By James Bowman on 9.22.09 @ 6:02AM
Much to po-mo man's incomprehension, "Let's Spend the Night
Together" isn't what Fanny Brawne and her poet boyfriend were
about.
On the line of the New York Times
review of Bright Star
which is normally reserved for descriptions of a movie's
suitability for children, the reviewer has written that the movie
is "perfectly chaste and insanely sexy." I think what may have
been intended, however, is "perfectly sexy and insanely chaste."
Modern culture so often displays a shocking lack of imagination
in coming to terms with the people of previous centuries, as if
it can't quite forgive them for not being just like us. Why even
comment on the chastity of the relationship between John Keats --
who, for victims of American public education, was an English
poet whose (formerly) famously short life was lived between 1795
and 1821 -- and his fiancée, Fanny Brawne? Do we imagine that, as
an unmarried couple in 1819, they could simply have chosen
instead to have been "sexually active" -- not a term that existed
at the time, by the way -- and moved in together?
This is not just the reviewer's obtuseness but also, at least to
some extent, a question arising out of Jane Campion's screenplay
and Jane Campion's direction and the fine and sensitive portrayal
of Fanny Brawne by Abby Cornish. It really does juxtapose
powerful feelings and the negative immensity of their being
frustrated of their natural outlet. The problem is that
conceiving of the relationship between Keats and Fanny in this
way emphasizes the film's 21st-century perspective. Everything in
it naturally centers itself around the moment where Fanny is made
to say, "You know I would do anything…" and Keats replies: "I
have a conscience." Their chastity is the thing we focus on
because it is the thing about their lives and relationship that
seems most strange and therefore remarkable to us. More
remarkable, even, than the fact that the young man involved was,
at least in terms of his potential, one of the half-dozen
greatest English poets and was dying, not yet having reached the
age of 25, of tuberculosis.
Even if, in taking us back to the years 1819 and 1820, the
film-makers had somehow caught in their lens a humble medical
student called John Smith, rather than John Keats, but one who
had the same girlfriend and the same illness, the absence from
their relationship of sex, in the modern sense, is unlikely to
have been the first and most important thing on either of their
young minds. They would have had to take that for
granted, and so their psychic energies would have been somewhat
differently focused. It's not that there would have been no
sexual longing, nor even that the movie is no good for
concentrating on sexual longing to the exclusion of much else and
so of failing to see its characters as they would have seen
themselves, and as their contemporaries would have seen them. But
it does seem to have missed an opportunity to slip the surly
bonds of hyper-modernity to show us something we would not
otherwise be able to see.
There has long been a division among Keatsians between pro-Fanny
and anti-Fanny factions, the latter seeing her as a bit of a
flirt, a bit of a flibbertigibbet, trivially minded and
intellectually light of weight -- in short, as an unfit consort
for one of the poetic immortals. She is supposed to have brought
the great man more heartache than joy and more distraction than
inspiration during the tragically brief period of his greatest
productivity. The feminist tendency of the criticism of the last
40 years or so, however, has championed her finer qualities, and
Miss Campion belongs, as we might expect, emphatically to the
pro-Fanny faction. Indeed, her movie not only presents Fanny in
the best possible light but is utterly Fanny-centric -- so much
so that we may almost forget about Keats (Ben Whishaw) as one of
the greatest of the English poets, and see him only as Fanny's
frustrated boyfriend.
In a way, however, that's almost inevitable in a movie like this.
Or in any movie. Telling the human story of famous people on film
produces such a powerful imaginative effect that the human story
is often, if not always, all that is left of them. The word
"human," by the way, should be seen at least partly as it was in
the pre-sexual revolution period as a euphemism for "sexual." The
reason why these two incidentally sexual beings became famous in
the first place, which has to do with the kind of work they did
rather than the kind of people they were, can rarely produce such
an impression. Certainly it doesn't in Bright
Star. Miss Campion tries here and there to give us a
cinematic rendition of bits of Keats's poetry, and there is a
complete recitation by Mr. Whishaw of the "Ode to a Nightingale"
over the closing credits -- not the best of her ideas, it seemed
to me -- but I fear that the poetic effects are likely to be too
subtle to register on a movie audience.
The anti-Fanny faction is represented here by Keats's best
friend, Charles Armitage Brown (Paul Schneider), who is shown as
being himself a disappointed aspirant for Fanny's attentions and
who subsequently gets the Irish housemaid pregnant. That
soap-opera touch conspires with the probably unavoidable tendency
to a disease-of-the-week style presentation of the consumption
that kills Keats's brother Tom (Olly Alexander) before killing
him, and together they push the love story itself in the
direction of the banal. Miss Campion deserves a lot of credit for
resisting this inertia of the medium and keeping things so
tastefully and charmingly arranged and beautifully photographed
that, leaving aside its anachronistic emphasis, it is quite
enjoyable to watch and must produce a moving effect on all but
the hardest of hearts.
The movie is named for the greatest of Keats's sonnets, which
goes like this.
Bright star, would I were stedfast as thou art --
Not in lone splendour hung aloft the night
And watching, with eternal lids apart,
Like nature's patient, sleepless Eremite,
The moving waters at their priestlike task
Of pure ablution round earth's human shores,
Or gazing on the new soft-fallen mask
Of snow upon the mountains and the moors --
No, yet still stedfast, still unchangeable,
Pillowed upon my fair love's ripening breast --
To feel for ever its soft fall and swell,
Awake for ever in a sweet unrest,
Still, still to hear her tender-taken breath,
And so live ever -- or else swoon to death.
Like the "Ode on a Grecian Urn" -- which would thus have been a
better choice than the "Nightingale" for its featured position --
this is a meditation on the unbridgeable gap between human
(including sexual) feeling and its representation in art -- which
appears here as "nature's patient, sleepless Eremite" (i.e.
Hermit) who shares eternity with the "stedfast" star. But for all
the beauty and finely evoked feeling of her film, Miss Campion
doesn't seem quite to be able to find a way to register the irony
of that same tragic -- and tragically timeless -- divergence,
which is what drives her back on the less compelling and less
historically accurate theme of sexual frustration. All the same,
the movie does well what movies can do well and is likely to
provide an enjoyable couple of hours, especially to those who
are, like me, sentimentalists about English poetry.
topics:
John Keats, Abby Cornish, Jane Campion