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- <text id=90TT3243>
- <title>
- Dec. 03, 1990: Tragedy Is Their Destination
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 03, 1990 The Lady Bows Out
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CINEMA, Page 95
- Tragedy Is Their Destination
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Bertolucci makes a bleak, beautiful film of The Sheltering Sky
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD CORLISS
- </p>
- <p> Ever since its publication in 1949, Paul Bowles' The
- Sheltering Sky has been praised for its portrayal of a modern
- married couple afflicted with ennui, malaise, anomie--the chic
- social diseases that Americans of the postwar era picked up from
- French intellectuals. But the novel has another ghoulish
- attraction: it maps out the all-time nightmare itinerary for the
- innocent abroad.
- </p>
- <p> Port Moresby (John Malkovich), the protagonist of Bowles'
- story and of the swank, sexy, bleak and very beautiful film that
- Bernardo Bertolucci has made from it, is traveling with his wife
- Kit (Debra Winger) and an upper-class twit of a friend (Campbell
- Scott). He lands in Algeria, a hot, arid country where each
- hotel is more primitive than the last and the transportation,
- when there is any, is mostly by truck and camel. There are
- pestilential insects everywhere; the breakfast tray comes with
- a DDT spray can. When Kit isn't complaining about the heat or
- the stupidity, she is sleeping with the twit. A local prostitute
- tries to steal Port's wallet, and a loathsome Englishman filches
- his passport. What other atrocities can he imagine? Perhaps that
- he will sweat out a typhoid fever in a miserable cell in a
- Foreign Legion garrison? Or that his wife will lose her wits as
- the love slave of the sheik of Araby?
- </p>
- <p> Bowles made this caravan of horrors persuasive by
- suggesting that tragedy was the destination his travelers
- sought. His prose got under the skin of hapless Port and Kit and
- revealed their itch for romantic catastrophe. But movies are as
- different from novels as show is from tell. The director who
- would adapt this treacherous tale must find resources other than
- interior monologues and wan philosophizing. Bertolucci knew this
- when, after conquering China and Hollywood with The Last
- Emperor, he and co-screenwriter Mark Peploe approached The
- Sheltering Sky. "Instead of using language and psychology, I
- wanted to be more physical," he says. "I wanted you to feel the
- smells, the heat, even the cold--suddenly you see snow on the
- tops of the camels. And in this film, the body language is more
- eloquent. There is very little profound dialogue, thank God!"
- </p>
- <p> Toward the end of the movie's two hours and 17 minutes,
- there is very little dialogue at all; half an hour passes with
- hardly a word spoken except in Tamashek, the language of the
- Tuareg nomads, with whom Kit hitches a fateful ride. But there
- are many profound images of the desert in all its pitiless
- grandeur, courtesy of Bertolucci and his peerless
- cinematographer, Vittorio Storaro. The wind sculpts mountains
- and minarets out of the shifting sand. On a rocky spot where
- Port and Kit have just made desperate love, the setting sun
- alights for a moment as if in benediction.
- </p>
- <p> These panoramic vistas are no mere window dressing; they
- serve as counterpoint and antagonist to the Moresbys. Kit,
- always fighting the elements, will be blown away by them. Port,
- like so many Bertolucci heroes a passive creature whose bravado
- consists in allowing chance to work its will on him, at first
- believes he will enjoy feeling stranger in a strange land. North
- Africa, he thinks, will offer escape into adventure, exotic
- peril, the seductions of oblivion. He is wrong. The desert
- demands his surrender. The sand is quicksand; it will swallow
- him whole.
- </p>
- <p> The fraternal twin to Sky in the Bertolucci canon is Last
- Tango in Paris, his taboo-trashing melodrama about a displaced
- American (Marlon Brando) who provokes a torrid, cloistered
- affair with a young Frenchwoman. But the new movie is not about
- sex--or even, Bertolucci says, "the impossibility of love. It
- is about the impossibility of being happy within love. Kit and
- Port don't realize that the modern couple is an endangered
- species. Couples are so attacked by the outside world that they
- create a kind of fusion, a symbiosis. And that takes them,
- eventually, to a crisis. They look at each other and say, `Who
- am I? Who are you?'"
- </p>
- <p> Some viewers, who believe movies should be easy and
- edifying, will say of Kit and Port: Such small people. But
- nearly all of Bertolucci's films, from Before the Revolution to
- The Conformist, from 1900 to The Last Emperor, are big canvases
- holding tiny, forlorn souls. Because of the performers' power,
- the Moresbys come alive onscreen as they never quite did in the
- book. Bertolucci looks at Malkovich, the lizardly eminence of
- Dangerous Liaisons, and thinks of Brando: "They are two
- monoliths, unchanging, absolutely still--and, from the first
- moment, condemned." Winger, for too many years the great unused
- actress of American film, is the perfect vessel for a woman who
- must be a piece of baggage on Port's existential tour, then a
- Florence of Arabia ministering to his illness, then the trophy
- of an alien prince. "You can always hear the click of Debra's
- mind," Bertolucci says admiringly.
- </p>
- <p> The horror of Sky is that at the end, you can see Kit's
- mind click off. The beauty of the film is that it ultimately
- locates a married couple's humanity in that horror.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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