"Sir, let those laugh that win."
Barry Lyndon
(1975); directed by Stanley Kubrick; produced by Stanley Kubrick; adapted by
Stanley Kubrick from the novel The Luck of Barry Lyndon by William Makepiece
Thackeray; cinematography by John Alcott; editing by Tony Lawson; musical score
(adaptations) by Leonard Rosenman; distributed by Warner Bros; Awards: Won Academy Awards for: Best Cinematography, John Alcott; Best Music, Leonard Rosenman; Best Art/Set Decoration, Ken Adams, Roy Walker, Vernon Dixon); Best Costume Design (Ulla-Britt Söderlund, Milena Canonero); nominations for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay; for a full list of awards and nominations, go here.
For my money, Stanley Kubrick is one of the greatest
directors who ever lived and this film is one of the four masterpieces he released
between 1968 and 1980. If pressed, I would probably name it as my favorite of the
four, though there were, upon its initial release, elements I had to overcome. And
that, in part, indicates the value of film retrospectives. It’s rare that
one’s first sense of a film remains in place without modification. I was 16
when the film came out and I was pretty much appalled that—with so many
exciting actors around doing some of their best work—Kubrick would settle on
Ryan O’Neal as his star. The associations with Love Story were simply too recent. Now, I barely remember that Love Story exists and was the huge box
office hit of 1970. Was O’Neal “good box office” for Kubrick’s film? I neither know nor care. I have come to
accept him in the role, even to prize him, mostly. For he is affectless at
times in a way that is necessary to this gullible and “game” young man. And he
manages to speak the stilted lines of the script with the lilt necessary
to suggest his own awareness of how little his words declare. O’Neal’s Barry
Lyndon is a man in love with a self-conception that he himself is rarely
conscious of—or, perhaps, that he is not able, consciously, to estimate. He can
only apprehend himself as a reflection from others, and O’Neal is quite good,
finally, at showing us a man who is only ever what he “seems,” for there is
nothing that he is.
Of all Kubrick’s films, this is the one where subtleties of acting are key to many scenes. Yes,
the scenes look exactly like 18th century paintings, but the actors in the “paintings”
are vivid in their meticulous manners and costumes. They must take pains to be
as full of decorum as the settings call for, and yet every deviation reveals a
seething life beneath the niceties. Think of Sir Charles Lyndon (Frank
Middlemass)’s challenge to Barry at the end of Part I, and the moment—both affecting
and comical—when it’s clear he realizes he’s doomed. Think of Barry’s attack
upon Lord Bullingdon (Leon Vitale); think of the coiled snake in the eyes of
Barry’s mother (Marie Kean) as she dismisses the supercilious Reverend Runt
(Murray Melvin) who gradually lets himself become indignant. Think of Philip
Stone's Graham in his breathless and nervous, yet measured, announcement of
the terms Lord Bullingdon will extend to the wounded Barry. Think of the duel
in which Barry is wounded—the looks on the faces of the seconds and the
overseer are wonderful in their unflappable sangfroid—where the excruciating
pace of the proceedings is an epitome of what the film is getting at.
Every image is exquisite. The score is lordly—ringing variations
on certain recurring pieces that clue the viewer into the film’s view of what
we’re seeing. When I say “film’s view” I mean Kubrick’s view, of course, but
because music and voice-over narration are used the way they are, the meaning
extends beyond Kubrick to a view that is almost cosmic. Granted, Kubrick had already
established himself as the most audaciously cosmic director alive with his film
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), and had
followed it up with A Clockwork Orange
(1971), a film that established his viewpoint as not only ironic—sardonic even—but
also capable of a magical detachment that could render what we see on the
screen as both artfully contrived and viscerally interesting. Barry Lyndon, I’d say, combines something
of both in what I take to be the film closest to what I imagine to be the
central idea of Kubrick’s film-making.
Here, he takes up again the tale of a ne’er-do-well, but the
very civilized trappings that were lampooned and/or ripped away in Clockwork are allowed to control almost
every aspect of life. And that control is in the name of a knowing detachment
from the ups and downs of history and of private and public life. Barry’s story
becomes, in Kubrick’s hands, the tale of an everyman, oddly enough. It’s an
American’s view of how upstarts—whether Yankees or Irish—fare in the cultural
stakes of the well-born, well-mannered, well-off world of British aristocracy. And
its tone toward the proceedings is mildly amused, able to see its characters,
of no matter what age, rank, appearance, skill, virtue, as equally tied to the
forces of fortune, which nobody rules. Barry, like all of us, ultimately, is
undone by circumstance. In a sense, he is the “bad guy” in his own life because
he brings upon himself the forces that undo him. Don’t we all?
