By
Kristin Battestella
Though
hampered in finding audiences by a limited box office season, writer,
director, and independent film stalwart Jim Jarmusch's (Broken
Flowers, Night on Earth,
Mystery Train) 2013 vampire
tale Only Lovers Left Alive
remains
a witty, impressive, thought provoking commentary long after the
viewing ends.
Vampire
and depressed musician Adam (Tom Hiddleston) has had it with humanity
and our so-called zombie apathy and finds it increasingly difficult
to make music in the once glorious but now downtrodden Detroit. His
perpetual lady love Eve (Tilda Swinton), however, adores Tangier and
enjoys her blood procuring visits with the long thought dead
Christopher Marlowe (John Hurt) – the true author of Shakespeare's
works. Eve makes the long trip to see Adam, but their rekindled
romance is threatened when Eve's disruptive sister Ava (Mia
Wasikowska) arrives from “zombie central” Los Angeles. The young
and reckless Ava takes a liking to Adam's lone human friend Ian
(Anton Yelchin) and soon endangers their O Negative supply line from
local Dr. Watson (Jeffrey Wright). Will the lovers survive?
Not
Your Mama's Vamps
Last
fall, I wrote a mini capsule review of Only
Lovers Left Alive for
one of my annual vampire
film lists. At the time, my primary concern was that this was a
refreshingly unconventional film and that it would not be for
everyone expecting more mainstream designs. Next, I feared the
picture wasn't as good as I thought it was when I first saw it –
would such offbeat hold up upon repeat viewings? However, I've found
myself near addicted to Only
Lovers Left Alive in
the months since.
Instead
of predicating my praise with a 'not
for everyone' label, my vantage has grown to the notion that everyone
should give this picture a chance. Forget Twilight.
I
am so sick of any vampire film, book, and television material being
compared to it when, despite its millions,Twilight
is only one very small, divisive, largely inaccurate reflection of
the genre and its longtime audiences. Only
Lovers Left Alive, by
contrast, is the 21st
century bar by which vampire pictures should be measured. This
is
everything I have ever
wanted in a vampire movie yet it is unlike any other vampy film
before it. The intercut beginning – who is who, what’s happening,
why they live apart – will confuse some audiences accustomed to
straightforward, spoon-fed explanations. Fortunately, these parallels
reflect the similar but different existence of our detached but no
less connected lovers and infers their own Einstein discussions.
Ironically, the leads don't talk to each other until half hour into
the picture when their vampiric nature is revealed with a
ritualistic, sex scene-esque, ecstatic, blood drinking high. Some
accept or revel in this shoot up tea time necessity while others
begrudge and seem ashamed of it. The euphoria is over so fast –
they can schedule it or travel a few nights without blood, but this
required fix takes on dangerous withdrawals when one is on the run
and down to a precious last drop.
Though
perhaps obvious, the addiction subtext in Only
Lovers Left Alive is
one of many genre layers amid the
witty, sardonic script and quotable ensemble banter. Certainly there
are spooky, atmospheric, noir moments, yet the subtle, chuckle
inducing black comedy accents toy with the social statements, bleak
palette, and melancholy analysis in the truest sense of the phrase.
Yes, what date of birth do
you give when scheduling that night flight? Numerous names,
languages, references, history, and literary allusions will take more
than one viewing to register, and you can learn something new every
time you watch Only Lovers
Left Alive. Granted,
that may not be the intention of the contemporary, multitasking,
desensitized viewer, but this impressive depth and mental stimulation
deserves your undivided attention. These
vampires were probably there to give plants and animals their Latin
names and scoff at how the antiquated grid technology hasn't caught
up to the new millennium. What else did they have to do for so many
centuries but read up on Tesla or quantum theory? They influence art,
advance science, and accumulate knowledge while humanity ignores our
spark and degrades into the mundane – understandably, it must suck
to pin all that worth on the mad dash to find uncontaminated blood!
Despite their seeming superiority, our couple will always be in
hiding, on the lamb, under the radar, and avoiding the police. Sooner
or later their predatory nature must surface and they will
find a way to survive.
