The Dreamers
I’ve
been making it a rule of late that before I see a film I should have read the
book, provided it’s available in English and that I know the film is based on a
book in the first place. So it has been with The
Assassination Of Jesse James By
The Coward Robert Ford and I Am Legend.
It produces mixed results: the first one, good; the latter, bad. I’ve now had
Bertolucci’s The Dreamers on
DVD for some time and have been holding off watching it until I had read the book.
And it being by Gilbert Adair, I’m surprised it’s taken me so long to get
around to it.
The
Dreamers (2003), as Adair notes in the afterword, is a
rewrite of his 1986 debut, The Holy Innocents, a novel he was never happy with
and constantly knocked back offers of adaptation, only to rescind when
Bertolucci came calling. Not just rescind, but seize the opportunity to put
past wrongs right, and come up with a new treatment, for both book and film,
which he claims “may be twins but…they’re not identical.”
It
seems in literature that when young Americans come to Paris they end up caught
in the moment and find themselves moving into an apartment indefinitely and
enjoying lots of sex. The Dreamers,
in this respect, is no different to James Baldwin’s Giovanni’s Room, as its
main character, the eighteen year old Matthew, has come to Paris, and in a
friendshap “matured in the white shadow of the Cinématèque screen”, has come to
know Théo and his twin sister, Isabelle, although his insecurity casts doubts
on his worthiness of their acquaintance:
A
lonely man thinks of nothing but friendship, just as a repressed man thinks of
nothing but flesh. If Matthew had been granted a wish by a guardian angel, he
would have requested a machine, one yet to be invented, permitting its owner to
ascertain where each of his friends was at any given moment, what he was doing
and with whom. He belonged to the race which loiters underneath a loved one’s
window late at night and endeavours to decipher shadows flitting across the
Venetian blind.
The
comparison of Matthew’s loneliness to one of repression is apt in the context
of the novel as Matthew, after an embarrassing misunderstanding with a friend
back in America, found “the door of the closet out of which he had momentarily
stepped proved to be a revolving one” and has buried what desires he has.
Echoing
Matthew’s psyche, on a larger scale but in the background of the novel, the
French government, under de Gaulle has designs on repressing the liberal
movement, one incediary act being the closure of the Cinématèque, a beacon on
the French cultural landscape standing outside of beaurocratic borders. And,
with no films to see, the trio of Matthew, Isabelle, and Théo embody the ethos
of the popular saying that the show must go on, adapting films into a parlour
game called Home Movies that starts with petty gambling, only for the stakes to
dangerously progress into a heady steam of sexual forfeit:
The
Cinématèque had been forgotten. The had a Cinématèque of their own, a Cinématèque
in flesh and blood. Which meant that the game was no longer played merely
whenever the inclination siezed them. While they read during the day, or played
cards, or fumbled one another, the curtain would rise on Home Movies night
after night, at six-thirty, eight-thirty and ten-thirty, with matinees on
Sunday.
But
like a screening at the Cinématèque, things must come to and end and in The
Dreamers Adair brings the final curtain down on a tragic note as the events of
May 1968, spurned on by the Cinématèque’s closure, slip from protest to riot.
Our dreamers, long lost in their liberal world, are woken by the heavy hand of
conservatism.
When
I pick up an Adair novel, this being my fifth, I’ve come to expect a level of
trickery but such expectations were not met here, although, in hindsight, I
suppose I should anticipate the unexpected from Adair. What The Dreamers is,
then, is a stylistically tame novel that, in protest at its timidity, delivers
a steamy soup of friendship, desire and sin that still needs a pinch of salt.
The story is assuredly told, each observation a sparkling pearl, but somewhat
lacks the wit displayed, such as showcased in Buenos Noches Buenas Aires, that,
for me, typefies an Adair novel and makes it something that The Dreamers can
only, well, dream of.
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