By James Bowman on 6.27.05 @ 12:02AM
Not that you should bother, but you will be bewildered.
The thing I couldn't quite figure out about Nora Ephron's new
film version of Bewitched was why Nicole Kidman, in the
role of the pretty suburban witch, took as her model not the savvy
but sly Elizabeth Montgomery of the original TV series but a
breathless, wide-eyed innocent of the sort that Marilyn Monroe used
to specialize in. Surely if being a witch, even a TV witch, means
anything it must mean being really smart rather than really dumb?
But in Miss Kidman's conception of the part, her superpowers are
not learned from years of poring over books of spells or hermetic
literature. Instead, they are an uncovenanted gift, like Marilyn's
naughty-child sexuality. Like it too, they are at least as much of
a nuisance to her as they are a means of getting what she wants.
But that still doesn't explain why she wants to renounce them. "I'm
fed up with snapping my fingers and getting my way," she says.
Ye-e-e-s, and this is bad because...? Why, too, does the new Darrin
(Will Ferrell) feel shocked and offended by her talents instead of
thinking them cool?
Back in the days of the TV series (1964-1972) everyone
understood the answer to that question, at least. Miss
Montgomery's Samantha was forbidden by Darrin from practicing
witchcraft and pretended to submit to his prohibition because a
husband -- so, incredibly enough, did they believe back then --
needed to feel he was king in his own castle, and that the power in
the relationship belonged to him. A woman with the power not only
to take care of herself but to alter reality at the twitch of a
nose could hardly fit comfortably into the then-desirable role of
the submissive wife. Yet "Bewitched" the TV series did as much as
anything in the American popular culture to alter these archaic
assumptions about marriage. Samantha never really sacrificed her
powers for Darrin and domesticity, and the poor chump himself could
hardly have been unaware of the fact. He was a pathetic wittol in
the case of his wife's infidelity with the always comic dark
powers.
Thus the show took on an archetypal quality, like "The
Honeymooners" only more so. For as feminist scholars have since
reminded us, the historic associations of women with witchcraft are
all bound up with the masculine fear of women's power. Samantha
Stevens was a sanitized but still powerful emblem of the emergence
of those dark and long mistrusted powers into the dawn of a new
feminist day. All of this is missing from the new movie. Where the
lineage of the TV series ran, however circuitously, back to the
Malleus Maleficarum or Hammer of Witchcraft of
the 15th century, that of the film goes no further than to the
comic book superhero and connects to nothing more interesting or
culturally resonant than the adolescent power fantasies that have
become Hollywood's stock-in-trade in the post-revolutionary
era.
That must be one reason for Miss Kidman's innocence, which
extends even to this witch's delighted admiration for the
witchcraft of microwaves and automatic sprinklers. In spite of
Michael Caine's droll turn as her father, we don't know where she's
been up until now -- though we do know that while there she has not
only been kept away from the normal amenities of life and
unfamiliar with popular vulgarisms but she has even been forbidden
to watch the television version of "Bewitched." In other words, it
is the same Never Never Land or Planet Krypton where all comic
superheroes come from. Or at least the ones with super-powers. As
the recent Batman Begins reminds us, the man who must rely
on knowledge and technique rather than super-strength or
trans-specific powers to defeat his foes has his
beginnings in a terrible knowledge. Surely, you would think, here
must be a better model for a witch than the alien or mutant
innocents of the comics?
But then that might risk striking a serious note that the movie
clearly could not sustain. Though the writing, by Miss Ephron, her
sister Delia and Adam McKay, is often sprightly and the jokes
mostly better than those in the recent and disappointing
Honeymooners, the triviality of the whole conceit
overwhelms it. And Will Ferrell's presence unbalances it in another
way.
Miss Ephron's big idea for a framing device is to have some
network suits re-making the TV series and offering the part of
Darrin to one Jack Wyatt (Mr. Ferrell), supposedly a big movie star
who has had a couple of big flops. Wyatt condescends to take the
part in a mere TV show on the understanding that he is to
be the center of interest while the witchy wife, for whom he wants
to cast an unknown, has barely a speaking role. The unknown,
unknown to him, turns out to be a real -- or rather a "real" --
witch. Think of the comic possibilities!
But hang on a minute. Is it remotely plausible in any
conceivable universe that even Jack Wyatt, obviously not the
brightest bulb on the marquee, can imagine Darrin as the
star of "Bewitched"? As he himself puts it: "I'm Darrin? They
replaced Darrin in the original series and no one noticed!" Yet the
film itself tries to get away with exactly the same impossibility,
pouring Mr. Ferrell's energetic mugging and over-the-top physical
comedy into the mold of that inevitable nonentity, Darrin Stevens,
just because he is a big star who can "open" a movie. His need to
treat Bewitched as a vehicle for what seems to me at least
his mostly unfunny clowning is the main reason for the film's lack
of any movie-witchcraft. It is also helps to explain the stunning
irony of Miss Kidman's re-conversion of this icon of feminist power
back into one of 1950s-vintage submissive femininity.
topics:
Trade, Television, Books, Hollywood