Something happened to me during the first few minutes of the first film of this year's Melbourne International Film Festival that hasn't happened to me in 24 years:
I had to leave the movie to go take a shit.
Sorry, I should have better prepared you for that, but you likely had some idea from the title of this post where I was about to go.
That's right, it was 2001 the last time I can remember having to do this -- which is also the only time I can remember having to do this. Considering that my stats show I've seen 1784 movies in the theater, that's crazy.
It likely would have been late October/early November, since that lines up with the release date of David Lynch's Mulholland Drive. A friend of mine and I went to see it after a Mexican lunch, though I can't remember if the specific food I ate had anything to do with it. Anyway, I joke that the reason I didn't understand Mulholland Drive was due to this unscheduled pit stop. As if any missed five-minute portion of that movie could unlock the whole movie.
The next time I got the uncontrollable urge to defecate while watching a movie, it was last night, in a movie called, humorously enough, Sex.
It's funny enough alone to call a movie Sex, then funnier still that this is the movie that stimulated my bowels beyond my ability to delay. Oh I tried to delay for a while, maybe as long as five minutes, but this was at the very beginning of the movie, and I knew it was a losing battle.
Sex is a Norwegian film written and directed by Dag Johan Haugerud, and it's the first of a trio of generically named films on similar themes, all of which have already been released. The other two are called Dreams and Love, and I'd really like to see them. (They're both also playing at this year's festival, but it wasn't something I had any idea I'd want to prioritize.)
But for a time, I thought my unexpected departure from Sex, about ten minutes into its running time, might be a fatal blow to seeing any of them, including the one I was currently seeing.
I was standing in the wrong line at Cinema Kino, waiting for another session, apparently, that was starting later than my 6:15 session of Sex. I'd chosen that line only because I'd seen the woman ahead of me holding a MIFF brochure, but of course this cinema is doing double or triple duty on MIFF films, in addition to its usual slate, so it would have behoved me to actually check.
My session had already been let in, but all this really meant was that the pickings were slim for seats by the time I entered the theater. And I did still want to use the bathroom -- just #1 at this point -- before the movie started, so I had to carefully pick through all the other legs in my row, nearly falling into the row in front of me, to deposit my bag and jacket, then return from whence I came to use the bathroom before finally returning again.
And then, about ten minutes later, pick back through those same legs again.
See I started to feel a little sweaty, started cramping in my gut in that way we're all familiar with. It means The Time Is Nigh.
"But wait," I thought. "This never happens to me. Maybe I can suppress it."
Fat chance.
I've often considered how cooperative the human body is when it comes to matters of holding it. One of the first times I noticed this happening was when I went away for the weekend for the first time with my new girlfriend, now my wife, in 2005. Literally ten seconds after I'd dropped her off at her house at the end of the weekend, my body said "Okay, you gotta get to a gas station pronto." Before that exact moment, I didn't even know I had to go.
My body knows movies are important enough to me that it also squelches the need to go in that situation -- at least I assume it must be doing this, since it's been nearly a quarter century since it's happened, and I'm certainly not consciously planning any method of avoiding it. But there are certain biological imperatives where mind over matter just doesn't work, and one of those is food poisoning.
Now, I don't know if I actually had food poisoning last night. I really hope not, as the Indian place I ate beforehand is one of my favorites, and very rarely visited, and it was especially yummy last night. But the symptoms were unmistakeable, starting with the sweating. And the main reason I thought the movie could be ruined is that if this was food poisoning, it was not going to end after a single session in the bathroom.
But there were twin social considerations here as well:
1) I had already pushed past these people's legs three times. I already got a mild sense that they thought it was inefficient of me to drop my bag and then go to the toilet, rather than taking care of that before I selected my seat.
2) I didn't want them to think I was a homophobe.
I'll have to explain that last one, which will get us into what Sex is about.
The film features two men who work inspecting chimneys to make sure they're up to to code. That leads to a lot of time atop roofs, which is what you're seeing in that poster. They are both -- as far as they know -- happily married.
In their first conversation, in a film that is filled with stimulating conversations, the first thinks he's confessing something shocking when he reveals he's been having dreams where David Bowie is there, and Bowie looks at him with this beatific pure love, as he'd never been looked at before. In fact, it felt as though Bowie was looking at him as he would look at a woman.
Not to be outdone, the second confesses to the first that he just had sex with a man the day before, on a lark, for reasons he cannot figure out, when the opportunity presented itself.
It was just after the second confession that I could no longer deny what was happening inside my person.
But if I left right now, would the people I had pushed through, and almost tripped over, three different times, think that I was so offended by the subject matter that I had to leave?
If you can believe it, as I was eating two antacids and calculating the likelihood that I could succeed in a battle to delay the inevitable for another hour and 45 minutes, this was a real consideration for me.
