Jump to content

Eyes Wide Shut

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Arcayne (talk | contribs) at 10:44, 16 April 2010 (Music: need cites that that music was used in that place). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Eyes Wide Shut
Theatrical release poster
Directed byStanley Kubrick
Written byNovella:
Arthur Schnitzler
Screenplay:
Stanley Kubrick
Frederic Raphael
Produced byStanley Kubrick
StarringTom Cruise
Nicole Kidman
CinematographyLarry Smith
Edited byNigel Galt
Music byJocelyn Pook
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date
July 16, 1999
Running time
159 min.
CountriesUnited States
United Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget$65,000,000
Box office$160,637,680

Eyes Wide Shut is a 1999 American/British neo-noir drama film based upon the 1926 novella Traumnovelle (Dream Story) by Arthur Schnitzler, It was directed, produced and co-written by Stanley Kubrick, and was his last film before his death in the same year. The slightly surreal story, set in and around New York City, follows the sexually charged adventures of Dr. Bill Harford (Tom Cruise), who is shocked by the revelation by his wife, Alice (Nicole Kidman), that she had contemplated an affair a year earlier. He embarks on a night-long, eventful sexual adventure, during which he infiltrates a massive masked orgy of an underground cult.

The film appeared on 16 July 1999 to generally positive critical reaction.[1]

Plot summary

Wealthy married couple Dr. Bill and Alice Harford (Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman) attend a Christmas party at the home of Victor Ziegler (Sydney Pollack), a friend and patient of Bill's. During the party, a Hungarian man (Sky du Mont) tries to seduce Alice while two younger models try to seduce Bill, however both Alice and Bill resist the offer. Later, Bill is summoned by Ziegler to his bathroom where he finds a naked woman, Mandy (Julienne Davis), who has over-dosed on a speedball. Bill helps her regain consciousness and promises Victor he will not speak of the incident. Bill also meets an old friend, Nick Nightingale (Todd Field), a former fellow student who dropped out of medical school and is now a pianist.

The following night, while Alice and Bill smoke marijuana in their bedroom, they discuss their encounters at the party, and it grows into an argument about sexual desires and fantasies, Alice states that she contemplated having an affair with a naval officer she saw while on Cape Cod. After this, Bill receives a telephone call summoning him to a deceased patient's home. When he arrives, the former patient's daughter, Marion (Marie Richardson) tells him she wants to give up her life to be with Bill. Bill resists and departs once Marion's boyfriend, Carl (Thomas Gibson), arrives.

While wandering the streets, Bill meets a female prostitute named Domino (Vinessa Shaw) and initially agrees to go home with her, but a call from Alice stops him. Bill then happens upon a jazz club where Nick is playing. As the two talk, Nick describes a party he played at the previous evening, and where he is also to play again that very evening. Bill coerces Nick into divulging the party's requirements: a costume and a mask. He learns the location and the password: Fidelio. Bill goes to the costume shop of a friend long after normal hours of operation only to find it has a new owner, Mr. Milich (Rade Šerbedžija). He offers Milich over the normal rental price to acquire a costume. During their meeting, Milich discovers his teenage daughter (Leelee Sobieski) half undressed with two Japanese men becomes angry with the men and threatens to call the police.

Bill takes a cab to the party in a mansion on Long Island. What he finds inside is a large group of people wearing various robes and Venetian carnival masks watching a sexualized ritual involving women standing in a circle wearing masks who after disrobing are scantily clad, led by a man dressed and masked in red. As the cloaked people watch, the women rise from a circle and select men from the audience, including Bill. The woman informs Bill that he is in danger and urges him to leave, but he refuses. She is led away by someone else, after which Bill wanders through rooms in which orgies are occurring. He is soon accosted and discovered as an outsider. Bill is forced to remove his mask in front of the red-robed master of ceremonies and is demanded to also disrobe, but his "punishment" is "redeemed" by the mysterious woman who had initially chosen him. Bill is warned to remain silent about what he saw, or he will "suffer". Bill returns home and finds Alice laughing in her sleep. After waking her, she tearfully tells him of her nightmare of having sex with other men knowing that Bill was watching while she laughed at him.

The following day, Bill decides to look further into the events of the previous night. He goes to the hotel at which Nick was staying only to discover that Nick had apparently been beaten and taken away by two men. Bill returns the costume to the shop where he discovers that Mr. Milich was actually offering his daughter as a prostitute to the same Japanese men from the previous evening. Bill then returns to the mansion, and is warned yet again. When he visits Domino's apartment, Domino's roommate tells Bill that Domino received results of a blood test, which said she was HIV positive. Later, Bill reads a newspaper article about a model named Amanda Curran who died of a drug overdose behind a locked apartment door. Bill goes to the morgue and learns this woman is the same woman whom Bill had helped to revive at Ziegler's party, and wonders if she was in fact murdered.