The
Lovers
At
first, the always ethereal Tilda Swinton (Michael
Clayton) seems more like a
Tolkien elf than a vampire thanks to her striking white hair, light
clothing, and Old World happiness as she takes a solo evening stroll
through Tangier. Clearly strong, Eve seems effortless, curious,
intuitive, and almost childlike ala the hissing swan inspiration from
The Bride of Frankenstein
yet also aged and advanced
in her sense of wonder. How
many of the great literary scandals has she witnessed
first hand! She touches books delicately, imprinting their tales with
a tactile osmosis and vampiric speed reading before wearing gloves to
protect this intimate touch during her journey. Eve is a progressive
vampire with plenty of credit cards, passports, and a smartphone, yet
waits in her lover's foyer as if the removal of said gloves is an old
fashioned, sensuous calling card. Traveling is such a drag, but they
talk long distance on schedule and Eve's handled Adam's periodic
brooding previously. She comes to him without outrightly being asked,
dances to the music he makes, and remains in tune yin to yang despite
their separation. This couple would seem mismatched – her bright
contentment to his bleak depressing – yet these primal, protective
mates for life are wonderfully kinetic be it a continent or inches
between them. Dark garments and red accents do intrude on Eve's white
as Only Lovers Left Alive
gets heavy, however. She wears his robe, feels at ease within his
dreary sheets, but as the desperation mounts the sophisticated layers
peel away, reverting to an older, fierce instinct. Eve says she is a
survivor, and we believe it when she drinks the O Negative first,
keeps the flask in her pocket, puts the blood on a stick in the
fridge, or wins at chess. She says, “Give me all your money baby,”
and Adam gives it!
I
confess, I’m behind on the Tom Hiddleston hysteria but became a fan
because of Only Lovers Left
Alive. Initially,
I could see the originally cast as Adam Michael Fassbender in the
early lone rocker scenes, but if Fassbender did The
Counselor
instead of Only
Lovers Left Alive,
he made a rare mistake. Now, I don’t think anyone but Hiddleston
could have played Adam, and it's a pity
so many may only know him as Loki in Thor
and
The Avengers.
From naming his male guitar after “just some old 17th
century English guy” and seeing long dead star Eddie Cochran “yeah,
on Youtube” to his modified electric car, antique stethoscope, a
perpetually out of order bathroom, and the need for an elusive wooden
bullet – there's more to Adam than meets the eye. His clutter and
technological work indicate they have been apart for some time, and
Adam seems to be an ongoing, moody, musical study in contradictions
with an old boob tube and giant cordless antenna phone hooked up to
his laptop and sophisticated music equipment. His music is brooding
art with a beat, a melancholy but still ticking reflection laced with
Byronic references. He dresses up as “Dr. Faust” to obtain his
blood supply and balances his pouty with a surprisingly sardonic wit
and chuckle-inducing deadpan irony. Adam claims mutual jeopardy makes
him feel safer, that he doesn't have spare time to waste, and above
all insists he doesn't have heroes – despite an entire wall adorned
with such luminaries (I see that Hank Williams on the right
coughISawtheLightcough).
Sadly, he is right about our zombie monotony and people fearing our
genius bringing us to ruin. These vampires have nothing to do with
their lives but read, invent, and watch us piss away the gifts we are
given. I’d be depressed, too! Adam was emo before emo was emo. If
Eve thinks he is wasting his long life on self obsession, by
comparison imagine how much time we
are wasting in our compressed lifespan.
Friends
and Foes
Adding
to Only Lovers Left Alive's
nostalgic charm is John Hurt (Alien)
as Christopher Marlowe –
yes, that Christopher
Marlowe. His Shakespeare
possibilities create just enough past interest while his unknown
aspects provide words of warning to Adam and Eve. Some audiences,
however, may be upset by his unexplained health issues or find the
Marlowe as Shakespeare suggestion unnecessary. Was Kit already too
old when he became a vampire, presumably after he faked his
historical death pre-Shakespeare? Has he already lived so long that
his immortality is now a slowly degenerative condition? Who or what
is Silmane Dazi's (This Path
Ahead) Bilal to Marlowe? He
knows both Eve and Adam
and their secrets, but by all indications Adam has not been in
Tangier for some time and Bilal doesn't appear to be a vampire
himself. Is he merely a literary protege to Marlowe or something
more, and how often do these kinds of short lived companions come and
go? Of course, we'll never know Kit's whole story, and that's the
point. Thankfully, his symbolic bad batch for the drug dealer twists
create more angst in Only
Lovers Left Alive, as
does the perfectly
juvenile and obnoxious Mia Wasikowska (Jane
Eyre) as Ava. Just when the
picture may seem too slow, Eve's so-called sister enters half way
through the two hour time – clearly uninvited as a reckless vampire
who lives in the moment regardless of any delicate needs or peril.
