Gia
Movie Review:
The modelling world seems like the
kind of environment which seems dazzling and exciting on
the outside yet ugly, rotten and soul-destroying on the
inside. The HBO docu-drama Gia is a brutal, painful version
of this reflection.
Based
on the true story of her rise and terrible fall in the modelling
world, Gia, played by Angelina Jolie, is revealed to have
had a very aggressive, often angry exterior which masked
a neediness and loneliness which, despite numerous attempts
through partying and drugs, never escaped her, and proved
to be her downfall. The movie begins with a short look at
her young life, living in a volatile home, where it's clear
the parents don`t get along. Gia retreats into a fantasy
world, writing in her diary of a girl with golden hair,
living in a nice house where everyone is welcome. Later,
as we see Gia in her late teens, Gia's personality has grown
harsher, more risky, as she flings herself into the excitement
and sexual ambiguity of the city's underbelly.
Alongside
this, Gia has a desire to become a fashion model, eventually
getting an appointment with an executive of a premier agency,
played by Faye Dunaway. Gia`s uniqueness is not so much
in her beauty but in her attitude, which seems a true contrast
to those who came before her. Gia is not soft, as is shown
in the scene where she attempts to convince the receptionist
she has an appointment. Gia goes so far as to carve her
name on the desk, hoping that the receptionist can get it
through her thick skull that this is not some stupid dreamer
thinking she`s all that. Dunaway`s character obviously admires
Gia's aggressiveness, even as she tries to tell her such
things like expressing an opinion aren`t encouraged in this
business.
Eventually,
Gia falls in love, with another model, Helen, a woman who,
in my view, is the total opposite of what Gia is. Helen
is a gentle, fairly clean-cut individual. Gia, however,
becomes embroiled in a downward spiral of drug addiction;
first, prescription pills, then, inevitably, cocaine and
crack. It is only a matter of time before tragedy strikes,
and it does.
To
me, the love story in Gia contains the meat of the production,
as it tells the tragic affair in the equally painful context
of Gia`s downfall. The two women are strongly attracted
to one another, of course, yet, for Gia, the affair doesn`t
seem to revolve around sex, but around need. Gia wants someone
to be with her, and there are a number of scenes where she
pleas, begs, and in some cases smashes things because she
can`t get what she wants. Her fear of being left alone is
so intense that when she phones Helen`s apartment and gets
the voice of a man who turns out to be someone from the
moving company, she runs away and creates havoc on the streets
and on the cop who stops her. And the drugs play a major
factor in that she simply cannot have a life with only the
drugs or Helen, and there is a painful moment where she
is confronted with that choice. Gia's mother is also a focal
point in that Gia also needs her presence, but as with Helen,
the mother often cannot handle the presence of an emotionally
draining addict, which only makes the pain inside Gia more
tough to bear.
I
believe what happens to Gia is what's to be expected in
a world such as modelling. In a world where you are treated
as an object, where everything else about you cannot ever
be revealed, where you are not allowed to look and act like
yourself, where you can only have the look the photographers
give you, and where you only hang out with people in the
same boat as you, of course you would be obsessed with finding
happiness anywhere. And in a world where only surface pleasures
and hedonism is encouraged, of course models would likely
turn to drugs, since those also are essentially base pleasures.
It`s not a coincidence that half the models in the world
look as if they are addicted. They might look too lively
otherwise. If Gia had a hobby like, I don`t know, stamp
collecting, or maybe pig farming, that might just look a
little too much like the life of an ordinary person, and
models are supposed to have the party life, the wild life,
the glamourous life. Perhaps that is fine for a while, but
this life has to last 24/7, and that will take its toll
on anyone. It would have been much better for a person like
Gia to be ordinary, a plain sort. At least she might have
found happiness, and a longer life.
My
little theory presents a problem for me, however, because,
while I can logically agree with what I said, I still can`t
deny that the models presents in such events do have a beauty
to them. It is perfectly natural to adore such perfections,
even if they are created and not the natural original woman.
(And there is a good scene in the rehab centre when a patient
taunts Gia by claiming there should be a warning label in
all fashion magazines saying nobody can be this perfect,
not even Gia.) And Angelina Jolie herself is a stunning
individual, with a round, expressive face, wonderfully ample
breasts, an overall comfortable body. And the movie itself,
even as it tries to criticise the fashion world, lapses
into its own exploitation of sorts when it depicts the beginnings
of the two models' love affair, which seem more like soft-porn
than gritty romance.
The
catch, however, is that Gia is real, at least as real as
an HBO docu-drama will allow. And her depiction automatically
makes her more interesting than any nameless, mindless model
strutting down the catwalk. Sure, a beautiful face is appealing,
but after a while it becomes boring, for we really haven`t
learned a thing about who owns that face. It`s the same
as a great image from a film. It only works if we know what's
behind it. It can`t work as well by itself. Jolie`s performance
as Gia allows you to at least see a life beyond the Vouge
covers. Jolie successfully portrays the torture involved
in living a life of excess and fleeting pleasures. You could
not help but feel at least a bit moved by her pain, even
if she tries to heal it by doing stupid things like drugs,
and hurts those closest to her, because her profession virtually
encourages this. Some people have denounced the movie because
of the belief there`s no need to see a movie about the painful
life and death of a model. This is as cruel as the disposable
way the fashion world treats those very same models. Every
person has a story, containing both happiness and pain in
varying quantities, and Gia, though far from classic, is
another one of those human stories which can`t help but
to be told.
David
Macdonald
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