing about
sex, she gets herself involved in many increasingly depraved
encounters.
Wow,
you say, all of these sexual encounters; what fun! Actually,
this movie is quite boring. It makes the erotic movie Temptations
seem like it was written by Billy Wilder. Actually, I think
Venus would have benefited from a little more honesty; this
is a soft-core film, for God's sake, not an art film! King
wants us to take this film seriously!! The movie takes place
during Hitler's rise to power, so we get shots of Nazis
making life difficult for others in Paris, shots of protests
and chaos in the streets, and of everybody speaking with
pretentious seriousness (The dialogue is ridiculous, however,
so nothing actually comes out with seriousness!). Apparently,
with all the Nazis and decadence, King thought he was actually
remaking Cabaret. The problem is that King has no talent
in the storytelling arena. The subjects of Nazism and Hitler
are not added to make a point, but because King somehow
believes that he is in the 1950's, and is too scared to
just go ahead and make a sexy movie. By mentioning "World
War II", "Hitler", and so on, well, he's
not making a pornographic movie, he's making something with
"redeeming social value"!!!
More
evidence that King is afraid of just going ahead with the
sexy movie idea: he mixes the sex with violence, humiliation,
and mental cruelty. The most ugly scene involves Elena's
rape by a stereotypical Nazi in a darkened alley. She's
raped from behind, adding to the cruelty. Yet she naturally
(naturally!!) uses this act as fodder for another erotic
story, and at the end she states she was the one who entered
this situation - she wanted to see what sex was like without
love. I don't know -- I think all of the sex acts she did
with Mandylor are pretty good examples of sex without love,
if, by love, you mean, heavy-duty romantic love. More cruelty
is in the actual relationship between England and Mandylor.
They fool around, she sees him with prostitute, she gets
angry, and he tries to apologise for it (what an optimist!).
Yet when they reunite, it is England who has to learn the
lesson, that the two had the perfect bond, a wondrous love
- because they found the truth about sex, which is not that
it is beautiful, but that it is depraved and wicked, and
so they must be wicked and depraved together. Mandylor already
knew that, since he essentially stabbed England in the back
with the whole prostitute thing, and now England herself
has discovered how wicked sex can be. Of course, there is
no mention of the fact that the women seem to be the exploited
and the men are the exploiters in this type of arrangement.
Audie England is certainly game for all of the erotic situations.
She is cold, with a pout (mouth parted, hair hanging over
her eye, a cold glare), which I actually find attractive
in a strange way. She is also a bit unusual in that she
is not really voluptuous or full-bodied - she's thin, and
kind of bony. Costas Mandylor plays the typical Zalman King
male; aggressive and overpowering. The funniest part is
that he used to be on "Picket Fences", on a fairly
reputable televison network, and is now reduced to performing
simulated sex acts for the King of soft-porn.
There is a lot of sex, but most of it is weirdly detached,
because they are performed by anonymous people as part of
Audie's voyeuristic adventures, and the script does not
make us feel much toward these people and their acts. The
only erotic moments that actually are interesting are the
ones between England and Mandylor, because at least they
are the main characters, and we can sort of follow what
they're doing.
There is even one moment of real beauty - they make love
in the apartment, he exploring her body with his hands,
she immersed in the passion of the moment. Close-up of her
taking his fingers into her mouth, panting "I can taste
myself...". Sounds pretty extreme, maybe, but it is
also just plain sexual, instead of violent, or cruel. If
King weren't such a wimp, and actually made a pretty movie
where a nice woman and a nice man got into a passionate
affair (and actually remained monogamous -- what a shock
it would be!), even if it were just all about sex, then
maybe we would have a nice movie. But King is a fool, unable
to see women in any way except as playthings for his male
heroes, and more interested in depravity than beauty.
David
Macdonald
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