Never mind the fact that I'd be leaving my backpack and jacket, meaning I was not storming out. (The other option, I suppose, was that I was so aroused by the subject matter that I was leaving to do a different thing. But that did not worry me as much.)
Anyway, I'm glad to say that it took only a single five-minute session in the toilet to pass whatever was ailing me, and I watched the rest of the movie in total biological comfort. And because I'd been there when the movie's key plot points were both introduced, and because this is a movie reliant on lots of long and interesting conversations, it was easy to pick back up with the story without having missed anything truly important.
The movie reminded me of other Scandinavian movies I've seen, maybe most specifically Force Majeure, as both movies are essentially structured around one long conversation about an event that occurred. There's also maybe a bit of The Worst Person in the World and even my beloved Toni Erdmann, though I know Erdmann is not technically Scandinavian.
And it struck me just how absorbing a movie can be when its plot is basically limited to the fallout from two different events that occur off-screen -- the other guy doesn't have an event as such, but seems to be questioning his gender identity -- and are comprised of just one conversation between a couple people after another. The movie is funny and poignant and kept me interested throughout.
The same cannot be said for Good Boy, a horror movie directed by Ben Leonberg, which has a delightful premise, but which I found very boring -- even though it's barely 70 minutes long.
Good Boy has a logline that immediately encapsulates what should be great about it: "A horror movie from the perspective of a dog." I don't even know if that's a proper logline, but it communicates what should be a unique approach to filmmaking and possibly a real hoot.
The thing is, Good Boy is not funny -- despite your expectations, it's not trying to be -- and it turns out, there's a reason horror movies are not made with dogs as their main characters.
But first, the thing I'm talking about in the subject of this post.
After a pinot noir at the pop-up wine bar hosted by Penfolds, I reported to cinema 1 at ACMI (Australian Centre for the Moving Image) for my second movie, which started at 9:45.
And noticed something straight away that was portentous: the opening MIFF ads, which I get to know well during the festival and just saw for the first time at Sex, had closed captioning with them.
Had they had closed captioning in my previous film? I didn't think so. I would have remembered that.
And sure enough, when Good Boy started, the closed captioning continued.
I was vaguely aware that certain MIFF sessions are tailored to hearing impaired individuals, but I had never yet attended one. It was not something I'd thought I had to check, before now.
And though I'd just watched a movie with text on its screen throughout the run time, it's not the same when the text is mandatory for you to understand the film. And it's quite detrimental when you're watching the sort of film that relies on its mood to scare you, yet is constantly breaking that mood by telling you that ominous music is currently playing.
I tried to ignore the text. I really did. But you know your eye is constantly drawn down to it. Even though I should know a) I understand the words being spoken on screen, and b) if there are no words being spoken, it's just music or noises that I can hear perfectly well with my own ears, it's still difficult not to check that text with some regularity. (And I checked often enough to notice some sloppy typos, such as when the word "echoes" was written as "echose.")
Do I think this really impacted my enjoyment of the film?
Not really. I think the film impacted my enjoyment of the film.
I should start, though, by saying the dog is awesome.
The golden retriever in this film may be one of the best dog actors I have ever seen.
I understand, of course, that a dog cannot really give a performance, so I guess I'm saying that his trainers are amazing in what they are able to coax from him. This dog had a different facial expression for every moment. The amount of time he spent looking concerned in slightly different ways ... well I just hope they didn't have to really torment this poor dog, though I suppose there had to be some of that. You can't tell a dog to act stressed, so you actually have to stress him out, and let's just hope you do it responsibly.
But seriously. If this movie had relied only on the performance of the dog, it might have been great.
But the human actors -- whose faces you never see clearly -- are not good, and their dialogue is quite poor. Plus, this thing drags, big time.
As soon as you realize this movie is not a joke -- or if so, a very subtle joke with almost nothing constructed as traditional humor -- it becomes a waiting game for you to start to be scared.
And you wait. And you wait. And you wait.
I'm sorry, but as much as dogs are awesome, it must just not be possible to feel a large amount of fear for what's about to befall a dog. Maybe we can't relate to it enough, since feeling scared in a horror movie relies on a certain amount of empathy with the characters. Plus the fact that you know the dog is going to survive the movie, because of course he is.
Because of the gimmick and because it is very difficult to have a dog carry a whole movie -- especially if it's not a talking dog -- the director feels he must move things along relatively slowly, just to get to something approaching feature length. (Maybe this should have been a short film.) But each scene meant to build tension just doesn't do it. Even with some okay horror imagery, we just don't get there, and I think it is actually a disappointment on our expectations to make a movie with this premise, and make it with a straight face. You are promising a horror comedy, and you are not delivering.
I'll be seeing a single MIFF movie on Sunday night, where I will be sure to eat a sensible meal beforehand.