This section contains 576 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) |
[Opening Night] is in many ways the logical extension and distillation of John Cassavetes' treatment of the actor as prime subject and co-creator of his films: a play-within-a-film story that never bothers to make too close a distinction between actress Myrtle Gordon's working out of her problems with a distasteful role on stage and Gena Rowlands' own experimentation with the part of Myrtle. As usual with Cassavetes' films, there is a lack of self-consciousness about the layering of ironies on art imitating life, and vice versa…. Since film-making is treated not as a form that mediates in life, but as 'life' itself, both the on- and off-stage events become equally raw material, each a possible permutation of the other. (p. 192)
Unexpectedly, given its concern for such actorish tantrums, Opening Night remains probably Cassavetes' coolest film, mainly because the offstage relationships are never reduced, in the usual, psychologising style...
This section contains 576 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) |