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FACES
Blu-ray
/ DVD. BFI
After
the critical success of Shadows,
John Cassavetes took himself off to Hollywood, where he would
have a few acting gigs and get to direct a couple of mainstream
studio projects, both of which were so disastrous that they effectively
killed off his career for a few years, as both director and
actor. Eventually, he’s start to get roles on screen again,
and from the late Sixties onwards would alternative between appearing
in mainstream movies - some respectable, some pure exploitation
– and directing a series of self-financed, very personal,
very intimate indie films that the acting gigs helped pay for.
The first of these was Faces, made in 1968 –
the same year he co-starred in Polanski’s Rosemary’s
Baby.
Faces is heavy going. Far removed from the freewheeling
style of Shadows, and some way from the deliberately
paced style of later films, this is a thoroughly grim drama, shot
on grainy black and white 16mm film, that explores the empty lives
of a bunch of middle aged, middle class executives and their wives,
as they desperately search for love outside their loveless marriages
and hopelessly cling on to vestiges of youth and happiness.
Never has a film with so much laughter been so utterly miserable.
There’s near-constant laughter from everyone involved during
the first half, though none of it convinces – it’s
all too desperate, all too forced. These are clearly miserable
people who think that a few drinks, a few jokes and a pathetic
determination to be seen as having fun will be enough to save
them from their loneliness and pain. At any moment, as with any
self-hating drunk, the laughter will end and the anger, the self-loathing
and the pain will emerge, and as the film progresses, this becomes
more and more obvious.
Cassavetes
wasn’t interested in making films as entertainment, and
Faces certainly isn’t an enjoyable viewing
experience in any conventional sense. Shot with a cold documentary
style, it’s often very difficult to watch, and at 130 minutes,
really hammers home the point. But that’s not to suggest
that the film isn’t rewarding. As we follow the two main
protagonists Richard (John Marley) and his wife Maria (Lynn Carlin)
in their desperate search for fleeting escape in the arms of others
(Gena Rowlands and Seymour Cassel respectively), we certainly
get an insight into their depressing world, a world that they
seem doomed to never escape – their affairs, Richard’s
demand for a divorce, all being temporary, unsuccessful shots
at an attempt to find a life that is probably not even out there
for them. Cassavetes portrays this through long, handheld scenes
that – appropriately, given the title – concentrate
on the worn down faces of his uniformly excellent cast, all too
convincingly real as the sadness behind their eyes reveals the
truth of the forced joviality. The end result is a film that is
brilliant, but utterly exhausting – you’ll need something
light and frothy to follow it with unless you want to be on a
downer for the rest of the day.
The BFI disc is typically excellent – there’s an alternative
21-minute opening scene that comes later in the final cut, and
is available with commentary from Peter Bogdanovich and Al Ruban,
and a 47 minutes with Seymour Cassel, together with a 30-page
booklet.
DAVID
FLINT
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