violence

52 Films By Women: Death is a Caress (1949)

IMDB

IMDB

By Andrea Thompson

It's still Noirvember, and I wanted to mark the occasion with another noir film directed by a woman. Having discussed Ida Lupino's “Outrage” last week, my options were predictably limited. Lupino was practically the only female director working in Hollywood at the time, and breaking it down by the genre made pickings far slimmer if I wanted to focus on a film by a different director.

But bless this wonderful age we live in, where there's always something somewhere that will reference the more obscure titles even some of the most devoted cinephiles haven't heard of. That, in short, is how I came across “Death is a Caress.” Made in 1949, it was apparently the first Norwegian film directed by a woman, and it upends many of the typical noir staples.

filmlinc.org

filmlinc.org

The film is narrated via flashback, beginning as a police vehicle drives through the streets. Ah siren, siren, what crime brings you forth? This is how we meet Erik (Claus Wiese), the young man under arrest who proceeds to narrate the film via flashback to his lawyer. Before his troubles started, he was a successful mechanic who was engaged to a beautifully innocent, adoring young woman named Marit (Eva Bergh). In true noir fashion, the best you can say about her is that she's delightfully bland. During one of their interactions, the camera zooms in a lovely white ornament nearby, as if to dangle the possibility of a happy, pristine future that's not to be.

Needless to say, Sonja (Bjørg Riiser-Larsen ) fits neatly into the mold of the femme fatale from the minute she appears. She's not only married, she's older and in full possession of wealth all her own, having never needed a man to support her. She's beautiful, but it's in a different fashion than noir dames typically are, with the sheer force of her presence being a large component of the impression she makes. When she shows up, she strides right over to Erik and demands his attention on their first encounter, and nearly runs him over in the next.

As their seductive dance continues, Erik tries to resist it, take solace in Marit, and avoid Sonja, only to be drawn back to her more and more willingly. Even when he meets Sonja's oblivious husband, Erik and Sonja exchange the kind of knowing smirks and glances that can only mean one thing as their interactions become more and more charged, and Erik soon abandons Marit without looking back. When he and Sonja do finally consummate their mutual attraction, it's far more erotic due to the lack of interference from the Hays Code, even if it's far less graphic than the films of today.

elgabinetedeldoctormabuse.com

elgabinetedeldoctormabuse.com

Surprisingly, Erik and Sonja's relationship soon incorporates love as well as lust, although Sonja has clearly formed similar liaisons previously. Sonja even promises Erik to divorce her husband and marry him. Even more shocking is that after an initial hesitation, Sonja actually follows through. But her and Erik's interactions have always been laced with harbingers of doom, and the problems start to arise as early as their honeymoon, and continue to grow throughout their relationship, which becomes more and more turbulent. Erik is somewhat resentful of Sonja's money and position, and she becomes more and more jealous and suspicious of him. Yet they always return to each other, until finally their mutually destructive impulses culminate in a horrifying climax.

This kind of toxic relationship is all too familiar, especially when it comes Erik's fatalistic mindset, which justifies his inability to take responsibility for his actions. He regrets what he's done, yet he believes it was inevitable, albeit in a more complex fashion than usual. As he puts it, things aren't decided in advance, but people have to follow their path, even if he allows that our choices are affected by our experiences. Granted, it's easy to trace the roots of this belief, since even Erik's boss remarks that they're one day closer to death at the end of the workday. Is all Nordic cinema obligated to somehow reference and/or grapple with death and existential angst in general?

Erik says he doesn't blame Sonja, but rather the class differences that kept them at odds. To the movie's credit, class itself is the source of much of the film's commentary on how many restrictions women face in their public and private lives, even when they seem to have a dizzying number of options. Yet at his sentencing, Erik seems determined to assign much of the blame to Sonja, not only claiming he never would've been a killer if he hadn't met her, but that Sonja actually participated in her own killing. He is unable to accept that he deserves to punished. And the system seems to partially agree, since Erik gets a mere five years for his crimes. Rather than vanishing, one could argue that this trope has merely evolved, with powerful women often being depicted as unstable at best, and still have a tendency to perish in the arms of the same men who profess their love for them.

Screenshot

Screenshot

Screenshot

Screenshot

The movie's title becomes an indictment, unintentional or not, about how common this kind of brutality is, especially for the women who typically suffer the worst of the consequences. In every statistic, the rates for those who have experienced intimate partner violence are not only higher for women than men, but the CDC estimates that “nearly half of female homicide victims in the U.S. are killed by a current or former male intimate partner.” There's a lot of insight into a certain kind of toxicity that fuels many a vicious cycle. Like many co-dependent couples, the highs were dizzying, but the lows were also devastating.

As for Erik himself, his obsession with Sonja is still powerful enough that he seems perfectly capable of giving himself the life sentence his judges will not. By the end, sitting alone in the darkness of his cell while bathed in warm light from the nearby window, he first speaks into an unseen distance, then unsettlingly, directly to us as he says he still can't say he would've avoided her Sonja even if he knew how his time with her would end. He's still filled with a longing for not only her, but “a heaven or hell where they could meet again.”

