| The SF, Horror and Fantasy Film Review |
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
| Science-Fiction |
|
|
| Horror |
|
|
| Fantasy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
FATAL ATTRACTION
Rating: 
USA. 1987.
Director Adrian Lyne, Screenplay James Dearden, Producers Stanley R. Jaffe & Sherry Lansing, Photography Howard Atherton, Music Maurice Jarre, Makeup Effects John Caglione & Doug Drexler, Production Design Mel Bourne. Production Company Jaffe-Lansing.
Cast:
Michael Douglas (Dan Gallagher), Glenn Close (Alex Forrest), Anne Archer (Beth Gallagher), Ellen Hamilton Latzen (Ellen Gallagher)
Plot: While his wife and daughter are out of town for the weekend, lawyer Dan Gallagher dines with client Alex Forrest and they end up in bed together. He leaves her at the end of the weekend with the understanding that it is the end of the affair but she slashes her wrists as he opens the door. He takes her to the emergency room and she afterwards apologizes. But she continues to ring and follow him. Finally she announces that she is pregnant. When he tells her that what she does with the pregnancy is her own choice, she becomes unbalanced, resorting to vandalism, the slaughter of his daughters pet rabbit and then kidnap the kidnap of his daughter.
Adrian Lyne is a director who makes films for the pure beauty of staging visuals. His Flashdance (1983) and 9½ Weeks (1986) are two of the most exquisitely stylish films ever made they shout out with the sheer sensual pleasure of light, colour and editing. The detail, the quiet and the immaculate chiaroscuros of light and colour that can be found in Adrian Lynes films are almost the equivalent of a Constable or a Rembrandt painting made with moving images. Whatever one can say about the slimness of the stories of either Flashdance or 9½ Weeks, they are exquisitely sensual and visual films. It is the same here with Fatal Attraction. The film is almost worth watching alone for the tiny little vignettes of background detail as Adrian Lynes camera cruises through a room. Alas Lynes subsequent works films like Jacobs Ladder (1990) and Indecent Proposal (1993) taper off in terms of such visual detail and are altogether more bland. And unfortunately these latter films only too clearly show Adrian Lyne out of his element. Having cut back on the stylish visuals, he is forced to rely upon the storytelling, and, as Fatal Attraction reveals only too well, Lyne isnt a storyteller, nor has the pacing a thriller needs. Adrian Lynes films are cinematographers films.
Adrian Lynes 9½ Weeks opened up a revolution in screen sexuality. It brought to prominence co-writer Zalman King and his brand of beautifully photographed, high-class erotica, as in tvs Red Shoe Diaries (1992-7) and films like Wild Orchid (1990) and Lake Consequence (1993) and paved the way for the later likes of Basic Instinct (1992). But for all that, 9½ Weeks is a conservative film. Though it celebrates the joys of all sensual possibilities, it ends with Kim Basinger deciding that enough is enough and walking away from her purely sexual relationship. A similar sense of conservatism underlies Adrian Lynes later films such as Indecent Proposal (1993) and Unfaithful (2002) the sense that for all the rapturous sensuality that one might find to explore, the welcoming hearth of a traditional marriage and family life represents the best of all possible worlds. Fatal Attraction reinforces this to even greater extremes.
Fatal Attraction was a massive hit and a real cause celebre in 1987. It was even nominated for an Academy Award Best Picture, along with Adrian Lyne for Best Director and Glenn Close for Best Actress. The film polarized both sides of the political spectrum, seen as having all sorts of metaphors and statements about AIDS, modern marriage and the male kickback against feminism. This is something at which Adrian Lyne, who insists he only wanted to make a thriller, altogether laughs at. If Lyne is laughing though, it is rather sad for all that is left is a thriller with an incredibly misogynistic attitude towards Glenn Close in its complete lack of sympathy for the use and then discarding of her as a sex object and in the ensuing condemnation of her for choosing not to abort her pregnancy. For all Adrian Lynes denial of any message, Fatal Attraction is a film that holds an aggressively, almost vindictively nasty, male response to feminism the sense that if a woman wants to have the right to say its my body, its my choice then when a pregnancy does emerge its also a case of you wanted the choice, you deal with it.
