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Friday, April 26, 2013

Expiration Watch: STARDUST MEMORIES


Misjudged as a slap at his fans and widely panned on its release in 1980, Woody Allen's Stardust Memories finally seems to be escaping the tarnish of its initial reception. Even without considering some of the director's shakier misfires to come, this arty, funny take on one filmmaker's struggle with his own limitations deserves a place among the Flawed Classics in the Allen pantheon.

A serio-comic homage to '60s European cinema, Stardust Memories tracks a day or two in the life of Sandy Bates, a successful comedy director overwhelmed by the world's suffering, his own mortality, and his inability to do a thing about either—in other words, the usual Allen preoccupations. Caught at a crossroads in both his personal and professional life while attending a filmmakers retreat with adoring critics and fans, Sandy seeks escape in surreal reveries about his past and in the allure of a pretty cellist (Jessica Harper). She reminds him of a past love, the troubled Dorrie—played in flashbacks by a luminous Charlotte Rampling—who Sandy has never entirely gotten over. This of course complicates things with his current girlfriend, Isobel (Marie-Christine Barrault), a French earth mother of two who represents sanity and stability but also a level of commitment he's not sure he's ready for.

Just don't call him Marcello
Throughout we get glimpses at the comedies that made Sandy famous as well as the grim, Fellini-esque drama he's fighting to protect from the studio's demands for something more commercial. It's a scene from this work-in-progress which opens Stardust Memories—a scene critics at the time singled out as a blatant ripoff of Fellini's 8 1/2. And yet it becomes obvious—especially with a second viewing—that this scene is not Allen's own pretentious attempt to emulate one of his idols, but that of his main character trying to prove his artistic depth. In fact the bulk of Stardust Memories is an indictment not of the director's fans—with their relentless demands on his time and psyche—but of Bates himself. The man is a mess, but he's also entirely to blame for his own misery. (Just ask those aliens who pop in for a visit late in the film.)

If you're already a Woody fan—especially of his early, funny work—then Stardust Memories will no doubt keep you amused. But there are other rewards to be had, including some surprisingly laugh-out-loud lines, an electric performance by Charlotte Rampling, and Gordon Willis' shimmering black-and-white cinematography. Willis of course was responsible for the equally iridescent Manhattan and would later bring his magic touch to Zelig and Broadway Danny Rose, but there's something especially haunting about the contrasty depths of his images here. That extends to his treatment of Rampling, who brings her own haunted quality to Allen's archetypal dark, neurotic beauty. You can't help but fixate on her restless, defensive gaze—most memorably in two emotionally contrasting scenes where the subject is as much her beauty as her character's place in Sandy's memories.

Those scenes will stick with you, as will a number of other evocative images. And if Stardust Memories doesn't quite achieve the home run status of a Manhattan or Annie Hall, it's certainly a solid triple. Catch it before it's gone.

A magic movie moment

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