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Where the Wild Things AreLoonies unbound in Grizzly Man and AsylumElla TaylorPublished on August 11, 2005
Fitzcarraldo is my best documentary. Grizzly Man is one of my best feature films.
Treadwell had his loyal supporters, many of them tree-hugging romantics like himself, as well as plenty of irritated detractors. One less-than-sympathetic Park Service employee interviewed by Herzog suggests that the bears gave Treadwell a wide berth because they had concluded he was retarded. An Aleut Indian curator with a Ph.D. from Harvard argues that by cuddling up to these extremely dangerous animals, Treadwell, far from protecting them, was crossing the line of respect humans must preserve between themselves and wild beasts. Herzog is too smart to deny any of this, or to skate over Treadwell’s past forays into drink and drugs, or the lack of success with women and people in general that led him to sentimentalize the bears and their habitat. But he seems all too willing to buy into Treadwell’s chest-thumping self-aggrandizement. For a formidable intellectual, Herzog can also be a shocking drama queen. Treadwell’s life and death could hardly be more inherently sensational, but Herzog jacks up the emotional register just the same. He can be coarse, as when he coaxes Jewel Palovak, Treadwell’s former lover, friend and co-founder of the educational organization Grizzly People (and, not incidentally, the film’s co-executive producer), into saying she feels like Treadwell’s widow — an idea that clearly hadn’t occurred to her before, but which she embraces with alarming alacrity. We also see him listening to the audio of Treadwell’s death (the lens cap was never removed), then coyly pronouncing it too horrifying to include in the movie. Perhaps so — one of the men involved in the cleanup after the bear was shot tells Herzog that they hauled away “four garbage bags of people out of that bear” — yet it seems oddly unlike the director to play censor of life’s unsightly underbelly. Nor was I ever convinced that Treadwell measured up to the long line of transcendently self-immolating madmen who are Herzog’s artistic obsession. Behind many an avowed ecstatic there hides an angry, impotent little man who feels rejected by the world. Treadwell, for all his gooey encomia to his furry friends, could be petty and vicious about people. Herzog gives that side of him full play, but, having shown us one of Treadwell’s paranoid on-camera rants against the Enemies of Bears, Herzog remarks, “His rage is incandescent, almost artistic.” Me, I saw a sad, overgrown schoolboy throwing a hissy fit. There’s more of that in Asylum, and it comes hitched to similarly repellent physical violence. Natasha Richardson, looking very Grace Kelly in a golden chignon made for carnal mussing, plays Stella, one of those neurasthenic neo-noir women who survive on booze, cigarettes and the promise of adultery with a cad. The alienated wife of an ambitious psychiatrist (Hugh Bonneville) who has snatched a top hospital job from under a long-standing deputy (Ian McKellen), Stella has no interests or ambitions of her own, hates other women and shows scant interest in their young son Charlie (Augustus Jeremiah Lewis). And still we are asked to root for her, especially when she falls for Edgar (Marton Csokas), a wild-eyed patient who’s in for the sensationally brutal killing of his apparently unfaithful wife. Signs, portents and parallels abound, mostly in the form of shattered glass, and pretty soon all aboard are merrily destroying themselves (and others) for no other reason than to goose our jaded reflexes. Sir Ian hams away enjoyably enough as the disgruntled colleague who channels his untapped libido into Machiavellian power plays, and Bonneville, who played the young John Bayley in Iris, is excellent in the thankless role of the eternal cuckold. But Richardson, who’s almost always better onstage than she is onscreen, is stiff and wooden in that uniquely Redgrave way, and Csokas — in a role originally meant for Richardson’s husband, Liam Neeson — has little to do but smolder, shag and, when all else fails, slug. Bookended by wittily surreal scenes of a hospital ball, the movie is shot with the same rigor and beauty that went into making Young Adam. But rigor and beauty are nothing without a point, and if the point of Asylum is that a little romantic obsession goes a long way, 100 years of cinema have made sure that we knew that already. GRIZZLY MAN | Directed by WERNER HERZOG | Produced by ERIK NELSON | Released by Lions Gate Films | At Laemmle Sunset 5, Laemmle Royal and Laemmle Playhouse 7. ASYLUM | Directed by DAVID MACKENZIE | Written by PATRICK MARBER and CHRYSANTHY BALIS | Based on the novel by PATRICK McGRATH | Produced by MACE NEUFELD, LAURIE BORG and DAVID E. ALLEN | Released by Paramount Classics | At ArcLight Hollywood and Westside Pavilion
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