The Deep End
review by Cynthia Fuchs, 17 August
2001
The dominant color -- or rather,
the dominant, pervasive idea -- in David Siegel and Scott McGehee's The
Deep End is blue. From the ominous presence of Lake Tahoe to the
oppressively huge Nevadan sky, from characters' clothing and cars to
the walls that seem to close in on them, every scene includes some
shade of blue.
While it surely conjures up all
kinds of longstanding cultural and emotional associations, this
color motif is also a rather clever way to underline The Deep
End's generic roots and disjointed timing: it is most definitely
a throwback film noir, but is also so acutely
contemporary in its anxieties, that it's impossible to label as only
that. Like many classic noirs, the movie follows a
protagonist who takes a terribly wrong turn from which she never
recovers, a turn that then takes the narrative into such peculiar
and "unrealistic" directions that you can't help but be
hyper-aware that you're watching a movie.
This despite the fact that The
Deep End expends some energy inviting you to believe that
Margaret Hall (Tilda Swinton) is an "ordinary" person, or
at least an "ordinary" mother, who will do whatever it
takes to protect her family. Her fierce intensity and unshakable
resolve are movie conventions, the kind of attitudes that you
examine closely in movies that put characters in extraordinary
situations -- finding their ways in and out of these situations
makes them extraordinary as well. First clue: Margaret lives in an
incredibly expensive, stunningly designed house on
Lake Tahoe, caring for her three kids and her father-in-law (Peter
Donat), while her Navy officer husband is away at sea. No
"ordinary" person lives in that house or lives that
isolated, wearying life. It costs her. When Margaret wants a
cigarette, she sneaks off to a room in a corner of that big house,
by herself, and smokes it by the window, waving the smoke outside
with her thin hand, like she's a teenager breaking the rules. This
detail lays out her sense of alienation in her own home.
But if her self-awareness is
limited at the start of The Deep End, it soon comes roaring
to the surface, in a series of events that rupture her household and
so, her sense of secure identity. And in this way, she's like a lot
of obviously contrived movie characters, an element among many
elements, encouraging you to think and rethink your own position,
but not really making her own concrete. You may sympathize with and
even marvel at her, but you never quite identify with her, at least
not in the standard understanding of the term. What happens around
and to and because of her is all too weird to be absorbed as
"ordinary" or even very possible, experience. Instead, you
watch as your jaw drops wider and wider, your brain wheels spin
faster and faster. And you keep wondering, when will
this woman do the right thing? Until you begin wondering, can
she?
As it happens, she can't. And
that's because Margaret is Walter Neff -- Fred MacMurray's
hopelessly in-over-his-head insurance guy from Double Indemnity
-- reimagined as someone's mother. The first time you see her, she's
already in trouble, and the film hasn't even started, really. She's
leaving the bright sunshine behind and descending, quite literally,
into a Reno nightclub called The Deep End, and everything around her
-- the walls, the fish tanks, the bottles behind the bar -- shimmers
blue. Menacing, pulsing blue. (And it's probably just coincidence
that the last movie made by Derek Jarman, Swinton's longtime
director, was Blue.) Looking lost and pale against this
watery background, Margaret seeks out the club owner, one Darby
Reese (Josh Lucas), whom, she has recently learned, is sleeping with
her adolescent son Beau (Jonathan Tucker). She tells him to leave
her Beau alone. Darby laughs at her.
As you soon learn, it took
something of a sledgehammer cue for Margaret to realize that her son
has developed into a sexual being: on the way from the club one
night, he was in a nasty car wreck, a scene shown only in fragmented
flashback, that focuses on Margaret's speedy fear and then relief,
when she finds Beau alive in the ambulance. And then she gets mad.
Margaret's crazy "solution" -- to confront the "bad
guy," restrict Beau's activities, and keep the entire matter
secret from her husband (who, she says, "wouldn't
understand"), and all on her own -- tells you a great deal
about her. She's a hardcore mom, but she's also without options (at
least in her own mind), and she hasn't thought through the possible
consequences. And these are, no surprise, a major bitch.
The trouble that begins in that
first scene in the club almost immediately expands to overwhelm
Margaret's life; much of it takes place in broad daylight, with that
glistening lake in the background. Margaret wakes the morning after
her meeting with Darby to find his body in the lake. Assuming that
she must protect Beau (whom she thinks is the killer, without even
asking him a simple question at any point), Margaret hides the body
in the lake. It gets worse: when she learns that she's dumped him
with his car keys in his pocket, she goes back to the lake, strips
to her white underwear and dives in, picking through his pockets
while his misshapen, bluish face looms at her in the water. She
returns home to make sure the kids get off to whatever
extracurricular activities they have scheduled. She does everything
she's supposed to do. And then some.
On top of all this, which takes
some time and a clear emotional toll, Margaret is approached by a
blackmailer, Alek (Goran Visnjic). Now, a little late, she learns
that Darby was hooked up with gangsters, and he owed money, and now
they want the money from her, also assuming that Beau is the killer
(in gangster debt-math, you assume your victim's obligations). Alek,
who ends up being a fairly sympathetic guy himself, brings some
incentive: a graphic sex tape starring Darby and Beau. This scene,
as Margaret watches the tape, might be the most chilling in the
film. The camera cuts from the grainy video to Margaret's ghastly
pale face, and you can only guess what she's thinking. There's
nothing here that she can repair or make better, and it has nothing
to do with the body or the blackmail. Rather, it's about her son
growing up. Beau is an adult, he likes sex, and she's suddenly been
left behind.
And... she can't reach her husband.
This is perhaps the creepiest and
most abstract problem in the film -- the absent-present husband. The
fact that she cannot bring herself to tell him about Beau's
sexuality (the fact that he has sex, even more importantly than with
whom) is a metaphor for her inability to be intimate or trusting
with him in any way. He "won't understand." That doesn't
mean that Margaret does. But she wants to, or thinks she does. And
that's what saves her, sort of.
Based on Elizabeth Sanxay Holding's
novel The Blank Wall, already the basis of a 1949 film noir,
The Reckless Moment, directed by Max Ophuls and starring Joan
Bennett, The Deep End is the second feature by Siegel and
McGehee, whose Suture (1993), offered a witty deconstruction
of the very idea of stable identity. The Deep End works a
similar set of problems, with less intellectual game-iness, and more
attention to the emotional pain and pleasure that come with such
deconstruction. At the same time, it sticks to its noir-ish
guns, fully appreciating and also tweaking the genre's improbable
plot turns and gorgeous visuals.
The complicated twists involve
Margaret's efforts to raise an impossible amount of money
(impossible, even though she does live in that swank house), her
changing priorities, and her increasingly passionate relationship
with Alek. They develop a taut and provocative rhythm in their
non-romance, evolving initially from Margaret's realization that her
son has sexual desires and experiences, both like and unlike her
own. Her self-conception mutates radically by the end of the film:
she is a faster, braver, and more brutal thinker than she had
imagined.
Click here to read Paula Nechak's interview.
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Directed by:
David Seigel
Scott McGehee
Starring:
Tilda Swinton
Goran Visnjic
Jonathan Tucker
Josh Lucas
Raymond J. Barry
Peter Donat
Written
by:
Elisabeth Sanxay Holding
Scott McGehee
David Siegel
Rated:
R - Restricted
Under 17 requires
accompanying
parent or adult
guardian.
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