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Femme Fatale at first seems like just
another sleek suspense thriller. The plot of a
nasty woman betraying a nasty man who then comes after her is similar to The
Last Seduction, which also happened to feature the last great femme fatale
performance (by the sizzling Linda Fiorentino). But Brian De Palmas Femme Fatale
doesnt have the narrative coherence or witty humor of the John Dahl film. After a bravura opening, it beings to meander, but then
it turns out that De Palma has something other than plot on his mind. This is a movie about movies, a regular De Palma
obsession. Its a statement on, and
deconstruction of, how movies contrive to work with our voyeuristic impulses and fulfill
our fantasies. That star Rebecca
Romijn-Stamos happens to be more famous as supermodel than actress is no coincidence.
Romijn-Stamos plays a jewel thief named Laure Ash, and Femme Fatale
opens with an image of Laures reflection on a television screen over Barbara
Stanwycks femme fatale in Double
Indemnity. It is only the first of
numerous cinematic references that have come to be expected in Brian De Palmas
movies. Masquerading as a photographer, Laure
is after the multi-million dollar diamonds adorning Veronica (fellow model Rie Rasmussen),
a woman accompanying movie director Regis Wargnier (playing himself) to his East-West at the Cannes Film
Festival.
Taking Veronica, who wears the
diamonds and not much else, into the bathroom, Laure engages her in a passionate liplock
(certainly the current lesbian chic hitting its peak in the movies). Orchestrated to Ryuichi Sakamotos riff on
Ravels Bolero, the heist progresses as Laures two colleagues
(Eriq Ebouaney and Edouard Montoute) make preparations for her escape. Then she betrays them. Laure
runs for her life to Paris where a supremely fortuitous case of mistaken identity offers
her a safe haven.
When ex-paparazzi photographer,
Nicolas Bardo (Antonio Banderas), inadvertently reveals her new alias to her ex-partners,
Laure has to concoct a new scheme to extricate herself that involves blackmailing her own
husband (Peter Coyote), a U.S. ambassador to France. If
all that sounds convoluted, it is. Adding to
that, Femme Fatale, like so many recent films, ends with a big twist that changes
the way you look at everything that has come before.
The twist is revealing, both literally and metaphorically, marked by the image of
Romijn-Stamos baring all.
De Palma has always been fixated on cinematic iconography and
references, particularly to Alfred Hitchcocks sexual-repression themed films. What is implicitly lurid and kinky in those films,
De Palma makes explicit in his own works like Body
Double and Dressed
to Kill. With Femme Fatale, De
Palma references his past obsessions Nicholas voyeuristic photography is yet
another homage to Rear
Window, Laures assumption of a new identity and Nicholas following her
around winks at Vertigo
and this time around, De Palma even makes an odd nod to Its
a Wonderful Life.
Despite being a technically dazzling filmmaker, De Palma has often
failed to translate those skills into raising the emotions in his films to the operatic
heights he seems to so desire. Part of that
might be because his characters frequently feel like instruments utilized for his own
fetishistic ends rather than as human beings with any dignity. Femme Fatale has the same traditional
failings but subverts them by making them part of the point even as the entire movie turns
out to be a lark. It is nevertheless one that
is emotionally and intellectually resonant. It
makes the viewer reflect on the viewing experience itself as an act of manipulation, a
willing suspension of disbelief, and a catering to ones desires and to social
appropriateness (in this instance both a comeuppance and a deliberately contrived
happy ending).
Alas, Romijn-Stamos is no Linda Fiorentino in the acting category, and
whenever she speaks normal English, which actually isnt that frequent in the movie,
she is wholly unconvincing. But she works fine
when dubbed into French or ironically enough, when faking a French accent. De Palma certainly takes advantage of her and
Rasmussens photogenic features; both of them are dressed throughout as if they never
left the catwalk. Camouflage has never looked
so sexy.
- George Wu