Adam says he never sees other vampires, yet they each dream of Ava
before she arrives and resent her bratty jokes and childish vamp
cliches. They can't forget whatever it was she did in Paris 87 years
ago, (Oh if this were Highlander:
The Series and
we could have seen that!)
and Ava comes between these would be parents, overstaying her welcome
and causing precious blood to be spilled – literally and
figuratively.
Though
Anton Yelchin (Star Trek)
as
Ian isn't a bad kid for being in the music industry and seems
grateful to genuinely help Adam, Ava
uses Ian and makes an already fragile situation regarding Adam's
music more suspicious. Why are teens showing up at Adam's house? He
has released music anonymously, but how have Adam's tunes made it to
the underground club scene and come back to him? Did Ian sell the
material, defying his confidentiality agreement, or was it Ava
somehow causing the musical stir? Ian wants to know more about Adam,
tries to get him out of his reclusive ways, and unknowing emulates
their vampire style – but he will never fully grasp the centuries
in play and is easily lead and influenced by the next shiny lure.
Again, perhaps the point is in not knowing how it all goes down, for
Adam and Eve have previously given their achievements to others, left
a place before they've stay too long, or fled from something worse.
Despite her lack of discipline, Ava is right that a lone vampire has
a much tougher existence. Are Adam and Eve really condescending
snobs, vampires so far removed from what they are that they don't
know how to get rid of a body? They think they are so above that 15th
century barbarism and must obey that stop sign when a cop is driving
by, but their gloves must come off eventually if they intend to live
up to being the Only Lovers
Left Alive. Fortunately,
Jeffrey Wright (Casino
Royale) adds a fun sense of
spooky as the blood procuring Dr. Watson. His hospital lab is bright
and high tech compared to the Detroit drab, and his Strangelove or
Caligari banter suggests he may suspect what's really going on in
this lucrative arrangement. Honestly, I wish Only
Lovers Left Alive were a
series so we could see more of this reluctant, looking over his
shoulder but no less sardonic doctor and his speculations, “Cat's
gotta be from Cleveland.”
Sophisticated
Designs
Compared
to a more expected in your face horror or heavy action spectacle, not
much happens in Only Lovers
Left Alive. However,
there are numerous visual treats and symmetrical designs layering all
that isn't said. The
moody nighttime sky, slowly descending camera angles, and spinning
records create a hypnotic start, and the dizzying round and round
parallels the intoxicating romance and blood highs. The photography
and camera framing feels intimate and humorous, contrasting the
decaying humanity and quiet players. Secretive, melancholy blue tones
and soft, exotic yellow hues distinguish locales or feelings while
suggestive hints of red pop onscreen and fade to black slides imply
something bad happening. Bright, white hospitals or airplanes mean
the sunglasses wearing vamps are out of their comfort zone and in our
tempting world. Though the coloring may seem too saturated or overly
processed and the brief CGI super speed actions are too noticeable,
the scheme feels deliberately dream like or off kilter in the
distorted motions – they move too fast for us but time goes so slow
for them. Piles of décor create a cool, aged feeling and psychedelic
atmosphere along with great character unto themselves Detroit and
Tangier locations, sweet records, excellent tunes, turntables, and
carefree dancing. Thanks to some inventive yak hair wigs, these
vampires aren’t pretty per se, but they look unusually beautiful
and as ancient and worn as their collections of books, instruments,
and accumulating pack rat lifestyles. Guitar enthusiasts will delight
in the mix of classic and modern technology, as will Tesla fans and
alternative energy theorists. Vampire inventors, who knew?
