by Douglas Messerli
P. David Ebersole (screenwriter and director) Death
in Venice, CA / 1994
P. David Ebersole’s 1994
MFA Thesis film at New York University straddles two LGBTQ film genres, a
head-on campy satire—in this case of Thomas Mann’s novella Death in Venice
and Luchino Visconti’s 1971 cinematic treatment of it—and a tragic coming out
tale in the Southern gothic tradition relocated to the long strand of the
Venice, California beach. The closest to the latter in genre, I’d argue, is
James Bolton’s Dream Boy of 2018.
It’s too bad, given the link she provides
to Ebersole’s obvious influences that she doesn’t have a larger role. Yet, as
Mona Dickens—the owner and guardian of the decaying, gothic-like boarding house
in which the Gustav von Aschenbach-like figure Mason Carver (Nick Rafter) takes
up residence and in which lives her step-son Sebastian (the name with which she
has dubbed the 17-year-old John [Robert Glen Keith] that also references Williams)—she hovers over the work with
monstrous effect.
The difference is that Williams was able
to graft these opposing genres together to create a hot-house like magnolia
whose scent wafted throughout the theater so powerfully that his audiences lost
their rational facilities as if they had smoked a dozen reefers before sitting
down to watch his plays. Williams took camp to new levels by grounding it in
the seemingly realist tradition of the Southern melodrama that broke our hearts
through its pathos of lost lives and loves. Williams’ plays are comedies at
which instead of laughing you’re forced to cry, cutting away that transitional
arc between, as the cliche puts it, “I laughed so hard it brought tears to my
eyes.” Williams proved Bergson was right, there is a thin line between the
comic and the tragic, between the pleasure of laughter and the suffering of
fury.
Alas, Ebersole is not quite sure, it appears, whether he really intends his Venice, California transposition of Death in Venice to be a comic or a serious work. Ludicrously, his von Aschenbach doppelgänger, Carver arrives with his suitcases and ill-fitting suit on Venice beach as if he has magically been flown in, just before the camera started rolling, from a Long Beach dock. And, as he passes the famed Venice Beach Weight Pen (now enlarged into Muscle Beach), we immediately know he’s doomed when he catches the eye and knowing smirk of the hunky young Sebastian working out with his musclebound friends.
Certainly Ebersole could not have chosen
a better place than Venice to create a sense of a pending choleric epidemic. In
its unending mix of a carney atmosphere where men and women freaks swallow
blazing shish kabob skewers and juggle fully-operating electric hand saws along
with its endless maze of cheap souvenir and T-shirt shops, Venice is a sleazy
tourist’s delight. And the men’s bathrooms, which the film features, are truly
foul-smelling refuges for homeless men, time-worn surfers, and gays seeking
sexual liaisons—at least at the time when this film was made. Since then, much
of that has been cleared away, but I recall back in 1985 or 1986, shortly after
having moved to Los Angeles, driving to a Venice parking lot and breaking down
in tears while the radio was playing Billy Joel’s “New York State of Mind.”
Although I had already come to love Los Angeles, I so hated Venice that I
despised even visiting it, occasioned on that morning I presume by a visit to
the local boardwalk bookstore, Small World Books.
Yet given all the noise and apparent
contagion about the place, I cannot imagine even a derelict house remaining on
the boardwalk, let alone run by a germophobic landlord such as Knight’s
character, who keeps the windows locked tight. Early in the film, “dropping
beads” (see my essay about the process) to the new tenant in the bedroom across
from his, Sebastian complains that his step-mother has got the place “shut up
like a coffin” so that “Come summer I’m going to have to sleep naked outside
the covers.” While I am sure that Carver went to bed that night with plenty of
lustful thoughts, because of the sea breezes Venice is often cold in the
nights, so that he might find the nude beauty shivering instead of sweating.
