A
Woman Under the Influence Movie Review:
Imagine
yourself in a situation where you live with someone you
care for, but is perhaps, you think, a little nutty. Now
imagine the state of mind you must be in to be willing to
accept that person in your life. This is the psychological
dilemma composed by director John Cassevettes (Shadows)
and performed by Gena Rowlands (Hope Floats) and Peter Falk
(Wings of Desire) in the classic A Woman Under The Influence.
This
film was made in 1974, and is a remarkable development from
the earlier film I`ve reviewed, 1968`s Faces. While I thought
that film was a little too in love with its own improvisational
style, this film shows a great focus. The improvisation
is still there, and it is long-winded, but is complemented
with a higher budget, and a more compelling script.
Rowlands
and Falk are a married couple living in an average neighbourhood.
Falk is a construction worker for the city who, along with
his crew, are apparently exploited by their employer. So
much so that the crew, after having worked the day shift,
are pulled back for the graveyard shift.....and then the
morning shift after that. While Falk is slowly going mad
from this horrifying position, Rowlands is going mad in
another way. A planned night just for the two of them has
gone awry due to the aforementioned lengthy construction
work. Rowlands is seen moping around the house, having strange
physical twitches, playing opera records. And, oddly enough,
later goes out to a small bar in town, drunk, and in the
process, picks up a guy and takes him home. I wasn`t very
clear on what happened after that, but that`s not really
the point. The point is what happens the next day, when
Rowlands cracks up in front of this stranger. She starts
calling him by her husband`s name, telling him to stop playing
games, etc. This strange scene tells us that she has unresolved
issues with Falk`s character. Perhaps she feels imprisoned
in this marriage in some way. These issues remain unresolved,
but it gives you insight into what might have made her this
way.
Later
on, she throws a party for her kids and the other local
children. She snares an unsuspecting parent into her delightful
party games. Watching her, you will get the feeling she
has never "grown up". She is unaware of the ways in which
self-consciously adult people interact with each other,
and all the innocent things she does during the course of
the party (like playing dress-up with the kids) are interpreted
as the actions of a truly disturbed, possibly sick woman.
Falk feels he has no choice but to commit her, for the sake
of the family. And in a lengthy, whirlwind scene, Rowlands
tries to fight the forces which seem to be against her.
In one key moment, Rowland`s character sticks up her first
two fingers, and says to Falk, "We`re together, just like
this. They can`t tear us apart." Why should she be taken
away from her kids, and her "happy" homelife, just because
"I make a jerk out of myself every day." She is obviously
saying the two of them share a common destiny, a soulful
attachment: the ideals any person would wish to have in
a relationship. But this attachment has far more disturbing
implications for this particular pairing, and that`s if
you pay attention to Peter Falk`s character.
While
I think Rowlands` only problem (if it really is a problem)
is that she has an almost childlike personality, Falk has
a mean, brutal streak which is frightening. At the beginning
of the film, he gives what seems to be a determined claim
to the boss on the phone that he intends to spend the night
with his wife instead of working. At first, his yelling
seems reasonable, for we all have the right to have a life
outside of the workplace. But it turns out it`s all just
yelling, for he never actually decides to skip work at all.
And during the numerous confrontational scenes, it isn`t
merely protests from a harried husband, but a man with a
violent, threatening temper which appears and disappears
with similar speed. He actually threatens his entire family
with death, and it sure sounds as if he means it. Yet moments
later he`ll slip back into a nicer mode....and later on
go through the entire cycle over again. Sure, Rowlands may
be crazy, but at least I`d not fear for my own safety around
her.
I
also think Falk`s character is more of a danger to the kids
then Rowlands could ever be. At least she tries to look
at kids on their level. Falk, on the other hand, yanks them
out of school one day to go on a beach trip, and the behaviour
displayed here is as if this conceivably fun outing is nothing
more than a punishment for everyone involved. The point
is that both parents try too hard to fulfill their assigned
roles, and their over-effort brings about only pain. Yet
no one ever says Falk is crazy, only Rowlands. The theory
is that Falk`s behaviour is somewhat acceptable because
he`s a macho guy, but an eccentric woman is dangerous, and
that theory is not too far off the mark.
This
is a must-view, if only for the gusto in Falk`s and Rowland`s
performances. Both of these actors are successfully able
to portray people at the end of their mental rope, without
seeming as if they might just collapse from all that acting
effort. The film itself is long-winded at times, especially
the spaghetti dinner scene, and also doesn`t have a "satisfactory"
conclusion. But, in the case of this film, for me at least,
these characteristics don`t pose a problem. The movie straddles
that fine line between the randomness of real life and the
confines of a story, and creates a classic from it.
David
Macdonald
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