Bill is then called to Victor Ziegler's home, where Ziegler reveals he was one of those at the ritual and that nothing further was done; according to him, Amanda was the woman who "redeemed" Bill and that she was simply a drug-addicted prostitute. Ziegler does warn Bill against investigating further, as some of the masked participants are said to be powerful members of society. Bill returns home to Alice and finds the mask he wore to the party on the pillow next to her. He breaks down crying, waking Alice before confessing about his journey. While Christmas shopping later that morning, Alice and Bill reconcile and attempts to improve their marriage seem to be underway.

Cast

Production

Comparison with Dream Story

The 1926 novella Traumnovelle by Arthur Schnitzler is set (somewhat earlier than its publishing date) in and around Vienna after the turn of the century. The couple are named Fridolin and Albertina, and their home is a typical suburban middle-class home, not the film's posh urban apartment.

The couple is also Jewish in the novella. According to historian Geoffrey Cocks, Kubrick (himself of Jewish descent) frequently removed references to the Jewishness of characters in the novels he adapted. This is reflected in the film by the fact that when Bill Harford is going home he is taunted by some young boys in the street with anti-gay slurs. In the novella, these are anti-Semitic slurs.[2]

The novella is set during the carnival season during which it is common for people to wear masks to parties. The party that both husband and wife attend at the opening of the story is a masked carnival ball. The film is set during the Christmas season.

Critic Randy Rasmussen suggests that the character of Bill is fundamentally more naive, strait-laced, less disclosing and more unconscious of his vindictive motives than his counterpart Fridolin in the novel.[3] For Rasmussen and others, the film's Bill Harford is essentially sleep-walking through life with no deeper awareness of his surrounding. In the novel when his wife discloses a private sexual fantasy, he in turn admits one of his own (of a girl in her mid to late teens), while in the film he is simply shocked. The film's argument over whether or not he has fantasies over women patients and whether women have sexual fantasies or not is simply absent from the novella where both husband and wife assume each other have fantasies. While in the film, Bill's estrangement from Alice in the film revolves around her confessing her having a recent fantasy to him, in the novella after both exchange fantasies, and her following declaration (not in the film) that in her youth she could have easily married someone other than him is what initializes a sense of estrangement between them.

Similarly, in the novel (as Rasmussen has also observed), he long suspected the infatuation of his patient Marion for him, while in the film it is a complete surprise, and he again seems shocked. He is also more overwhelmed by the orgy in the film than in the novella. The novel's Fridolin is socially bolder but less sexual with the prostitute (Mizzi in the novel, Domino in the film). Fridolin is also conscious of looking old in the novel, though he hardly does in the film.

The party's password (quite sparsely attended in Schnitzler) is "Denmark", the location of where Albertina had her infatuation with the soldier. In the film the password is "Fidelio" Italian for faithfulness, the main name of Beethoven's only opera "Fidelio, or Married Love". In early drafts of the screenplay, the password was "Fidelio Rainbow". Jonathan Rosenbaum notes that both passwords echo elements of one member of the couple's behavior, though in opposite ways.[4] The party in the novella consists mostly of nude ballroom dancing.

In the novella, the woman who "redeems" Fridolin at the party, saving him from punishment, is costumed like a nun, and most of the characters at this party are costumed like nuns or priests (though this element was present in the original screenplay[5]). Fridolin himself is dressed like a monk. This element is removed from the film, although the chanting and incense seen at the orgy may seem loosely religious in a manner like a Black Mass rather than a Christian worship.

When Fridolin returns home, Albertina's dream is an elaborate drama that concludes with him getting crucified in a village square after Fridolin refuses to separate from Albertina and become the paramour of the village princess, even though Albertina is now occupied with copulating with other men, and watches him "without pity". By being faithful, Fridolin thus fails to save himself from execution in Albertina's dream although he was apparently spared by the woman's 'sacrifice' at the masked sex party. In both the novella and film, Albertina states that the laugh in her sleep just before she woke was a laugh of scornful contempt for Fridolin; although awake she states this matter-of-factly. The novella makes it clearer that Fridolin as this point hates Albertina more than ever, thinking they are now lying together "like mortal enemies". It has been argued that the dramatic climax of the novel is actually Albertina's dream, and the film has shifted the focus to Bill's visit to the secret society's orgy whose content is more shocking in the film.[6]