So far Ebersole has spun out a kind of
campy version of an extremely closeted fuddy-duddy finding a delightful torment
in his longing for a young man’s body. Yet when the film begins to get down to
its semi-realist foundations, we simply can’t believe it at the very same
moment we have just begun to be intrigued by Carver’s rather absurd dilemma.
How could this art historian who sees
himself as an authority of Romantic love, have ever agreed to be holed up in
such a Venice dump? Ebersole’s attempt to cover the implausible situation by
suggesting that Carver’s wife is Mona’s sister, making him Sebastian’s
step-uncle, just doesn’t resolve the riddle.
And even had Mona resided in a smart
Venice rehab why would he choose Venice as his Los Angeles “home-base”?
Although we soon see him, on a day in which Sebastian has been charged to show
him around the Venice environs, in a museum, anyone having come to the city
with the intent of museum-going or doing of research would know that there are
no museums in Venice (although there is the splendid contemporary art gallery
LA Louver) in which you might find a painting of St. Sebastian, which he
lovingly describes to his namesake. Such a work might be studied only in the
Getty Museum in Malibu (the Getty Center had not yet been completed at the time
of this film) or the Los Angeles County Museum of Art*—both miles away from
Venice.
And why, for god’s sake, does Carver
daily dress up in a suit each morning when no one else in Los Angeles does
except for museum directors and a few businessmen working in downtown offices?
As a native Angeleno, Ebersole certainly knows better.
Even if we were to ignore these minor
details, however (recognizing that in the movies accuracy is a rare commodity)
or to accept them for part of satiric absurdity, we still have major problems
in simply believing in the characters Ebersole is trying to create as his
satiric targets. This is certainly the first LGBTQ film that I’ve seen to date
(and admittedly I have hundreds still to view) where the youth in a “coming
out” film not only is more aware of his sexuality than any adult the movie
portrays, but is lasciviously involved with the gay sexual world. Sebastian is
no innocent Tadzio. He admits he’s been knifed by a leather number he tried to
pick-up in a Venice bathroom and when he goes missing, Carver immediately goes
to look for him and finds the boy trolling in the then infamous Venice toilet.
When Carver describes himself as being an authority on Romantic love, he means
he is a scholar of the attitudes the 19th Century Romantics held
about love. But when Sebastian claims “I am too,” he means just that; he’s a
firsthand authority about gay sex and where to find it.
Finally, when the sexually cowardly
Carver finally turns tail, ready to run back to his wife, why would such an
experienced gay boy decide to hang himself under the Venice beach pier pilings
(incidentally, there is no pier that I know of in Venice, and I’ve never seen
these pilings unless they’re under the Venice Beach parking lot). It just
doesn’t ring true.
If he’s finally resolved to leave his
lustful ways behind him, why also does Carver seek out Sebastian, now known as
John, under those darkly-lit pilings? Just for one last kiss? Maybe one more
blow job?
Most importantly, if this 30-some
minute film was meant to be a satire, why are we suddenly faced with an ending
that proffers a serious enough offense that the police are easily convinced
that Carver has killed the kid, locking the innocent sinner in prison for the
rest of his life. The film’s early humor and even its several beautifully
composed scenes and images are suddenly reduced to a spiritually-based
psycho-babble: “Maybe I loved him. I certainly was a victim of that romantic
possibility. But a man has the right to live a life in which he sidesteps
persecution. I have one hope for
salvation. A chance to begin again. To die. And to be reborn a braver soul than
I left.”
At least von Aschenbach
kept quiet about it all!
I hate to say this, since I kind of
liked Carver and hoped that he might find a way to enjoy the sex he longed for,
but even if he’s totally innocent, I’d now argue “lock him up.” Besides, he’s
been locked up for his entire life already.
*The LA County Museum of
Art does hold Delacroix’s St. Sebastian Helped by Holy Women, but the
painting we see in the film looks something like the 17th century Baroque
master Guercino’s St. Sebastian held by the Pushkin Museum in Moscow.
Los Angeles, March 22,
2021
Reprinted from My
Queer Cinema blog and World Cinema Review (March 2021).
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