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The Ninth Gate (1999)
Our review of the Perez-Reverte novel on which the film is based |
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Suggested reading: |
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The Ninth Gate opens with a short and simple camera movement
that finds the crepe-edged comedy in the final moments of a mans life
its vintage Roman Polanski. The horror genre has been degraded for so long that
having Polanski (Repulsion,
Rosemarys Baby, Chinatown) back in charge feels like the restoration
of a monarch. The Ninth Gate maintains this triumphant feeling for half of its
running time, and not even its self-mocking climax can fully extinguish the glow. As it
is, its a letdown of a movie thats worth seeing for its hundred marvelous
touches.
Dean Corso (Johnny Depp) is a rare book broker who brings an
ambulance-chasing mentality to his trade: he lulls his moneyed clients to sleep with talk,
then beats them out of their first editions. Its this lean and hungry attitude that
attracts demonology scholar Boris Balkan (Frank Langella) to him. Balkan has acquired a 17th
Century text held by legend to be capable of invoking the Devil. Believing that his copy
may be a fake, Balkan instructs Corso to travel to Portugal and Paris, where two other
copies of the book reside in private collections, and to compare the three texts to test
their authenticity. Corsos search brings him into contact with an array of people
who have hidden agendas: a widow (Lena Olin) whos desperately trying to reclaim her
copy of the book; an aging baroness (Barbara Jefford) who bitterly rejects Corsos
efforts to examine her volume; and a mysterious woman (Emmanuelle Seigner) whose
appearances have the fortuitous timing of a guardian angel.
Everything clicks on the surface of The Ninth Gate. After the
modest Bitter Moon and Death and the Maiden, Polanski has made an
expensive-looking, voluptuous movie that revels in its decadent atmosphere. Visually the
movie is completely thought out, down to the way a crumbling estate reflects the
personality of its gray, receding owner. And Polanski is still the master of those
poisonous touches a flickering light in a telephone booth, a little girls
unnerving stare that seem like rents in the veil of a malignant universe.
The movies troubles begin with its casting. Depp fits the look of
the movie so well that hes like a piece of production design, but he delivers such a
clouded, somnambulant performance that even the sight of Lena Olin hitching her skirt up
to her waist barely elicits a twang from him. Coupling him with the flavorless Seigner
makes for a lot of narcotized scenes where the vibes just hang in the air; its as if
Polanski tried to produce a chemical reaction by mixing flour with flour. (In the
meantime, Langella and Jefford absolutely romp through the movie, bringing just the right
shade of seriousness to some supremely unserious lines.)
But if Depp hasnt done anything to shape his role, Polanski
hasnt given him much clay to work with. Dean Corso gets none of the loving detail
that Polanski usually lavishes on his characters; instead, he consists of a few shorthand
flourishes, not all of which make sense. (Even if the swanky Corso would eat a TV dinner,
why would he shove one into the microwave without removing it from the box?) More
importantly, we can tease out of the story the idea that Corsos assignment has
turned him into a modern-day Faust, but we never really glimpse the contours of his
obsession, and neither Polanski nor Depp let us know why or when it takes hold of him.
Without a human being in the picture to give it psychological scale, we cant even
muster a sense of dread when Satan himself is being conjured up.
These slights to his protagonist are the surest sign that Polanski is
not fully himself here, but The Ninth Gate is careless even with its central
mystery. Visual clues that ought to remain subliminal until a second or third viewing are
conspicuous during the first one, so that were forced to solve the movies
riddles prematurely, against all of our moviegoing instincts. And where we want the script
to punish us for our presumptuousness, it only gives us speeches confirming what
weve figured out for ourselves.
The Ninth Gate gets punchier the farther along it goes.
Seigners goddess-like descent from the sky is a lovely conceit (and the most
affectionate view that Polanskis ever given us of his real-life wife), but the magic
is immediately dispelled by a wretchedly staged fistfight. Later on, Corso and his angel
steal a high-powered sports car, and we brace ourselves for a high-concept car chase,
Polanski-style. But when Corsos quarry effortlessly gives him the slip, we realize
that Polanski is only taking a minimalists dig at the absurdity of the car-chase
convention. (Its a punchline without a joke in front of it.) When Corso infiltrates
a coven of devil worshippers, Depp in his outsized robes and pendant looks like hes
in a live-action version of "The Sorcerers Apprentice." Its a hit
that no movie could fully recover from, but things go even farther to pot in a brief scene
that occurs late in the picture. Polanski has often mocked the idea that sex is the
devils handiwork, but never before has his sense of satire worked on such a
perfunctory, first-draft level.
Polanski has always ridden a savory line between horror and black
comedy in a style thats unmistakably his. No one else would have Rosemary still the
creaking bassinet with the point of a butcher knife; no one else would stick a corpse in a
motorized wheelchair and send it smashing through a pair of French doors. All of his
talent and obsessions are on display in The Ninth Gate, but he winds up relying on
the tropes of younger (and lesser) directors, as if at 66 he feels some need to prove his
relevance. Some people will like The Ninth Gate because its weighted more
toward parody than artful dread, but thats the tamest, easiest route a Polanski
picture can take. Its painful to watch The Ninth Gates meticulous tone
and rhythms go for naught in its final half-hour, until it cant dig into us the way
his movies usually do until it cant sting. We may still feel inclined towards
laughter, but this time its not sticking in our throats.
- Tom Block