Cancan't
Baz Luhrmann's Moulin has too much Rouge
by Peter Keough
MOULIN ROUGE. Directed by Baz Luhrmann. Written by Baz Luhrmann and Craig Pearce. With Nicole
Kidman, Ewan McGregor, Jim Broadbent, John Leguizamo, Richard Roxburgh, David
Wenham, Garry McDonald, Jacek Koman, and Caroline O'Connor. A 20th Century Fox
release. At the Flagship, Holiday, Hoyts Providence 16, Showcase (Route 6 and Warwick
only).
If we assume he knows what he's doing, then Baz Luhrmann's goal seems to be the
end of cinema as we know it: i.e., a coherent art form that provides
pleasure and meaning. How else explain Moulin Rouge, a film that takes
beautiful actors, sets, costumes, and production numbers, fuses (or diffuses) a
century and a half of pop culture from Verdi to MTV, photographs it all like a
freak show, and chops it into confetti? This is the Memento of movie
musicals, stroboscopically edited into three-second segments without apparent
logic, cohesion, or continuity and designed to cater to -- or induce --
short-term memory disorder.
Okay, so it's also an artifice about artifice, as is evident from the first
shot of a proscenium and a curtain symphonically rising over the studio logo
(with this film, for better or worse, that should be 21st Century Fox).
Moulin Rouge opens to the rooftops of Paris as they might have been
imagined by Tim Burton, with buildings shaped like elephants and a mustachio'd
moon, where unfolds the tale of Christian (Ewan McGregor), a British wanna-be
writer in town to take in "1899 -- the summer of love" and join in the
"revolution" of "truth, beauty, freedom, and love."
By slapstick contrivance (a narcoleptic Argentinian falls through his roof, ho
ho!), Christian meets "Toulouse" (John Leguizamo as Lautrec popping into the
frame like the cockroach in the Orkin pesticide commercial) and his bohemian
buddies, who hope to put on a show called Spectacular Spectacular at the
cabaret Moulin Rouge. They need a new writer, and Christian, who knows the
lyrics to the songs from The Sound of Music (Rouge flaunts its
anachronism, to no avail), is their man.
He gets more than he bargained for, ffalling in love with Satine (Nicole
Kidman), the star of the show, a luminous courtesan who enters on a swing
singing "Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend." But the Duke (Richard Roxburgh),
the show's backer, expects Satine to be part of the deal, and he demands
exclusive rights to her from Zidler (Jim Broadbent), the club's proprietor.
That's just the beginning of Satine's problems -- she coughs blood into a
handkerchief (and Nicole thought this Tom Cruise thing was a drag).
How operatic -- as in La traviata, La bohème, and a little
bit of Cabaret. Then there's the Brecht element that Luhrmann keeps
claiming. By calling attention to the artifice, so goes the alienation-effect
theory, the film makes the audience question the illusion and the realities it
seeks to conceal, thus invoking a state of objective awareness. This, however,
is no Threepenny Opera. There is no reality behind the illusion, no
social or ideological consciousness. Hammered home at 24 frames a second, the
illusion is all, and the only state it invokes is stupefaction.
Okay, so how about a polysemous intertextuality evoking the postmodern
condition? The contemporary songs ("Children of the Revolution," "Roxanne,"
"Nature Boy" as an annoying leitmotif), the relentless pop references, the
Cuisinart style? Thanks, but I'll take Top Hat any day. They not only
had faces then, they had bodies, too. When Fred and Ginger or Gene and Cyd
danced, they were shown fully framed in one continuous shot (or as few shots as
possible), and we could see them not just dancing but reveling in the elegant,
otherworldly physical act.
Even Luhrmann's MTV editing wouldn't be a bad thing if there were a point to it
-- but it's an exercise in pointlessness. Instead of colliding to create
something new, as Eisenstein might suggest, the shots bounce around like
pinballs or self-destruct like antimatter. Perhaps Luhrmann is indulging a
perverse desire to deny audience satisfaction. More likely, he's trying to
conceal the film's essential banality and ineptitude. We'll never know from
Moulin Rouge, for example, whether Kidman or McGregor can dance, though
to judge from their singing, it's unlikely.
What makes the film most frustrating is that there are times when what's going
on seems worth slowing down -- say, Jim Broadbent's hilarious version of "Like
a Virgin." And then there's the morbid fascination of sheer awfulness. It's not
enough, however, to redeem this death by a thousand cuts.