The character of Dr. Ziegler (who represents the high wealth and prestige to which Bill Harford aspires) is entirely an invention of the film, having no counterpart in the novella at all. Critic Randy Rasmussen interprets Ziegler as representing the worst demonic potential of Bill, much as in other Kubrick films where the Dr. Strangelove character represents the worst of the American national security establishment in Doctor Strangelove, Charles Grady represents the worst of Jack Torrance in The Shining, and Quilty represents the worst of Professor Humbert in Lolita.[7]

The presence of Ziegler allows Kubrick to change the mechanics of the story in a few ways. In the film, Bill first meets his piano-playing friend, Nightingale, at Victor Ziegler's party, and then while wandering around town, seeks him out at the Sonata cafe. In the novel, the cafe encounter with Nightingale is a happy accident. Similarly, the dead woman that Bill suspects of being the woman at the party who saved him is a baroness that he was acquainted with earlier, not a hooker at Ziegler's party.

More significantly, in the film Ziegler gives an entire commentary on the whole story to Bill, including an explanation that the party incident of Bill being apprehended, threatened, with the woman's sacrifice for him was staged. Whether or not this is to be believed, it is an exposition of Ziegler's view of the ways of the world as a member of the power elite.[8]

The novella suggests a clear explanation as to why the husband's mask ends up on the pillow next to his sleeping wife, she having discovered it when it slipped out of his suitcase, and placing it there as a statement of understanding him. In the film, this is left unexplained.

Use of Venetian masks

Numerous authors of works on Stanley Kubrick have noted that the masks worn at the sex ritual in Somerton[9] mansion are virtually all Venetian[10][11][12] and that the film has a closing credit for "Venetian mask research". In an interview, costume designer Marit Allen talks about Kubrick having all the masks sent from Venice but notes Kubrick also retouched them, slightly altering their appearance after he purchased them.[13] In addition to the Cocks anthology cited above, an earlier version of author Tim Krieder's essay published in UC's "Film Quarterly" is online.[14] These masks have been at some periods in history (including today) associated with Venetian carnival and performances of Commedia dell'arte, and the film's source novella by Arthur Schnitzler is set during carnival season. (Indeed the party attended by the husband and wife in the novella's opening is also a carnival-season "masked ball" in addition to the mansion gathering being described as such.)

Historians, travel guide authors, novelists and merchants of Venetian masks have noted that these have a long history of being worn during promiscuous activities.[15][16][17][18] Previously mentioned authors Tim Kreider and Thomas Nelson have both linked the film's usage of these to Venice's reputation as a center of both eroticism and mercantilism. Nelson notes that the sex ritual combines elements of Venetian carnival and Catholic rites. (In particular, the character of "Red Cloak" simultaneously serves as Grand Inquisitor and King of Carnival). As such, Nelson argues the sex ritual is a symbolic mirror of the darker truth behind the facade of Victor Ziegler's earlier Christmas party.[19] Carolin Ruwe writing in her 2007 book Symbols in Stanley Kubrick's Movie 'Eyes Wide Shut' argues that the mask is the prime symbol of the film, the masks at Somerton mansion reflecting the masks that all wear in society,[20] a point reinforced by Tim Krieder who notes the many masks in the prostitute's apartment and her having been renamed in the film "Domino" which is a style of Venetian mask.

Since the release of the film, some vendors of Venetian masks have used Eyes Wide Shut as publicity on their websites[21][22] and some published travel guides to Venice have pointed readers to shops from which Stanley Kubrick is said to have purchased masks used in the film.[23][24]

Reception

The film opened with mixed to positive reviews. The film currently holds a 78% certified fresh on Rotten Tomatoes. At The Internet Movie Database, the film currently holds a weighted average rating of 7.2.[25] Critics objected to two features. The first complaint was that the movie's pacing was too slow. While this may have been intended to convey dreaming, critics objected that it made actions and decisions laborious. Second, reviewers commented that Kubrick had shot his NYC scenes in a studio and that New York "didn't look like New York." Lee Siegel,[26] in Harper's, felt that most critics responded mainly to the marketing campaign and did not address the film on its own terms. Others feel that American censorship took an esoteric film and made it even harder to understand.[27] Noted online reviewer James Berardinelli also stated that it was arguably one of Kubrick’s best films.[28]

