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Festivals
Berlin film festival, part 2
The tension between cinematic vision and life itself
The Million Dollar Hotel, directed by Wim Wenders
By Stefan Steinberg
26 February 2000
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This is the second in a series of articles on the recent
50th Berlinale, the international film festival, held February
9-20. The festival is one of the largest in the world, with more
than 300 films screened. Subsequent articles will review a number
of the most interesting works, including a new film by German
filmmaker Volker Schlöndorff, as well as documentaries on
the Kosovo war and conditions in post-Soviet Russia.
German director Wim Wenders' new film, The Million Dollar
Hotel, opened the 50th Berlin international film festival.
Wenders occupies a virtually unique position bridging European
and American film and is the only German filmmaker of stature
who has been able to work with a degree of independence from the
main American studios.
Following his own disastrous experience and conflicts with
Francis Ford Coppola and the American studio system in the course
of making the film Hammett, Wenders licked his wounds,
summed up his experiences of Hollywood in his film The State
of Things (1982) and was able to recover ground. In particular,
following the success of Buena Vista Social Club (1999)
, he is now in a position to raise sufficient finances
to develop his own projects employing some of the best talent
on offer on both sides of the Atlantic.
Wenders first began his film work in the 1960s as part of the
cinematic movement known as New Cinema. Wenders has spoken about
the particular problems confronting German filmmakers at that
time following the experience of fascism and the general postwar
cultural stagnation in Germany. I don't think any other
country has had such a loss of faith in its own images, stories
and myths as we have. We, the directors of the New Cinema, have
felt this loss most keenly in ourselves as the absence of a tradition
of our own, as a generation without fathers. Wenders, along
with others, set about to find new sources for potent images and
stories, a new basis for German film itself.
Throughout his film work Wenders has drawn heavily from American
film influencesnotably Nicholas Ray and John Ford. Wenders
recalls that in the late 1960s, during the heyday of radicalism
on the campuses, fellow film students urged him to attend political
meetings. Wenders preferred to watch American westerns. He has
made no secret of his admiration for road movies such as Easy
Rider and many of own his films revolve around a journey or
quest.
In a number of his films Wenders has also played with the classic
thriller theme in the shape of an investigating detective. Hammett
(1982) is devoted to detective novel writer Dashiell Hammett and
his involvement in a real-life mystery, and in Until the End
of the World (1991) he featured an investigator who travels
across continents, while the journey of the film's heroine culminates
in outer space. Featuring rootless individuals (Travis, the main
figure in Paris, Texas [1984] emerges suddenly from the
American desertapparently lacking a past) relieved of immediate
social ties, Wenders' films recurrently point towards a rupture
which has taken place in the lives of his characters.
Traditionally, both the road theme and the detective on a quest
have been used to construct a rigid framework for the development
of a film story. In his own films, however, Wenders demonstrates
that real life spills over and rarely fits into the neat who-done-it
framework of the classic thriller, real life never begins and
ends as cleanly as a bus trip.
Wenders search for new cinematic inspiration and a new language
point both to the strengths and the weaknesses in his work. Employing
elements of traditional American film genre Wenders has been able
to take up themes such as the reliability of memory, the difficulties
of communication, the way in which we perceive the world and how
this perception can be illuminated or distorted by film itself.
At the same time, when compared with other figures of the New
Cinema movement, for example R. W. Fassbinder or Volker Schlöndorff,
Wenders exhibits a tendency to pull back from difficult social
and historical questions. Both Fassbinder (one of whose principal
cinema influences was the German-American director Douglas Sirk)
and Schlöndorff have tackled head-on issues emanating from
the German past and fascism in particular. On many occasions their
films have encountered withering criticism and hostility from
vested social interests (see Schlöndorff review).
In Wenders' own films the traces of the past remain either
tracespolitical slogans daubed on a wall in the backgroundor
assume an absurd formsuch as the Nazi war movie being rehearsed
in Wings of Desire (1987). This is not to insist that every
German filmmaker has to devote all of his work to making films
devoted to the German past, but Wenders evinces a reluctance to
really come to grips with the roots of the problems displayed
by the figures in his films, loneliness, despair, disorientation.
Wenders originally planned a science fiction film entitled
The Billion Dollar Hotel whose action would have taken
place late in the 21st century. Budgetary limitations meant that
the completed film, based on an idea by U2 pop singer Bono, takes
place in the here and now. One of Los Angeles' most exclusive
hotels in the 1920s, which has meantime become a depository for
the poor, socially excluded and mentally disturbed, provides the
arena for the action.
The film begins with a long pan of the LA skyline which ends
on the roof of the hotel. One of its residents, Tom Tom (Jeremy
Davies), runs the length of the roof and pitches himself over
the edge. Through Tom Tom's eyes we experience the plunge from
the roof and his slow-motion passage past the windows on each
floor. In the course of his fall we catch a glimpse of some of
the hotel's inhabitants and their activities. Tom Tom's leap recalls
a scene from Wenders' earlier film Wings of Desire the
plummet of an angel from the top of the Siegessaule in Berlin.
In the Wings of Desire the fall of the angel to earth brings
new life, with the angel exchanging its eternal, ethereal existence
for a material, mortal one.