The
unique vampire mythos in Only
Lovers Left Alive will
also alternatively delight and aggravate fans of the genre, as again,
most of their vampire technicalities go unclarified and leave room
for debate. How could they get their photo taken if they have no
reflection? Eve says they looked so young in an 1868 third wedding
picture, so do they age or don't they? Are their experiences and long
lived souls reflected in their eyes, noticeable only to them? Are
Eve's predictions on our
fighting over water and the rise of new regions actually prophetic or
is it merely thousands of years of seeing it all before? Why does
Adam keep books in the refrigerator – space issues or are those
rare volumes in need of climate control? Just imagine if more people
kept books in the refrigerator instead of junk food. Sustenance for
the mind, right? The mushrooms, what the heck is it about the
mushrooms? I hate mushrooms! The blu-ray edition of Only
Lovers Left Alive adds
more deleted scenes and comedic moments with sunlight and mirrors,
and these extra minutes
could have remained in the film. Only
Lovers Left Alive already
makes its own rules and pace, and a hour length behind the scenes
feature goes into more
detail on the film's long gestation and attention to its narrative.
Renovation admirers can also see before and after photos of Adam's
Detroit abode online, now sold and restored to its former glory.
Somehow, that just seems fitting.
An
Audience Awaits
Somewhere
I read a one sentence review that said the worst part of Only
Lovers Left Alive is
that it ended. Though appropriately Sopranos
style,
that finale may also upset some audiences. I myself had to rewind it
two or three times upon my first viewing – just like my favorite
part, the dance scene. Vampires are people, too, and Eve has come to
make Adam live again. Are there plot holes and pretentious writing in
the unexplained aspects at work here? Perhaps, but there is nothing
so glaring to deter viewers – and plenty more enticing and
intelligently structured designs make it easy to roll with Only
Lovers Left Alive. I
want to discuss this tale further, for I know I am forgetting to
mention even more little treats – the music alone, hello! Instead
of a mind numbing movie, Only
Lovers Left Alive feels
like a book continually giving a new
puzzle piece with every viewing. Yes, the silent montages, heady
atmosphere, and seemingly aimless, desolate Detroit style won’t be
for everyone. It is correct to say nothing really occurs in Only
Lovers Left Alive, and
that will mean a big no thank you for much of today's audiences. I
didn't get to see Only
Lovers Left Alive in
theaters thanks to its extremely limited run and distant festival
appearances, and it saddens
me that something like the Marvel pictures make billions while films
like this go unseen with a blink and you miss it million dollar box
office. Can't everyone have a piece of the cinema pie?
When
I finally picked up the blu-ray edition of Only
Lovers Left Alive and
convinced my husband to
sit down and watch, we ended up discussing it for weeks. In fact,
we're still talking about the unanswered questions and intriguing
possibilities of Only Lovers
Left Alive long after it
has ended. I was excited to see Poe, Twain, Keats, and Dickinson on
Adam’s wall, and I want to know who all his other heroes are, too.
I originally started writing vampire stories because I had to write
what I wanted to read. Outside of the biggies like Anne Rice or Bram
Stoker, there was little serious vampire fiction around forty years
ago. Had Only Lovers Left
Alive been there in my
youth, perhaps I wouldn't have had to make up my own vampire tales.
Maybe that isn't saying very much, but as a long time fan of the
fanged genre, it is perhaps the highest compliment I can give. Only
Lovers Left Alive stays
with you that deeply. Fans of the cast, vamp pictures, indie films,
and well honed cinema should educate themselves with Only
Lovers Left Alive ASAP.
2 comments:
I was lucky to catch this in theaters and I really enjoyed Swinton Hiddleston and Wasikowska's performances a lot. The Camera work and production design was also very inventive. The ending was perfect in my mind, and this is up there with Let The Right One in as my favorite vampire movies of all time. Agree that you do get more insights each time you watch it. Good review
Hi Vern!
Thanks for taking the time to stop by I Think Therefore I Review and leave a comment.
This film really is like a book, every time you watch it you can find something new. Amazing!
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