Film Review
Today it is hard to appreciate just how important the movies were to the
generation living through the Great Depression of the 1930s. In a decade
of almost unimaginable hardship, movies offered the only form of escape for
millions from a life that was relentlessly grim. It was into this world
that Woody Allen was born and, although he was too young to fully experience
the palliative power of cinema in the 1930s, the movies had such an impact
on him in his formative years that he was able to convey this, with such
a welter of feeling, in one of his most perfect films,
The Purple Rose
of Cairo - which just happens to be one of the few films of his that
he rates highly. It is also one of the minority of his films in which
the director does not appear on screen, not that this diminishes its charm
in any way.
'Illusions are what make life bearable' is the theme that runs through much
of Allen's work, and this alone would explain the enduring popularity of
movies. What cinema gives us isn't just a brief distraction from the
traumas and travails of our everyday existence, but a genuine escape into
another world. Watching a movie is like stepping through the wardrobe
into Narnia. We enter a whole new reality, a safer, simpler, more comprehensible,
less scary reality than the one we struggle to make our lives in. We
are not just passive on-lookers. We
become the characters on
the screen, we inhabit their lives, we experience their feelings, we even
share in their happy endings. As you watch a movie, you feel as if
you are coming alive, and when it's over and the final 'end' caption sends
us back home to reality, we come away with the warm glow of transcendence.
We do not dread the horrors and upsets that life is about to sling in our
direction, for we know that we can return to movieland any time we choose.
The magical wardrobe is always there, its door temptingly ajar in our mind's
eye.
The Purple Rose of Cairo reminds us how much we need cinema to help
us to cope with life in the real world, but it comes with it a cogent moral
- namely that we should not get too close to the illusion. Our world
and the world of movie fiction are separate universes, and madness and sorrow
will surely follow if ever we try to conflate the two. Played by Mia Farrow,
the heroine in Allen's film is Cecilia, such a sad specimen of humanity that
at first we find it hard to sympathise with her. She can't pick up
a plate without dropping it, she allows her brute of her husband to throw
her around her grubby one-room apartment like a deflated basketball, her
every utterance is a mumbled apology, and her only pleasure is to gape like
a lovelorn teenager at the movie screen, projecting her own personal fantasies
on whichever square-jawed actor takes her fancy.
Cecilia is what we must never become - a celluloid junkie. She is so
hooked on the movie drug that you can't imagine her finding happiness - or
even wanting to find anything approaching happiness - in the real world.
Cinema is her whole life and her infatuation with the movies is so strong
that she actually ends up willing a character on the screen to break through
the fourth wall and join her in her world. (Woody Allen is not the
first filmmaker to employ the fantastic conceit of people stepping in and
out of projected movies - Buster Keaton did it as early as 1924 in his film
Sherlock Jr. and it has been copied several times since.) As
Cecilia embarks on a love affair with her pith-helmeted
beau idéal
Tom Baxter she soon comes to appreciate the drawbacks of dating a scripted
character. Tom's knowledge of life is limited to what his screenwriters
have allowed him to say and do. He knows how to drive a car, but not
how to start one. He has no concept of what physical love is (since
his movie was made in the era of Hays Code censorship, and the words 'brothel'
and 'prostitute' mean nothing to him. He is the man no woman can resist,
but he is merely the idealised sketch of a man. Romantic possibilities
are indeed limited when the guy you are in love with expects a fade to black
every time a clinch is in the offing.
So, when the actor playing Tom turns up and turns on the charm, Cecilia is
easily lured away from her celluloid lover as other illusions come crowding
into her ditsy little head. He may have more in the way of a functioning
sex drive than his screen alter ego, but Gil is even more deluded than Cecilia,
convinced that he is the star of his last picture and destined to be the
next Ronald Colman. To us it is obvious he is just a second rate actor
with a ginormous ego (the film's one minor flaw is that Jeff Daniels is
far more convicing as the fictional Tom than the real world Gil), but to
Cecilia, her head full of schoolgirl fantasies,
he is the Prince Charming she has been waiting for all these years.
Cecilia trades one wild illusion for another and ends up with both vanishing
in a puff of theatrical smoke. Too late does it dawn on her that film
stars are as two-dimensional and illusory as the characters they portray
on the screen, and so she soon finds herself as alone and bereft as ever
in her pathetic little world of smashed plates and smashed dreams.
But, come what may, she still has the movies. Life may be terrible,
but she can still escape whenever she wants. It is with a wistful smile,
not a tear, that we watch Cecilia project herself into Fred Astaire's arms
at the end of the film, well and truly transported to Heaven.
© James Travers 2016
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Next Woody Allen film:
Hannah and Her Sisters (1986)
Film Synopsis
New Jersey, at the height of the Great Depression. Cecilia's life is
one of unending misery. Abused by her thug of a husband, barely scraping
by on what she earns as a waitress, her only refuge is the movies.
At the local cinema, she is so enchanted by the romantic comedy
The Purple
Rose of Cairo that she watches it over and over, until she is head over
heels in love with one of the minor characters, an archaeologist named Tom
Baxter. One evening, Cecilia is almost knocked out of her seat when
Tom suddenly turns to camera and addresses her, before walking out of the
film to engage her in conversation. The audience are as disconcerted
by this improbable turn of events as the characters still in the movie, which
is stalled whilst one of its dramatis personae plays hooky. As Tom
and Cecilia embark on a love affair which is mildly handicapped by Tom's
lack of knowledge of the real world, the film's producer and the actor who
played Tom, Gil Shepherd, fly in from Hollywood to try and resolve matters.
Aware of what an untold number of Tom Baxters breaking out of the film and
marauding the country could do to his career, Gil goes after Tom and Cecilia.
Having failed to persuade the character he created to return from when he
came, Gil convinces Cecilia that he is in love with her and offers her a
new life with him in Hollywood. It looks as if Cecilia's story will
have a happy ending after all - but surely such things only exist in the
movies...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.