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Eyes Wide Shut/Dream Story (Traumnovelle)
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Stanley
Kubricks Eyes Wide Shut was
shrouded in secrecy and hype for so long (compounded by Kubricks unexpected death
last March) that it was probably destined to disappoint critics and moviegoers.
Predictably, the film had a stupendous opening weekend, but the few positive reviews it
garnered weren't enough to overcome the bad word-of-mouth that sent the box office grosses
plummeting 70% within two weeks.
Warner Books has now
published the screenplay (by Kubrick and Frederic Raphael) in a paperback edition that
also includes a new translation of Arthur Schnitzlers 1926 novella, Dream Story,
upon which Eyes Wide Shut is based. While it isn't likely to revive the film's
moribund box office numbers, this is nevertheless the kind of snazzy little volume that
one wishes were published more often. It's wonderful to have a copy of Schnitzlers
novella, which heretofore hasn't been easy to obtain, and having the opportunity to
compare it closely with the screenplay should be a treat for any Kubrick film buff.
The book is being
marketed as a fast-buck "movie tie-in" and includes 16 pages of cheesy black and
white production photos, with particular attention given to the slinky shots of Nicole
Kidman that have been reprinted ad nauseam.
Arthur Schnitzler
(1862-1931) was an Austrian playwright and novelist who wrote about lust and
adultery among the bourgeoisie in turn-of-the-century Vienna. A man of prodigious sexual
appetite, Schnitzler kept meticulous diary accounts of his female conquests, as well as a
monthly tally of his orgasms. He was preoccupied, if not obsessed, with sex, and this is
the landscape he wrote about in his plays and fiction. It's not surprising to learn that
Freud was fascinated by Schnitzlers work and that the two men corresponded off and
on over the years. Peter Gay, in his magisterial Freud: A Life
for Our Time, writes that Schnitzler "secured Freuds unequivocal
applause for his penetrating psychological studies of sexuality in contemporary Viennese
society." [Editor's note - see also: La
Ronde.]
Kubrick reportedly
was interested in making a movie of Schnitzlers Dream Story as far back as
the late 1960s, but the project didn't begin in earnest until 1994 when Frederic
Raphael was hired to write the script. Raphael has recently published a memoir about
working with Kubrick, Eyes Wide Open,
which is comprised of the screenwriter's self-absorbed journal entries and unlikely
"transcripts" of telephone conversations with Kubrick. The memoir shows all the
cut-and-paste signs of having been written quickly and rushed into print. (Its publication
was timed to coincide with the release of the film, which Raphael had not yet seen).
Unfortunately, there's just enough worthwhile and interesting information in Eyes Wide
Open to make it required reading for anyone curious about the process of adapting
Schnitzler for the screen.
The novella
and the film derive some of their similar flourishes from other genres such as murder
mysteries and melodramas, not to mention James Frazers The Golden Bough,
a hugely influential Victorian study of arcane religious folklore and fertility cults. The
degree to which Eyes Wide Shut is faithful to Schnitzlers Dream
Story is remarkable. The film's narrative is updated from fin de siecle Vienna
to modern-day New York, yet the shape and story line of the novella remain intact. In both
stories, a wife taunts her husband with a sexually charged memory of her desire for
another man. The jealous husband then embarks on a late night smorgasbord of urban erotica
in a futile attempt to assuage his hurt pride and to satisfy his own unfulfilled urges.
Dream Story reads like
Kafka with sex, and this is precisely the disorienting and eerie tone that Kubrick brings
to the film. Even the truly odd masked orgy scene that critics like Michiko Kakutani have
labeled "ludicrous" in the film, is taken wholesale from Schnitzler. In the
novella, the protagonist Fridolin (Tom Cruise's Bill Harford in the movie) wonders to
himself: "Have I strayed into the gathering of some religious sect?" The
novella's orgy - just like the film's - mingles mystical music, cult rituals, hooded
figures, and naked women.
In some respects,
Dream Story goes further than Eyes Wide Shut. When Fridolin returns home from
the bizarre orgy, his wife Albertine (Kidmans role of Alice) wakes up from a dream
that curiously parallels Fridolins unnerving experience. The nightmare that Kidman
tearfully relates in the film - involving intercourse with an endless crowd of strangers -
is only a fraction of the elaborate 10-page dream that unfolds in Dream Story and
which culminates on a chilling note: Albertine laughs while an angry mob prepares to
torture her husband and nail him to a cross. Of course, the notion of Tom Cruise as a
sacrificial Christ-figure is probably more than any movie audience would wish to endure,
so perhaps Kubrick was wise to dispense with this.
A rumor circulated
prior to the film's release that there was a scene of Cruise kissing a woman's corpse and
being titillated by the "forbidden" allure of necrophilia. In reality, the
morgue scene in Eyes Wide Shut doesn't go this direction; instead Cruise
seems to express a sort of mute compassion toward the dead woman who may have lost her
life in order to help save him. Schnitzlers novella does indeed go the more lurid
route of necrophilic attraction: "[He] intertwined his fingers with the dead woman's
as if to fondle them, and, stiff as they were, they seemed to him to be trying to move and
to take hold of his; indeed he thought he could detect a faint and distant gleam in the
eyes beneath those half-closed lids, as if trying to make contact with his own; and as if
drawn on by some enchantment he bent down over her."
Undoubtedly there
will be arguments for years to come over the artistic merits of Kubricks film. Where
Schnitzler is overheated, Kubrick is clinical. One could almost imagine that Eyes Wide
Shut was directed by Freud himself. Yet both Schnitzler and Kubrick are
effective at suggesting something primal and unsettling lurking beneath the surface of
middle-class complacency. As long as human beings have the capacity to be haunted by
dreams of lost love, and nightmares of inexplicable compulsions, then Eyes Wide Shut
and Dream Story will have the power to disturb and move us.
- Bob Wake