In the television show Roger Ebert & the Movies, director Martin Scorsese named Eyes Wide Shut his fourth favorite film of the 1990s.[29] For the introduction to Michel Ciment's Kubrick: The Definitive Edition, Scorsese wrote: "When Eyes Wide Shut came out a few months after Stanley Kubrick's death in 1999, it was severely misunderstood, which came as no surprise. If you go back and look at the contemporary reactions to any Kubrick picture (except the earliest ones), you'll see that all his films were initially misunderstood. Then, after five or ten years came the realization that 2001 or Barry Lyndon or The Shining was like nothing else before or since."[30]

Music

Controversies

Kubrick's opinion of the film

R. Lee Ermey, an actor in Kubrick's film Full Metal Jacket, claimed that Kubrick phoned him two weeks before his death to express his despondency over Eyes Wide Shut. "He told me it was a piece of shit", Ermey said in Radar magazine, "and that he was disgusted with it and that the critics were going to "have him for lunch". He said Cruise and Kidman had their way with him — exactly the words he used."[32]

Jan Harlan, Kubrick's brother-in-law and executive producer, reported that Kubrick was "very happy" with the film.[33] According to Todd Field, Kubrick's friend and an actor in Eyes Wide Shut, Ermey's claims are slanderous. Field's response appeared in an October 26, 2006 interview with Slashfilm.com:[34]

The polite thing would be to say 'No comment'. But the truth is that... let's put it this way, you've never seen two actors more completely subservient and prostrate themselves at the feet of a director. Stanley was absolutely thrilled with the film. He was still working on the film when he died. And he probably died because he finally relaxed. It was one of the happiest weekends of his life, right before he died, after he had shown the first cut to Terry, Tom and Nicole. He would have kept working on it, like he did on all of his films. But I know that from people around him personally, my partner who was his assistant for thirty years. And I thought about R. Lee Ermey for In the Bedroom. And I talked to Stanley a lot about that film, and all I can say is Stanley was adamant that I shouldn't work with him for all kinds of reasons that I won't get into because there is no reason to do that to anyone, even if they are saying slanderous things that I know are completely untrue.

Censorship and classification in America

Citing contractual obligations to deliver an R rating, Warner Bros. digitally altered the orgy for the American release, blocking out graphic sexuality by inserting additional figures to obscure the view, avoiding an adults-only NC-17 rating that limited distribution, as some large American theaters and video store operators disallow films with that rating. This alteration antagonized cinephiles, as they argued that Kubrick had never been shy about ratings (A Clockwork Orange was originally given an X-rating). The unrated version of Eyes Wide Shut was released in the United States on October 23, 2007 in DVD, HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc formats.

The version in South America, Europe and Australia featured the orgy scene intact (theatrical and DVD release) with ratings mostly for people of 16 (Germany) and 18+ (Australia). In New Zealand and in Europe, the uncensored version has been shown on television with some controversy. In Australia, it was broadcast on Network Ten with the alterations in the American version for mature audiences of 15 and older, blurring and cutting explicit sexuality.

Roger Ebert objected to the technique of using digital images to mask the action. He said it "should not have been done at all" and it is "symbolic of the moral hypocrisy of the rating system that it would force a great director to compromise his vision, while by the same process making his adult film more accessible to young viewers."[35]

Although Ebert has been frequently cited as calling the standard North American R-rated version the "Austin Powers" version of Eyes Wide Shut[36], in fact his review mockingly referred to an early rough draft of the altered scene (never publicly released) as the "Austin Powers" version of the film.[35] This is in reference to two scenes in the film Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery in which, through camera angles and coincidences, sexual body parts are blocked from view in a comical way.

Usage of Hindu prayers

While American censorship attempted to control the sexuality, complaints came from offended members of the Hindu community. The American Hindus Against Defamation [37] wrote to Warner Brothers requesting they change the voice-over chant that plays as Bill Harford wanders from room to room at the mansion. According to the AHAD, "the background music subsides and the shloka (scriptural recitation) from the Bhagavad Gita, one of the most revered Hindu scripture is played out." But, in reality, this is a modified version of an earlier piece by the film composer entitled "Backwards Priests". The main musical track in the orgy scene is the chanting of a Romanian priest being played backwards.[38] As noted above one musical cue is sung in Tamil[39][40] although other sections are sung in Hindi[41] taken from an earlier recording by Manickam Yogeswaran.

When Warner did not concede, the American Hindus Against Defamation threatened to protest. Eventually, Warner Brothers agreed with the Hindu community of Great Britain to replace it with a chant of similar dramatic tone. These changes were not made in the theatrical release in North America.[42]

DVD release

The DVD release of Eyes Wide Shut corrects technical gaffes, including a reflected crew member, and altering a piece of Nicole Kidman's dialogue. Most home videos remove the verse cited from the sacred Hindu scripture Bhagavad Gita.

