giving allowances
by Douglas Messerli
Christopher Münch (screenwriter and director) The
Hours and Times / 1991, USA 1992
Christopher
Münch’s 1991 black-and-white film about a weekend
vacation to Barcelona with John Lennon and The Beatles’ manager Brian Epstein
is, like the other two “Beatles’ without Beatles’”
I have reviewed, a fantasy. Yet this one has a
special poignancy, because it truly might have happened even in a
slightly different form.
In
The Hours and Times, the director toys with the possibility that
the street-smart singer might have been somewhat curious, despite his own
heterosexual marriage to Cynthia, about gay life. It wouldn’t be the first time
that heterosexual men have toyed with and even explored the LGBTQ world. And
Münch presents Lennon as a highly intelligent, if a bit course an uneducated
man, who’s a tart wit, at times, and is most certainly curious about the world
around him, even if he expresses utterly no interest in seeing Barcelona; for him
it could have been any city in any country.
The
fact that he trailed along after the ascot-wearing Epstein into strange
territory is highly intriguing, and Münch subtly steers his queer-friendly film
around the possibilities, while making no claim to suggest that anything sexual
between the two ever occurred.
In
fact, that is precisely what transforms this such an insightful work. The
director saw it as a kind of exercise in thought, never expecting that such a
movie would get any distribution or even receive permission to be shown. Rather
amazingly, it won the Special Jury Recognition award at the 1992 Sundance Film
Festival.
During the flight to Barcelona Lennon flirts with a more-than-attentive
stewardess, Marianne (Stephanie Pack) inviting her—despite Epstein’s
discouragement—to visit him in his hotel when she returns to Barcelona two days
later. After all, Lennon proclaims to his knowing management, you have to give
me “allowances,” to which Epstein grumbles that is always what he always does.
Yet
when the two travelers actually do reach their hotel destination, Lennon brings
up the subject of gay sex—Epstein’s sexuality being an open secret—suggesting
that he sometimes thinks about trying gay sex but imagines it would be too
painful.
To
diffuse the tension, Epstein suggests they play cards, and Lennon returns to
his own room alone, receiving a call from his wife, whom he appears to treat
quite badly despite her insistence that she misses him. Lennon seems to miss
only his son, Julian, and hangs up mid-sentence.
The
next day Lennon actually suggests that Epstein take him to a gay bar. The bar,
more a “gentleman’s club” than what we might today describe in the US as a gay
bar, is almost empty at the hour, except for Quinones (Robin McDonald), a gay
man who is married, a fact which Lennon finds intriguing. Quinones, clearly
interested in Lennon, takes them back to his hotel room, but they soon leave,
Epstein furious with Lennon’s flirtation, describing the man as a fascist and
an anti-Semite, subtly apparent in the stranger’s questions and demeanor.
During a tour through the city, Epstein encourages his protégé to speak
about his relationship with Cynthia, but it is clear that Lennon is
uncomfortable discussing such things.
Returning to their rooms, Lennon is determined to take a bath while
playing his harmonica. The manager enters the room, sitting on the edge of the
tub before the musician asks him to scrub his back. As Epstein does so, Lennon
unexpectedly begins to kiss him, and Epstein, totally encouraged by event,
undresses and joins the Beatle performer in the tub. The kiss continues for a
few moments before Lennon stands up and bolts.
Lennon
is what we call in the gay world a “come on,” a flirtatious being who will
not/cannot carry through—the most frustrating of all people. Yet Lennon takes
this even further, receiving a phone call from the returned Marianne, whom
Lennon immediately invites up to his room, leaving Epstein to suffer alone
again in bed.
Yet
even Marianne, amazingly intelligent and spunky, does not necessarily offer
herself up to an easy “rape,” making that possibility political: “Our country
rapes another country.” She also describes the musician as tormenting his
manager.
Yet
she has brought a present for Lennon, a Little Richard record, a singer who
Epstein had asked to lead for a Beatles’ concert the year before these events.
Given Little Richard’s effeminate exaggerations, his choice of wearing make-up
and other feminine clothing, and his fascination with voyeurism, it is another
subtle reminder to Lennon that his macho behavior may not get him very far in
this world. His evening with Marianne ends with a quiet dance to that record.
In
the very next scene, we see Lennon sleeping next to him in bed. Münch is not so
much suggesting that the two have sexually “come together” so to speak, but
that they have come to a kind of arrangement, a comprehension of their
differences and desires. It is strange that when, as they have planned, on
their final day they attend a bull fight, it is Epstein who is worried about
whether or not Lennon might be too squeamish to watch, suggesting perhaps that
the gentle soul here is Lennon not Epstein, who is a hearty man experienced in
the pleasures and terrors of the universe.
The above might simply sound like a recounting of the plot. But this
film is about its details, in the negotiations such different people, who still
admired and love one another, make with one another in order to get on. And it
is almost a study in the torments of the sexual frames we put around ourselves
and each other. In this case, both were seeking a kind of fluidity, even if
they might never find it.
In
the context of the other two of the Beatles’ fantasias on which I focus—Across
the Universe, and Yesterday—The Hours and Times is perhaps the most
honest, and the nearest to The Beatles’ real world, however unknowable and
insane that might have been.
Los Angeles, July 12, 2019
Reprinted from World Cinema Review (July
2019).




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