Gummo, written and directed by Harmony Korine, is a pretty hateful
experience, and I'd be loath to watch it again without needles under my
eyelids. At its worst--which is about 90 percent of the movie--it's as if
Let Us Now Praise Famous Men had been concocted by slumming East Village
swells. Within that other 10 percent, however, are some startling,
affecting, even visionary moments. The cruelty and condescension in Gummo
are detestable, but the movie shouldn't be dismissed entirely. That's too
easy a way of ducking the issues it raises about making--and watching--a
movie.
By now you know that Gummo was filmed in Nashville, is virtually
plotless, and takes place in a mythical town that was once leveled by
twisters. In the movie's impoverished Xenia, Ohio, adults are largely
absent, sex is either a living or a perversion, and kids make money
poaching cats for meat. This is the norm. The movie is largely a series of
scripted and improvised outrages, enacted by a cast that mixes professional
actors with friends and locals who were found by happenstance.
It's the blurring of the line between fiction and documentary that makes
Gummo conceptually fascinating and dramatically frustrating.
Fascinating, because with the movie's untrained performers, we're always
aware that the set-up situations could explode into real mayhem.
Frustrating, because at a certain point bad improvisation reveals nothing
more than the performers' desperation and the director's lack of ideas.
Scenes of two kids enacting a murder ritual in a junkyard or two skinhead
brothers walloping each other recall the worst of John Cassavetes--the
endless takes of actors bullying extras or repeating each other's lines
while they stall for inspiration.
Only with Cassavetes, we never felt the director was looking down on his
subjects. Documentarians such as Frederick Wiseman and the Maysles brothers
were sometimes accused of exploiting subjects who couldn't or wouldn't
think for themselves, but Wiseman and the Maysles could claim they were
simply reporting. As manipulator of his fictional universe, Harmony Korine
comes on like King Midas crossed with Spalding Gray: Everything he touches
turns to performance art. He doesn't see anything wrong with using breast
cancer or incest or mental retardation just to spice up his act.
The most discomforting aspect of Gummo is the sense that Korine
used destitute people in Nashville so he could stick them with attitudes
and actions he wouldn't dare otherwise. Korine may give himself a drunken,
sentimental baggy-pants turn on camera, but when he wants somebody to
declare, "I hate niggers," or to rant about gays, those words are carefully
placed in the mouths of non-actors, who take all the heat.
As craven as Korine is in many ways, though, he's fearless in others.
Even if Gummo is numbing and soggy, it's the first American movie
this year to suggest a way out of the present dead-end of conventional
narrative cinema. Movies don't have to tell stories in straight lines, and
when Gummo works, it forces us to respond to the images onscreen
without the crutch of narrative bearings or routine musical cues. The
opening, in which a half-naked boy (Nashville skateboarder Jacob Sewell)
shivers on an interstate overpass, is a great short film in itself; so is a
beautiful scene of the boy and two sisters frolicking in a swimming pool
during a rainstorm.
If only the director didn't see the rest of humanity as found art, and
himself as its appraisor! Harmony Korine has a gift for desiccated
vaudeville--he's ideally suited for silent film, where we'd be spared his
dialogue--and he's developing a groundbreaking style. But his grotesque
misanthropy throws you out of the movie. When a girl of uncertain mental
faculties shaves off her eyebrows for the camera, doesn't Korine see her as
anything more than material? The last straw for me came when a pathetic
girl discusses a mastectomy in garish close-up; the creeps seated in front
of me just sat there and hooted at her. I don't know who should be
clobbered first--them for laughing, or the director for making it so easy
for them to laugh. At least Gummo is finding the audience it
deserves.