The scene in which Kidman dances naked in front of a mirror has been zoomed in on DVD copies after Cruise enters the room.

Although the earliest American DVD of the uncut version states on the cover that it includes both the R-rated and unrated editions, in actuality only the unrated edition is on the DVD.

Notes

  1. ^ TIME Magazine Cover: Tom Cruise & Nicole Kidman - 5 July 1999 - Tom Cruise - Actors - Movies
  2. ^ Peter Loewenberg notes this in his essay Freud Schnitzler and Eyes Wide Shut [1] as does Geoffrey Cocks in his book Wolf at the Door
  3. ^ Rasmussen 2005, p. 331
  4. ^ Essay in Depth of field: Stanley Kubrick, film, and the uses of history by Geoffrey Cocks, James Diedrick, Glenn Wesley Perusek [2]
  5. ^ Eyes Wide Shut original screenplay
  6. ^ [3]
  7. ^ Rasmussen 2005, p. 332
  8. ^ Cocks, Geoffrey (August 2, 2004). Wolf at the Door. Peter Lang Publishing. p. 146.
  9. ^ The sign on the gate of the mansion says Somerton. References to the mansion as "Somerton mansion" are found in much literature on the film.
  10. ^ Kubrick, inside a film artist's maze by Thomas Allen Nelson (1)
  11. ^ Depth of Field: Stanley Kubrick, Film, and the Uses of History by Geoffrey Cocks, James Diedrick, Glenn Wesley Perusek (2)
  12. ^ The Wolf at the Door: Stanley Kubrick, History, & the Holocaust By Geoffrey Cocks (3)
  13. ^ Kubrick: The Definitive Edition by Michel Ciment, Gilbert Adair, Robert Bononno Kubrick Venice masks&f=false
  14. ^ Kreider essay, Film Quarterly
  15. ^ Sketches from Venetian history, Volume 2 by Edward Smedley 1837
  16. ^ Frommer's Portable Venice by Darwin Porter, Danforth Prince masks history&f=false
  17. ^ Novel The Venetian Mask by Rosalind Laker
  18. ^ [4]
  19. ^ Nelson pp. 288-9
  20. ^ [5]
  21. ^ [6]
  22. ^ [7]
  23. ^ Frommer's Northern Italy: Including Venice, Milan & the Lakes by Reid Bramblett published by John Wiley and Sons masks eyes wide shut&f=false
  24. ^ Venice and the Veneto by Damien Simonis published by Lonely Planet. masks eyes wide shut&f=false
  25. ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0120663/
  26. ^ EYES WIDE SHUT What the critics failed to see in Kubrick's last film
  27. ^ "For Movie Folks Who Considered Burning Down The Ratings Board When The Adjustment Was Enuf". Movie City News. January 26, 2006. Retrieved 2008-04-15.
  28. ^ http://www.reelviews.net/movies/e/eyes_wide.html Review of Eyes Wide Shut
  29. ^ Ebert and Roeper
  30. ^ Ciment, Michel (2003). Kubrick: The Definitive Edition. New York: Faber and Faber. ISBN 978-0571211081
  31. ^ Kubrick's Approval Sets Seal on Classical Crossover Success : Pook's Unique Musical Mix - International Herald Tribune
  32. ^ [8]
  33. ^ On Kubrick - A Talk With Kubrick Documentarian Jan Harlan
  34. ^ Interview: Todd Field Part 2 - /FILM
  35. ^ a b Roger Ebert's review of Eyes Wide Shut
  36. ^ See [9], [10] and [11]
  37. ^ [12]
  38. ^ http://lannghiemphu.blogspot.com/2007/01/porunca-noua-dau-voua_452.html
  39. ^ http://bharani.dli.ernet.in/thf/audio/yoges.html
  40. ^ http://archive.sensesofcinema.com/contents/02/23/ornament.html
  41. ^ http://www.runmovies.eu/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=311&Itemid=57
  42. ^ http://www.unomaha.edu/jrf/dharma.htm

References

  • Rasmussen, Randy (2005). Stanley Kubrick: Seven Films Analyzed. McFarland & Company. ISBN 0786421525.


Preceded by Box office number-one films of 1999 (USA)
July 18, 1999
Succeeded by
Preceded by Box office number-one films of 1999 (UK)
September 12, 1999 – September 19, 1999