I find Glenn Close one of the coldest and most closed-off actresses around. I am really unable to understand why people thought her performance here was so brilliant. All she seems here is clingy, mercurial and psychotic. And as a character, she is only defined in terms of how she functions as an antagonist in relation to hero Michael Douglas, never in terms of psychological motivation. Indeed Alex is given almost no character description and certainly no motivation beyond that of Evil Psycho Bitch. In contrast to her, the family scenes in Michael Douglass home are shot with almost nostalgic golden hues and a sumptuous warmth Adrian Lyne even includes a scene of Glenn Close looking in through the window and throwing up at the purity of it all.
Fatal Attraction is really an entirely male-oriented film it is a male fantasy about a man who is lead by his dick, strays from the path of marital fidelity and the nuclear family norm, pays for it by unleashing dire consequences, learns his lesson, dispatches the evilly deranged temptress and restores the cozy status quo of his family life with nary a peep from his forgiving wife, having learned the clear neo-conservative lesson that straying from the path of marriage is a really bad thing. Its a male-oriented fantasy wherein the hurt feelings of the wife are easily washed away and the feelings and responses of Glenn Close at being used and abandoned pregnant are relegated to the realms of the deranged.
The basic set-up of the female stalker was done before and far better by Clint Eastwood with Play Misty for Me (1971). Adrian Lynes failing as a director here is to never really let the suspense pay off in a big way. Theres certainly one good shock with the revelation of the rabbit in the pot, which Lyne quite skillfully leads up to with an almost textbook case of dramatic underscoring first showing us the boiling pot, then cutting to the child running towards the rabbit hatch, building up a sense of dread before showing us anything. But Fatal Attraction really needed more of that. The ending generates an okay intensivity but is marred by a really schlocky return from the dead cliche. The dvd releases of the film has the original ending where Glenn Close is merely carted away in handcuffs by the police, which shows us just how little Adrian Lyne was really interested in the suspense. Preview audiences had such a reaction to the way that the film had built Glenn Close up as an Evil Psycho Bitch that Adrian Lyne went back and shot a new ending where Michael Douglas gets just vengeance and stabs her to death. For a far more infinitely disturbed variant on the female stalker film see the amazing French film Anna M. (2007).
The success of Fatal Attraction opened up a whole host of films wherein usually middle-class men found themselves and their perfect family lives at siege from forces outside from female stalkers in other copycat films such as Strangers (1990), Malicious (1995), The Ex (1996), Passionate Revenge/Friend of the Family II (1996), A Thin Line Between Love and Hate (1996), Devil in the Flesh (1997), A Bold Affair (1998), Swimfan (2002) and The Kindness of Strangers (2006), and only two featuring a male stalker Asunder (1998) and Too Good to Be True (2003); lesbian stalkers Kates Addiction/Circle of Deception (1999); malevolent children Mikey (1992), The Good Son (1993) and Daddys Girl (1996); malevolent babysitters The Hand That Rocks the Cradle (1992), The Perfect Nanny (2000) and The Stranger Game (2006); predatory women in the workplace The Temp (1993), Disclosure (1994) and The Secretary (1994); psychotic estranged wives Mothers Boys (1994); psychotic estranged children The Stepdaughter (2000); their tenants Pacific Heights (1990), Single White Female (1992); sexually assertive minors Poison Ivy (1992) and The Crush (1993); their daughters bad boyfriends Fear (1996); psychotic swingers Zebra Lounge (2001); and overly friendly cops Unlawful Entry (1992). Fatal Instinct (1993) was an occasionally amusing spoof.
Copyright Richard Scheib 2002
|