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WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
Jane Campion's The Piano: A sensitive touch to a fairly
selfish theme
By David Walsh
17 January 1994
In Jane Campion's film The Piano, mute Scottish widow
Ada McGrath (Holly Hunter) and her child take themselves off to
New Zealand in 1852 to start a new life. Ada and her stuffy, but
earnest, new husband Stewart (Sam Neill) do not hit it off. She
does, however, strike up a relationship with her husband's overseer,
Baines (Harvey Keitel), an illiterate who paints his face in the
style of the aboriginal Maoris. Through a somewhat circuitous
route, he has ended up the owner of her piano. Baines proposes
to sell her back the instrument one black key at a time, in exchange
for music lessons. The lessons turn into erotic encounters. All
this leads to jealousy and violence.
Campion was born in Waikanae, New Zealand, and attended the
Australian Film, Television and Radio School. She has a television
movie, Two Friends (1985), and two other feature films
to her credit: Sweetie (1989), a portrait of a disturbed
girl and her family, and An Angel at My Table (1990), based
on the novels of Janet Frame.
The Piano has been praised on many sides for its "sensuality"
and its "visionary brilliance." It is a great success.
The director, in her production notes, made the following comment:
"I feel a kinship between the kind of romance Emily Brontë
portrayed in `Wuthering Heights' and this film. Hers is not the
notion of romance that we've come to use; it's very harsh and
extreme, a Gothic exploration of the romantic impulse."
This is quite significant and deserves some consideration.
If one makes the point that The Piano as a work of art
stands in almost direct opposition to Wuthering Heights,
it is not in order to attack Campion as an individual or deny
her talent (which is genuine). The problem is a thornier and,
at heart, objective one: the disorientation of the artist under
the prevailing ideological conditions, and, to speak directly
to the matter, the truly pernicious influence of contemporary
feminism on many women (and men) artists.
Self-pity is a very poor foundation on which to construct a
work of art, or much anything else for that matter.
An unstated assumption underlies The Piano (an assumption
undoubtedly shared by much of its potential viewing audience),
to wit: sensitive middle class women are special, abused, silenced
(Ada is mute by choice, she has been traumatized by life somehow)
and deserve better from the world. The film takes as a starting-point
much of what it actually needs to establish dramatically,
but cannot because of the essential hollowness of its outlook.
A certain tone is set in one of its first sequences. A crew
of sailors unloads Ada's belongings in the surf. Mother and daughter,
somewhat dazed from the journey and the rude landing, appear vulnerable
and frail. The seamen, on the other hand, are crude, uncouth and
careless. They clearly have no appreciation of the significance
of the piano. To them, it is simply something heavy to lug around.
When asked if there is anything further she needs or wants,
Ada, through her daughter, replies that she has had enough of
the stinking ship and they can all go to hell. (One thinks of
the Manhattan lady advertising executive or up-and-coming lawyer
upbraiding a subway conductor when there has been a delay in train
service.) The audience members titter in sympathy with the poor
woman. They know straight away to whom this film is addressed
and to whom it is not.
Campion has failed, frankly, to bring to life a plausible,
mid-nineteenth-century Scottish widow. She has created a middle
class professional woman from one of the large urban centers of
Western Europe, North America or Australia/New Zealand, 1993 model,
and transported her back in time.
The film as a whole is filled with implausibilities. How is
it that Baines, the illiterate backwoodsman, turns out to be such
a tame, understanding and articulate creature? After sending for
her thousands of miles, why is Stewart so easily put off by Ada?
And how does she dare, isolated and friendless in a new country,
to enter so rapidly and willingly into a liaison with Baines?
It is not a question of demanding naturalistic detail, but,
once the filmmaker herself has created a certain framework, expecting
some kind of coherence. The film is not essentially an effort
to grasp the truth about the world, but to shape the world
according to a particular sensibility.
In a peculiar way, Campion both reveals her own orientation,
and fundamental complacency, and underestimates the pressures
that women, including many in the middle classes, do in fact confront.
The Piano presents someone who has, presumably of her own
accord, come half way around the world to marry a new husband.
And yet she refuses, from the very outset, to make the slightest
effort, on principle, to ingratiate herself with him. Is that
likely? Isn't it far more tragic that many women accommodate themselves
to intolerable situations from fear of destitution, loneliness,
etc.?
Emily Brontë approached things in a different manner.
The lives of Emily and her two novelist sisters, Charlotte (1816-1855,
the author of Jane Eyre) and Anne (1820-1849, a lesser
talent), are fabled. They spent almost their entire short existences
at an isolated moorland parsonage in Haworth, Yorkshire, in the
north of England.