52 Films By Women: Revenge (2017)

Film Affinity

Film Affinity

By Andrea Thompson

They say hell is other people, and in the 2017 French film “Revenge,” a young woman is certainly put through the ringer, not just because of the men around her, but their toxic entitlement that views her as an object to be used and discarded at will.

However, “Revenge” isn't just a melding of genres, an action thriller that's also a horror film. It's clearly a rape revenge movie, a horror subgenre that doesn't get a lot of respect, and rightly so. Typically, they're films that claim to be about empowering women after a devastating attack, but more often than not, they're exploitative in the most unenjoyable way, relishing women's pain and not just the violence they inflict, but also endure. Such films also tend to enforce gender norms, typically depicting a stereotypically innocent girl or woman who is “tainted” by her rape and must be avenged. Sometimes it isn't even her who does the avenging, but her family, as was the case in “The Last House on the Left” and “Death Wish.”

Given such staples, it's hardly a surprise that nearly every film in the genre was written and directed by men. Even if “Revenge” contains all the typical elements, its female gaze makes all the difference. Coralie Fargeat wrote as well as directed the film, and the longer you watch “Revenge” the clearer her intentions become. Much like a film we previously discussed, “Revenge” caters to the male gaze, but Fargeat has far more success subverting it.

IMDB

IMDB

The heroine, Jen (Matilda Anna Ingrid Lutz) isn't just an atypical heroine, she's the girl who's more likely to be killed off as punishment for her sexual sins. From the minute she appears in all her blonde glory, sucking on lollipop and then going down on her handsome blonde lover Richard (Kevin Janssens), in his gorgeous, isolated desert home he uses as a getaway for himself and his friends' hunting trips, she seems doomed, with nearly every thought emphasizing her beauty and sexuality.

How doomed becomes clear once Richard's friends Stan (Vincent Colombe) and Dimitri (Guillaume Bouchede) join them early, much to Richard's dismay. From the beginning, they unsettle Jen, but she makes the best of it, and they party late into the night. In films such as “Straw Dogs,” Jen's deeply sexual dance would be a provocation, but in “Revenge,” it's just a party, and in no way an excuse for what occurs the next morning when Richard departs on an errand for a few hours.

Even if they've never been through such an attack, so many women can relate to what happens to Jen, and the discomfort she immediately feels sitting across the table from Stan. At first she's able to laugh off the unnecessary touching and the comments. Then his leering intensity, which Jen tries to ignore, makes her so uncomfortable she retreats to her room. Stan follows her, then gets angrier when Jen doesn't respond to his advances, which she first tries to placate, then flee from. It's to no avail, as Stan not only rapes her, but is abetted by Dimitri, who not only walks away, but turns on the TV to drown Jen's screams.

IMDB

IMDB

Far from reveling in the attack, Fargeat refuses to show it or Stan himself, with the few shots emphasizing Jen's pain and refusing to consider it in any way justified. When Richard returns, his concern is keeping Jen quiet, and offers her a large sum of money as well as a job in Canada as a bribe. Jen is unsurprisingly less than receptive, only wanting to return home, and their argument escalates in Richard pushing her off a cliff, something which shocks even Stan.

Jen doesn't so much survive as experience a kind of rebirth, just barely able to at first evade the men who intend to finish the job Richard started once they discover she's alive. At first, Jen is little more than a wounded animal, but she needs no persuasion to do away with Dimitri, the first man who finds her. After that first kill, she spends the night healing herself thanks to a drug and some methods that don't seem like they'd be effective enough to allow her to walk, let alone run and fight, the next day. But in case we missed the point “Revenge” has been trying to make, the phoenix from the bar can Jen used to cauterize her wounds has become magnificently branded onto her skin. With such flourishes, who really cares about plot holes?

Sure enough, when Jen spots Stan, she runs toward him, not away. Is Jen objectified, even though she's become the hunter, rather than the hunted? To be sure. This is still an exploitation pic where a devastatingly attractive young woman woman is wreaking havoc in skimpy clothes. But Jen's scars are also her glory, adding to her new identity as a hawk-like avenging angel who tears her prey to shreds.

IMDB

IMDB

Then again, she's not the only one who's objectified. The final showdown was always going to be between Jen and Richard, who underestimates her to the end, with him insisting he and his friends split up even when they discover Dimitri's body. He is also naked throughout their confrontation, and Fargeat's camera is like a voyeur, lingering behind Richard and emphasizing his vulnerability for the end we know is coming, and which leaves his immaculate home smeared with blood on nearly every surface, with his ultimate insignificance emphasized.

Neither Jen or Fargeat gives these men any mercy. They're all married, but their families only serve to emphasize their coldness and entitlement. They're all held equally responsible for Jen's suffering, and they all pay the price for their vicious misogyny. There is no voiceover, no running dialogue of Jen's mind, but Fargeat doesn't need it with an actress like Lutz. Her mostly wordless performance proves that less really can be more, with her journey from sex object to victim, and finally, action heroine, gives us a deeply satisfying, stylish feminist vision bathed in blood.