52 Films by Women Vol 2. 37. FREAK SHOW (Director: Trudie Styler)
Until she made her feature directorial debut with Freak
Show, an adaptation of James St James’ 2007 novel, 63 year old Worcestershire-born
Trudie Styler was best known as an actress turned movie producer. She appeared
in the television series Poldark (the Robin Ellis one), as
well as Kelly Monteith, Funny Man, The Bell and Miss
Marple: The Body in the Library. She married her husband Gordon Sumner
(aka Sting) before making her home in New York raising children Mickey, Eliot,
Jake and Giacomo. Mickey Sumner followed her mother into acting: you will have
seen her in Noah Baumbach’s Frances Ha in 2012. Styler is best
known for producing Guy Ritchie’s break-out film Lock, Stock and Two Smoking
Barrels in 1998 and has cultivated the career of writer-director Dito
Montiel, producing and executive producing his films A Guide to Recognising Your
Saints (2006) and The
Son of No One (2011) respectively. Her other high-profile producing
credits include Duncan Jones’ 2009 debut Moon and Girl Most Likely (2012) starring a post-Bridesmaids Kristen Wiig.
So what pushed Styler to make the transition from producer
to director? In an interview with movie trade paper Variety, she describes
having an accident with a truck aged two and a half leaving her face lined with
deep red scars; she was dubbed ‘scarface’ by cruel children. At its essence, Freak Show
is about a response to bullying. Actually, Styler only opted to direct the film
after the original director (unnamed) pulled out. She does, I can report, a
creditable job.
James St James (born James Clark) is famous in his own right
as the author of Disco Bloodbath, about the club kid phenomenon in New York in
the 1990s. It was turned into a film, Party Monster, in 2003 by directors
Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato, with Seth Green (Austin Powers) as St
James and Macaulay Culkin as wild party organiser Michael Alig. Freak
Show was published in 2007 and is based on St James’ high school
experiences. ‘The concept is completely autobiographic’, said St James in a
2007 interview with Brian Kenney of School Library Journal. ‘The house,
the school, it’s all me.’ It is autobiographic, but also an exercise in wish
fulfilment. In High School, James got quieter and quieter. His 17 year old
surrogate, Billy Bloom, the protagonist of Freak Show, got louder and louder.
The film begins with Billy (Alex J. Lawther, who played the
young Alan Turing in The Imitation Game) arriving at his
father’s house – nay, a mansion. Daddy William (Larry Pine) is fabulously
wealthy but mother (Bette Midler) is just fabulous. Billy idolises his mother,
his Muv, with a passion and is bitterly disappointed not to live with her.
William has custody of young Billy until he becomes of age and sends him to the
preppy red brick High School (Dwight Eisenhower in the book) where his taste in
make-up and girl clothes singles him out for hostile stares and ostracism.
Billy makes two friends: a girl whose name her never learns
whom he dubs Blah Blah Blah (AnnaSophia Robb from Bridge to Terabithia, a film about retreating into fantasy
as a response to bullying) and the local jock, Flip Kelly (Ian Nelson), the
football star for whom everything comes all too easily.
Quite apart from the other boys who attack Billy quite
brutally at the film’s mid-point – Billy and Flip bond as he recovers – Billy’s
main antagonist is Lynette (Abigail Breslin). In an act of defiance, Billy
decides to stand against her to be voted High School Queen of the Prom, an
election campaign that gets TV coverage.
The film is firmly in Young Adult (YA), teen movie territory
– and what the heck is wrong with that? It is powered by an engaging
performance by Lawther, who throws himself into wardrobe choices. His enactment
of Zelda Fitzgerald as a book report is an eccentric highlight. The script by
Patrick J Clifton and Beth Rigazzo (Raising Helen) brings the 2007 story
bang up to date with anti-DT barbs. ‘Let’s make America great again,’ trumpets
Lynette as the caricatured villainess as part of her campaign. The film is
slightly unfair to her: the girl isn’t the prettiest and her campaign is based
on arrogance and prejudice rather than a defence of heterodoxy as a means of
surviving in ‘America First’ USA.
Some reviewers have sniffed that the film isn’t particularly
subtle. Its tone is taken from its protagonist who is über-confident and
clearly defined. Yet it has nuance. Billy discovers that his view of his mother
is romanticised and the crotchety housekeeper, Florence (Celia Weston) becomes
a sympathetic source of support. When Billy returns to school, he is
appropriated as a symbol of progress. The institution attempts to support him,
if only for fear of a lawsuit.
The supporting cast is eclectic and includes John McEnroe as
a gym coach. The 72 year old Midler is in amazing shape and at one point raises
her leg with the dexterity of a gymnast. Okay, she’s too old to be Billy’s
mother if you do the math, but disbelief is there to be suspended.
It may be significant – or a coincidence – that women rather
than men are directing films about the transgender experience. Just
Charlie from British director Rebekah Fortune, 2016’s Don’t
Call Me Son from Brazilian director Anna Muylaert and 2015’s About
Ray (director: Gaby Dellal) starring Elle Fanning, Naomi Watts and
Susan Sarandon are recent examples. There is certainly a distinction between
these movies about The Danish Girl (director: Tom Hooper), which is more about the
experience of transgender artist’s Lili Elbe’s wife (Alicia Vikander) than the
artist herself and Walter Hill’s 2016 genre actioner (Re)Assignment starring
Michelle Rodriguez as a male assassin forced to undergo gender reassignment
surgery. The most significant mover in the genre is Jill Soloway, creator of
the TV series Transparent, based on her father, Harry, coming out as
transgender. Just as Harry Soloway became Carrie, so Mort (Jeffrey Tambor)
became Maura. At some point, transgender
directors will make films about their own experiences. For now, you feel like
you are watching a genre being formed, heading towards its most perfect
expression. In western terms, we are at the Tom Mix stage rather than the John
Wayne one.
Freak Show feels like
an anomaly in Styler’s CV. She formed Maven Pictures with Cecilia Rattray to
support women in filmmaking, with productions including Novitiate by
writer-director Margaret Betts and The Kindergarten Teacher by writer-director
Sara Colangelo; Maven also produced last year’s American Honey, written
and directed by Andrea Arnold. Styler is an example of a considerable number of
women – and actors in general – who turn to directing for the experience,
rather than making a career out of it. However, she is an important force for
women in film, with an executive producer credit on Turkish writer-director
Deniz Gamze Ergüven’s upcoming Kings set in South Central Los
Angeles in the run up to the riots that took place in 1992. The film stars
Halle Berry and Daniel Craig and will be screened at this year’s Toronto Film
Festival
Reviewed at Edinburgh
International Film Festival, Saturday 24 June 2017, 09:15am, FilmHouse,
Edinburgh (Press Screening)
Originally published on Bitlanders.com
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