Mulvey, Laura. Notes On Sirk and Melodrama
Mulvey, Laura. Notes On Sirk and Melodrama
Mulvey, Laura. Notes On Sirk and Melodrama
Pleasures
Laura Mulvey
palgrave
*
© Laura Mulvey 1989
The author has asserted her right to be identified as the author of this
work in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
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Notes on Sirk and Melodrama*
• Presented as a paper for the SEFf weekend school Melodrama and published in Movie in 1977.
39
40 Visual and Other Pleasures
Harvey, her date and their preferred future stepfather. The camera does
not allow the spectator to make the same mistake, establishing in no
uncertain terms the formal detachment with which Cary sees Harvey,
in contrast to the way in which in the previous scene Ron had been
subtly extracted from the background and placed in close face-to-face
with Cary.
Lighting style clearly cannot be recognised within the diegesis, and
in All That Heaven Allows it illustrates the basic emotional division which
the film is actually about: Cary's world is divided between the cold,
hard light (blues and yellows) of loneliness, repression and oppression
and the warmer, softer light (red/orange) of hope, emotional freedom
and sexual satisfaction. In keeping with the pace and emotion generated
by a particular scene, Sirk occasionally changes lighting from one shot
to the next, for instance, in order to use the dramatic potential of an
intricate screen which dominates Cary's confrontation with her son
Ned.
Although it is impossible to better Rainer Werner Fassbinder's plot
synopsis of All That Heaven Allows, 5 it might be useful to bring out some
different emphases. The story-line is extremely simple, if not minimal
(concocted specifically to repeat the success of Magnificent Obsession) 6
and is told strictly from a woman's point of view, both in the sense of
world view (the film is structured around female desires and frustrations)
and point of identification (Cary, a widow with two college-age children
and a standard of life in keeping with her late husband's elevated social
and economic position). The narrative quickly establishes lack (her
world is sexually repressed and obsessed simultaneously, offering only
impotent elderly companionship - Harvey - or exploitative lechery -
Howard). She then discovers love and a potentially physically and
emotionally satisfying country way of life in Ron Kirby, her gardener
(whose resonance shifts from that of the socially unacceptable in the
Country Club world to that of the independent man in harmony with
nature out by the old mill where he grows trees). Cary's transgression
of the class barrier mirrors her more deeply shocking transgression of
sexual taboos in the eyes of her friends and children. Her discovery of
happiness is then reversed as she submits to pressure and gives Ron
up, resulting in a 'ffight into illness'. The doctor puts her on the road to
success through self-knowledge and a happy end, but, by an ironic deus
ex machina in reverse, their gratification is postponed by Ron's accident
(caused by his joy at seeing Cary in the distance). A hidden shadow is
cast implicitly over their perfect, joyful acceptance of love, although as
the shutters are opened in the morning, the cold, hard light of repression
is driven off the screen by the warm light of hope and satisfaction.
Jon Halliday points out the importance of the dichotomy between
contemporary New England society - the setting for the movie - and
Notes on Sirk and Melodrama 43
'the home of Thoreau and Emerson' as lived by Ron. 'Hudson and his
trees are both America's past and America's ideals. They are ideals
which are now unattainable ... .' 7 The ftlm is thus posited on a
recognised contradiction within the American tradition. The contempor-
ary reality and the ideal can be reconciled only by Cary moving, as it
were, into the dream which, as though to underline its actual ephemeral
nature, is then broken at the end by Ron's accident. How can natural
man and woman re-establish the values of primitive economy and the
division of labour when the man is bedridden and incapable? How can
a mother of grown children overcome the taboo against her continued
sexual activity in 'civilised society', when the object of her desire is
reduced to child-like dependence on her ministrations?
In other films, particularly All I Desire, Imitation of Life and The Tarnished
Angels, Sirk ironises and complicates the theme of the continued sexuality
of mothers. The women perform professionally (from the depths of
Laverne's parachute jump in Tarnished Angels to the heights of Lora's
stardom in Imitation of Life) and attract the gaze of men and the curious
crowd. Their problems are approached with characteristically Sirkian
ambiguity as they try to brazen out their challenge to conformity as best
they can. Cary, on the other hand, has no heroic or exhibitionist
qualities, and the gaze and gossip of the town cause her agonies of
embarrassment. It is only very occasionally that the setting and the
narrative move away from Cary and, when they do, it is significant.
The gaze of Cary's friends at Sara's party is established in a scene before
Cary and Ron arrive. The camera takes in the prurient voyeurism which
turns the sexual association of a middle-aged woman with a younger
man into an act of public indecency (this view is then expressed and
caricatured by Howard's drunken assault on Cary).
Melodrama can be seen as having an ideological function in working
certain contradictions through to the surface and re-presenting them in
an aesthetic form. A simple difference, however, can be made between
the way that irreconcilable social and sexual dilemmas are finally resolved
in, for instance, Home from the Hill, and are not in, for example, All That
Heaven Allows. It is as though the fact of having a female point of
view dominating the narrative produces an excess which precludes
satisfaction. If the melodrama offers a fantasy escape for the identifying
women in the audience, the illusion is so strongly marked by recog-
nisable, real and familiar traps that escape is closer to a day-dream
than to fairy story. Hollywood ftlms made with a female audience in
mind tell a story of contradiction, not of reconciliation. Even if a heroine
resists society's overt pressures, its unconscious laws catch up with her
in the end.
44 Visual and Other Pleasures
Notes
1. Paul Willemen, 'Distanciation and Douglas Sirk', Screen, vol. 12, no. 2. Paul
Willemen, 'Towards an Analysis of the Sirkian System', Screen, vol. 13, no. 4.
Stephen Neale, 'Douglas Sirk', Framework, no. 5.
2. Helen Foley, 'Sex and State in Ancient Greece', Diacritics.
3. R. B. Heilman, Tragedy and Melodrama (Seattle: University of Washington Press,
1968).
4. Thomas Elsaesser, 'Tales of Sound and Fury', Monogram, no. 4.
5. R. W. Fassbinder, 'Six Films by Douglas Sirk', Halliday and Mulvey (eds)
Douglas Sirk, Edinburgh Film Festival Publication (Edinburgh, 1972).
6. Jon Halliday, Sirk on Sirk (London: Seeker & Warburg, 1971).
7. Ibid.