Kubrick’s idea
is to get at the hollowness of “the hero,” no matter how he comports himself in
the tale he is making happen. There is no way for an outcome to match his self-conception; if, as with Barry, he attains a pinnacle, he cannot stay there.
The odyssey is always toward a manifestation of inadequacy. We aren’t equal to
our own lives, and Kubrick shows this by the painstaking effort he puts into
creating a world in which his point will be made. Indeed, a world that makes
his point for him. And of all the cinematic worlds he created, Barry Lyndon is
the most indelible, the one where Kubrick’s status as the supreme Eye is made
apparent in every frame.
I’ve already mentioned the changes I’ve experienced in
watching the film. I seem to remember wanting to like the film more than I
actually did. I suppose I wanted a hero in the film to match “the hero” behind
the film. As the first Kubrick film I
saw on its release, Barry Lyndon
could not help but impress me with the sheer artistry of its director. The
control exercised on every aspect of the sights and sounds of this film is extraordinary.
And yet that very control—the perfection of its pacing as an aspect of its
theme of manners as a gloss on life, as art is at times a mirror of the perception
we want to have of ourselves—led to outcries that the film was lifeless. My experience
was to find the film hypnotic; one watches it—and here I’m speaking of the
“it must give pleasure” aspect of the film—as one listens to music, eyes led by
the rhythm of Kubrick’s camera (John Alcott, who joined Kubrick on 2001, and
was his cinematographer for the next three films, and who won an Oscar for this one).
Then there's the telling use of music—the Sturm und Drang
rendition of Handel’s “sarabande”; the clockwork minuet of Rosenman ‘s
adaptation of Schubert’s piano trio in E-Flat, that seems to use the interplay
of piano and strings to draw out the interplay of time and desire; Vivaldi’s cello concerto in E minor which highlights, each time it is played, the
romantic aspects of the film, seeming to be a musical expression of the
fluttering emotions in Lady Lyndon (Marisa Berenson).
A highly paid model
(before there were “super models”), Berenson is striking as the melancholy
beauty whom Barry (born Redmond Barry in Ireland)
wins away from her ailing and soon-to-be-dead husband Sir Lyndon. Lord
Bullingdon (played, as a youth, by Dominic Savage) is sullenly perceptive of his
new stepfather’s character—“a common opportunist.” The bad blood between them,
spurred by Barry’s penchant for corporal punishment and extreme favoritism to
his own charming (albeit spoiled) son, Bryan (David Morley), precipitates Barry’s
final fall.
One might say that Kubrick has banked upon his film not
changing, in the way that the paintings—particularly Hogarth—he mimics don’t
change. If so, its fixity is also that of a musical piece that, having traced
its variations, must always come to the same conclusion. We sit before this
aural and visual tableaux with a sense of how it, like all museum-held
heirlooms of a distant past, contains something about our own natures and the nature
of our existence in time.
At one point, King George III commends Barry on raising a regiment to fight the
rebelling colonials in North America—suddenly we’re looking at a culture that
is pitted against an upstart faction, and that faction, for the moment, might
include Barry, though he chooses to identify with his betters. “Raise another
regiment and go with them,” His Majesty quips, indicating how expendable Barry
is, but also sensing, perhaps, that Barry was a common soldier himself in the
King’s war against France.
In many ways, Barry is a renegade and a pretender,
and his place in this world, like the worth of art itself, is always a matter
to be determined by machinations he can’t control. More like Joyce’s sense of
the author than almost any other director one would care to name, as, like “the
god of creation,” “indifferent, paring his fingernails," Kubrick’s grasp of the
film seems to indicate he does control the machinations that doom Barry and
that such might also be the means by which art attests to a greatness beyond
comedy and tragedy, creating a perspective that, heretofore, only the best novelists and very few
filmmakers had attained.
50 Since 1970
3 comments:
I went to see this with my father when it came out. I don't really know why, since he never discussed Kubrick with me later, but he was totally excited about the film's release. After Part I, he was thrilled; at the end, he was totally let down. But I do remember that he said that it all fit together: the thrilling Rise; the torment of the Fall. Oddly, I remember nothing whatsoever about it! None of the pictures here strike any chord of memory!
I think I did a better job imparting to my offspring the importance of this film than your dad did to his. Was he let down by the film, or by the story in the film?
I'm beginning to notice that few of the heroes in my favorite films wind up in a good place. I tend not to be let down by this, because my hero tends to be the filmmaker rather than a character in the film, which carries over from my way of reading fiction to, which ultimately probably derives from the poet, the painter, the singer, the philosopher as each being the source of what I admire. That only sometimes carries over to novelists, and even more rarely to filmmakers, I'd say.
Lord Wendover's utter rejection of Bary's invitation to a party expresses the politeness evident throughout the masterpiece: "If I may, I'll write and say if I'm free or not."
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