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During the 1980's Paul Cox was one of the players in the Australian
film renaissance and he created a series of quirky, character-driven films like Lonely Hearts, Man of Flowers, and My First Wife.
All had an idiosyncratic charm and a genuine sense of caring for the offbeat people and
relationships portrayed. But aside from one IMAX documentary, Cox has gone over a decade
without having his new films released in the United States. Until now, that is.
Unfortunately, with Innocence, Cox may be relegated permanently to the outback.
His subject is love in the senior set. Not love between a long-married
couple a la On Golden Pond, nor the induced randiness of the marginally
condescending Cocoon. In Innocence, a couple who had a love affair in
their youth reunite half a century later, fall in love all over again, and initiate an
affair. He, Andreas (Charles Tingwell), is a widower and she, Claire (Julia Blake) is
still with her husband of many years, in a marriage from which love and sex evaporated two
decades before.
With ever-increasing life expectancies, there are more old people
around now than at any time in history. Perhaps due to the youth-fixated values of our
society, it was assumed for a long time that sex ceased for the aged and the subject was
either a joke or simply ignored. In more recent years, it has become clear that sexual
appetite and activity can continue with gratifying satisfaction into the 70's, even the
80's.
It's a great idea for a movie to explore such a romance and Innocence
gives the impression that Cox sat down and thought out all the issues that are bound to
arise in the circumstances. What about the abandoned spouse? the sagging body parts? the
imminence of the infirmities of age and death itself? And, of course, what will the
children think? Then, instead of vesting the issues in the kind of individualized
characters that Cox used to do so well, he comes up with a rather ordinary upper middle
class couple--she, the suburban housewife; he, retired and occasionally playing the organ
at the local church.
The relationship is romanticized, cutting back and forth between the
youthful affair and the current liaison. When they first again bed, she asks him to close
his eyes, about the only reference to the condition of the geriatric physique. The
camera's avoidance of their bodies seems dishonest, rather than tactful, a blatant
avoidance of the very issues that have been raised. And Julia Blake is so beautiful an
older woman, that, like Hollywood romances about the young, it's hard to identify--those
are film stars on the screen, not ordinary mortals. Surely not you and me.
Aside from the unimaginative approach, the film self-destructs
with dialogue that would make a soap fan blush. "What really matters is love,"
says Andreas to his daughter, "Everything else is rubbish." "She
wants to be needed," says Claire's husband, "That's the way women
are." And "Love becomes more real the closer it comes to death." and
"I want to make it up to you, Claire." and "I'm suffering but you don't
care." and "I don't understand women. Never have." and "I thought that
happiness was living for other people."
Both Blake and Tingwell are charming performers, struggling to stay
afloat in this bowl of porridge. Terry Norris, as Claire's husband, John, plays on just
one tiresomely predictable note of angry hurt. Had he been played (and written) with more
shading and complexity, there might have been a more interesting conflict for Claire.
The field remains wide open for a movie about senior passion and love,
one stripped of sentimentality and rooted in characters who did not originate in daytime
television, but have some individuality and the kind of interesting quirkiness that Cox
used to know how to do quite well. A good dialogue writer is essential.
- Arthur Lazere