Zatoichi
“You are so far behind, you think you are in first,” one character remarks to another in James Cameron Mitchell’s playful new film. Perhaps this his way of addressing the cocky know-it-all-superiority that is a cliché of New York before September 11, 2001. Crisis and tragedy perhaps provided an opportunity for several lost souls to make some sort of ‘real’ connection. There is a wonderful dreamy magic at work at Shortbus which is not typical for a film involving so much quasi-hardcore sexual content. The transitions between stories in the film involve an animated flybys of the city which is constructed of twinkly lit card-board and oil painted buildings, sort of a Michael Gondry-like homemade model and the stories are dramatically vibrant.
Justin Bond, a real-life New York cabaret singer, acts as the sort of Maître d’ of the Shortbus lounge, a very liberated club in witch the patrons have all kinds of sex or sexual conversations with one another. He comments at one point while observing a room full of New Yorkers engaged in a full on orgy of sex. “It’s just like the 60s, but with less hope.” That is not exactly the message of the film, but more that voyeurism is participation, and the feelings here are indeed infectuous. In fact if you see one ensemble feel-good sex film this year, I fully recommend that it be Shortbus. The movie plays out like the sex version of Shortcuts or Magnolia set in New York instead of LA. The large focal event (in lieu of earthquakes or frogs) is the Eastern Seaboard Blackout of August 2003. Combined with this ensemble of interweaving stories, the actors collaborated with the director to write their own story arcs, in the same vein as a Mike Leigh film.
The characters cross paths at Shortbus, a sexual liberation lounge that has many of the usual unusuals that you would think this type evening sex-club would attract, but mainly just normal folks looking for an experience which yields some sort of communication. There is a gay couple having relationship issues, one of them, making a home film reminiscent of Jonathan Caouette’s Tarnation (incidently a film which John Cameron Mitchell helped produce). He used to prostitute himself out and is depressed to the point of suicide. A hetero couple seem to be keeping their relationship together for the sake of keeping it together. They walk on eggshells around the fact that he cannot give her an orgasm (oh, and by the way, she is a sex therapist). There is a dominatrix who just wants to meet the right guy and settle down with a house and a cat. There is a voyeur who spies on the gay couple from the neighboring apartment. All of these characters are really just looking for a way to connect with one another in some sort of meaningful way.
Some of the stories veer into the territory that feels written over real: A sex therapist who cannot have an orgasm, the dominatrix who cannot form or have any sort of stable relationship has a name of the first 7 letters of Severance (although her real name is Jennifer Aniston – a long story). However, where Shortbus is wildly successful is that it is charming and funny, but dramatically authentic as well. The laughs are generated with the little details that crop up in peoples lives and while they are quite often embarrassing, they are what make people human. You are laughing with the characters not at them. And the sex, while not always titillating, is also humorous at times, and drives the story forward with odd little details (one character sings the American National Anthem into another ass for instance, while the other uses the erect penis for a karaoke microphone). Like many stories which celebrate New York, New York is a good enough representation for a country as complex and large as the United States. And Shortbus is one of the best examples of the celebration of America 21st century. In a just world, a movie that cannot escape the NC-17 rating, should have at least the popularity from word of mouth as The Adventures of Prascilla Queen of the Desert, if not a heck of a lot more. Shortbus comes highly recommended, even for your grandmother.
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Reader Comments
Swarez 09/12/2006 @ 4:48am
Can’t wait to see this. Hopefully it will play over here.
Jurgen Fauth 09/12/2006 @ 10:03am
Thanks for the review, Kurt--I adored the movie but since I saw it at a press screening rather than a festival, I’m apparently not allowed to talk about it yet. Tiny correction: Jennifer Aniston’s dominatrix name is Severin, as in Venus in Furs (Leopold von Sacher-Masoch.) See also:
Venus In Furs
by Velvet Underground
album: The Velvet Underground & Nico (1967)
Shiny, shiny, shiny boots of leather
Whiplash girlchild in the dark
Comes in bells, your servant, don’t forsake him
Strike dear mistress, and cure his heart
Downy sins of streetlight fancies
Chase the costumes she shall wear
Ermine furs adorn the imperious
Severin, severin awaits you there
I am tired, I am weary
I could sleep for a thousand years
A thousand dreams that would awake me
Different colors made of tears
Kiss the boot of shiny, shiny leather
Shiny leather in the dark
Tongue of thongs, the belt that does await you
Strike dear mistress, and cure his heart
Severin, severin, speak so slightly
Severin, down on your bended knee
Taste the whip, in love not given lightly
Taste the whip, now bleed for me
I am tired, I am weary
I could sleep for a thousand years
A thousand dreams that would awake me
Different colors made of tears
Shiny, shiny, shiny boots of leather
Whiplash girlchild in the dark
Severin, your servant comes in bells, please don’t forsake him
Strike dear mistress, and cure his heart
Bang 09/17/2006 @ 8:07am
Saw the film in Toronto and loved it. While it has moments of physical comedy and sharp wit which are fantastic, there is a strong emotional core that affected me and I was incredibly touched after the film. Leaving the screening while rolling out into the streets of Toronto and the crowds of people, I was suddenly aware that the world offered so many opportunities to make a human connection and reminded me that after 9/11, how much I had forgotten that. Anywhoo, great film - wonderful cast and Justin Bond was a hoot!
junkie 10/02/2006 @ 3:58pm
curious- just how graphic is this film? i have heard the sex is hardcore and non-simulated...true? while i know this is a niche film, scenes depicting hardcore gay sex might be too much for many...considering the themes of the film, that might be a shame. in any case, was wondering just how graphic it really was. thanks
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