In The Million Dollar Hotel, following his suicide leap,
the childlike, innocent Tom Tom is evidently fated to travel in
another direction. The shot of the hotel windows is evidence of
the director's keen eye and artistic vision which permeate the
film. His balancing of light and shadow, securing his subjects
within the framework of a room or street, recalls in particular
the pictures of Edward Hopper. At the same time the action is
driven forward by carefully selected rock music.
We do not experience Tom Tom's encounter with the groundinstead
his voice observes: After I'd jumped everything was clear.
He continues to narrate the story of the film, which moves briefly
back in time to deal with the circumstances leading up to Tom
Tom's suicide leap. Prior to Tom Tom, another hotel resident Izzy
had taken the same route. Did he fall or was he pushed? Izzy has
a rich father who wants to know (or suppress?) the truth and employs
a super detective, FBI-agent Skinner (Mel Gibson as a sleuthing
cruise missile) to investigate the circumstances of
his son's death.
We are introduced to the inhabitants of the hotel. Dixie (Peter
Stormare) plays guitar, wears his hair long and maintains he is
the long ignored fifth Beatlethe man who really wrote the
songs for John Lennon and Paul McCartney. Geronimo (Jimmy Smits)
is an American Indian with esoteric artistic interests and a restrained,
silent manner recalling the Indian figure in Milos Forman's One
Flew Over the Cookoo's Nest (which Wenders acknowledges was
an influence on this film). Eloise (Milla Jovovich), cool and
reserved, is a young woman who seeks refuge in a bookshop by day
and offers her body to strangers at night.
Tom Tom loves Eloise and in the course of the movie they develop
a relationship. The various inhabitants of the hotel meet together
and, in free-ranging discussion, discuss how they can exploit
Izzy's death and the subsequent interest on the part of the media
for their own benefit.
In The Million Dollar Hotel Wenders returns his recurring
detective motif but there is no obvious journey undertaken in
the workapart from the film-length passage of Tom Tom from
the hotel roof to the ground. Our attention is focused entirely
on the inhabitants of the hotel and the development of their relationships.
In this respect Wenders' considerable cinematic skills are unable
to disguise the thinness of the plot and the inadequacy of the
characters.
Eloise begins the film as a virtually autistic creature, rejecting
company and unwilling to communicate. Under her arm she carries
a book, A Century of Loneliness. She speaks only under
duress and then to declare that she does not exist. Rescued
from a nighttime rape by agent Skinner, she unwinds sufficiently
to develop an affectionate relationship with Tom Tom. Her moments
alone with Tom Tom towards the end of the film contain real tenderness
and are sensitively filmed, but her own transformation remains
unexplained and too abrupt.
In his opening scenes FBI agent Skinner functions as a sort
of Robo-cop, ruthlessly intimidating murder suspects and planting
bugs. His head is supported by a neck-bracein fact, his
back and spine are horribly disfigured. In one scene, recalling
David Cronenberg's work, Skinner is bent double, twisted in agonising
pain as he spies on the hotel's inhabitants. The man of law and
order also admits to being as much a freak as the people he is
investigating and in his own sudden about-turn protects the suspect
Tom Tom from pursuing police.
Tom Tom is the adult with the spontaneity of a child, the innocence
of an angel. His view of the world is direct and free from ideological
ballast, his spontaneity works to break down tensions between
the hotel inhabitants. The theme of childish perception of the
world is another recurring theme of Wenders. The closer we get
to the characters, however, the more unsatisfactory they become.
In his notes to the Berlinale Wenders declares: The hotel
can be understood as a kind of madhouse, except that, ultimately
compared to the world around them, the supposedly crazy inhabitants
appear quite normal and healthy. Wenders has acknowledged
parallels drawn between his film and The Idiots by Lars
von Trier.
Without disputing the derangement of the real world,
there are definite problems with such a standpoint. Put a deranged
person together with relatively a sane person, there is bound
to be conflict. Put two mentally and socially disturbed people
together, they will adjust to one another and live in harmonyis
it really as easy as that? But this seems to be the message communicated
by the harmonious and democratic meetings of the hotel residents.
Wenders himself is not blind to the realities of modern day
Los Angeles. Indeed he notes that during the shooting of the film
at the hotel ambulances and police cars were a daily occurrencedealing
with disturbances and disputes, carting off the latest victims
of drug overdose. In his film, however, Wenders chooses to largely
exclude such manifestations of poverty and mental illness, with
the result that he does a disservice to his characters. The film
presents us with pure, at the same time privileged spirits, too
good for this world and doomed to destruction.
Wenders entire career in film exudes a continual dissatisfaction
and unease with the conventions and trivial priorities on offer
in modern societypriorities promoted by the mass media which
work to blunt critical faculty. But in his latest film Wenders
is too compliant in ironing out contradictory elements of modern
life which could get in the way of his artistry and cinematic
concept. Not only do his story and characters suffer as a resultas
social tensions intensify the danger arises that such one-sidedness
can reduce the filmmaker's work to the level of the evocative
but insubstantial.
See Also:
The 50th Berlin film festival: pomp and
paucity
[24 February 2000]
Wim Wenders talks with WSWS:
"The culture of independent film criticism has gone down
the drain"
[10 January 2000]
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