The times they lived in were bleak and desperate. This was
the era of the rapid growth of London, Manchester, Liverpool,
Glasgow and the new manufacturing centers of the Midlands, whose
populations lived in physical wretchedness. The threat of the
hated workhouse, depicted in the novels of Charles Dickens, hung
over the head of every laborer.
This was the age of Chartism, the first independent movement
of the working class. As one commentator put it, during the "Hungry
Forties" two fears were ever present in the minds of the
prosperous classes: "terror of pestilence and terror of a
rising of the `mob.'"
In art, we associate the period with the last phase of Romanticism,
a movement characterized by an infatuation with emotion, imagination
and individualism. As one historian puts it, "The longing
that haunted it [Romanticism] was for the lost unity of man and
nature. The bourgeois world [of 1830-48] was a profoundly and
deliberately asocial one.... Three sources assuaged this thirst
for the lost harmony of man in the world: the Middle Ages, primitive
man (or, what could amount to the same thing, exoticism and the
`folk'), and the French Revolution."
Out of all this--the intense, claustrophobic family life, the
harsh social climate, the stormy effusions of Romanticism--Emily
Brontë created one extraordinary novel at the age of 27,
Wuthering Heights, three years before her death. The story
of the ill-fated love of Heathcliff and Catherine Earnshaw, and
of his revenge, is saturated with a passionate hatred of polite
society and all forms of restraint. Catherine's mystical vision
in the book was no doubt Emily Brontë's: "I see a repose
which neither earth nor hell can break ... where life is boundless
in its duration, and love in its sympathy, and joy in its fullness."
We referred above to one of the opening sequences of The
Piano. In her novel, Brontë introduces Heathcliff in
an altogether different fashion. Catherine's father goes off on
business from their isolated rural estate and returns with a "gypsy
brat" and "a tale of his seeing it starving, and houseless,
and as good as dumb, in the streets of Liverpool." Heathcliff
emerges as a kind of demonic force, in keeping with the Byronic
view of the dual nature--half-revolutionary, half-malevolent--of
the great Romantic myth-heroes and literary creations (Satan,
Napoleon, Don Juan, Faustus) in general. But, in any event, Brontë's
work burns with protest against the conditions of Heathcliff's
early life, against abuse, against injustice.
One commentator has noted that while Marx and Engels repudiated
the idealization of the aesthetics of the Middle Ages indulged
in by Romanticism, "That movement also contained Byron and
Shelley, for whom [they] held great respect. There is little doubt
that they made a distinction between `Philistine' Romanticism
and a plebeian and folklore-oriented Romanticism." Marx,
in 1854, included Charlotte Brontë (Emily had died by then),
along with Elizabeth Gaskell, William Makepeace Thackeray and
Dickens in the "present splendid brotherhood of fiction writers
in England, whose graphic and eloquent pages have issued to the
world more political and social truths than have been uttered
by all the professional politicians, publicists and moralists
put together."
In all honesty, why does Campion think her film makes a point
of contact with Wuthering Heights, which burst out of Brontë
as a condemnation of everything corrupt and inhuman that existed?
Because her character goes "beyond the bounds," so to
speak? Because of the film's emphasis on the intuitive, the sensual?
But these elements are quite unconvincing in the film and the
characters' motivations seem petty. Romanticism as a movement
wasn't simply concerned with self-expression. On the part of its
most heroic representatives, it was a doomed, but inspired, attempt
to regenerate and remake bourgeois society emotionally and intellectually,
to make it "live up to" the great democratic ideals
of the French Revolution. The outcome of the 1848 struggles demonstrated
to nearly everyone, artists included, the hopelessness of such
an effort.
Objectively, The Piano and Wuthering Heights
have almost nothing of substance in common, but Campion is no
doubt sincere in thinking that they do. What is the problem? Artists
(and not only artists) have difficulty because their entire framework
for looking at social problems is so warped. It is as if people
were looking at objects under water. Campion no doubt considers
herself a radical and a critic of society. The fault lies with
the absence of any mass movement against capitalism which might
provide a social compass, on the one hand, and the dominance,
on the other, of petty-bourgeois protest movements and a general
atmosphere which nourishes self-pity and self-absorption.
A balance sheet could be drawn up. Movements such as feminism,
black nationalism and gay rights have not helped anyone to see
the world and its most fundamental social relationships more clearly;
they have had precisely the opposite, narrowing effect. They have
objectively damaged artistic and intellectual work.
The film's great popularity stems from the fact that it applies
a sensitive veneer to a fairly selfish and comforting theme: the
"specialness" of the petty bourgeois individual and
his or her inalienable right to find personal fulfillment and
be protected against the more brutish side of existence. This
is a message many still want to hear.
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