BLAD BLAD BLFJ
Mar 312010

In 1950s America–or any other time and place–it’s tough to imagine anything scarier or more warping than watching your dad slowly turning into a sadistic maniac before your very young eyes, and even worse if he decides to make you his personal project, and burn all the laziness out of you as if you’re no longer just a kid but training to be a Navy SEAL coupled with a Harvard fast tracker (an epidemic reflected in today’s “helicopter parenting”). This month we can begin to really immerse ourselves in that scariness, as Nicholas Ray’s BIGGER THAN LIFE (1956) finally hits DVD in the lush Criterion edition his fans have been praying for… shall we celebrate? No?! Not yet. First we must write this essay– a hundred times on the blackboard, until it’s perfect–and our crazy dad shall hover over us in the sky, terrifying and confusing the hell out of us whilst we try to concentrate. In short, while BIGGER THAN LIFE is a masterpiece, it is at times excruciatingly painful to watch. Art, entertainment and genuine fear and tragedy rarely all filter down into a deceptively “normal American family film” with such quiet desperation.

Chronicling the madness of an insecure but basically benign suburban schoolteacher (James Mason) in 50′s America, BIGGER THAN LIFE would a good companion piece to another Nicholas Ray “social message” picture of the era about a family with one male child age 8-18, REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE (1955), made a year earlier. Not least of the reasons: the red jackets worn by both Dean in REBEL and Christopher Olsen (as the endangered all-American son, Richie) in LIFE — red the big Ray symbolic color that sets vulnerable innocent youth up like a toreador’s cape before the minotaurs of suburban America. Ray’s great gift was to see the eternal mythic aliveness of the present in every day reality and the way that aliveness both transcends and is caught and destroyed by banality’s sticky web. Thus, BIGGER THAN LIFE seems a bit like a Byronic poem assembled from cut-up episodes of Leave it to Beaver.

Tale of Two Dads: Jim Backus (Rebel) and James Mason (Bigger than Life)

BTL was something Ray was hired on to direct, with Mason footing the bill as producer, making this a bit of a vanity project; it’s easy to see why it bombed at the box office. It’s not exactly uplifting and as far as unflinching headlong careens down the shock corridor, it makes quite a spectacle of itself.  Mason’s acting here fits the title; he goes beyond nailing it, beyond even hammering it. He becomes bigger than life and in the process nearly destroys everything around him.

However, the tricky part of a Jekyll/Hyde role like Ed Avery is in first winning audience sympathy as a good, “normal” kind of guy. Remember when Stephen King got all mad at Kubrick for putting Jack Nicholson as Jack Torrance in THE SHINING? Dude! King wanted, as I recall, Michael Moriarty; a nice “normal” face. Nicholson didn’t reign in his bigger than life qualities so seemed creepy right from the get go, and that made King mad! All that came after BIGGER THAN LIFE but James Mason has the same problem.  It’s very tough to “love” James Mason, even when he’s trying so hard to be lovable. He’s meant to be the Napoleanic bad guy, Claude Rains with the edges filed off, sun dried until crackling and glazed with a shiny patina. That’s why he’s such a good foil in films like LOLITA, NORTH BY NORTHWEST and– damn, what else has this guy been in? Oh God, that’s right: MANDINGO.

But the thing is, though Jack  Nicholson made for a creepy dad, he was the creepy dad that we all know: the kind who laugh at their own jokes, presuming no one else will get his brilliant wit. Smarmy — but a sexy, earthy, real smarmy that comes from having lived a full and addled life, i.e. a mix of love and hatred for his rich plethora of vices. He lets it all hang out with a sense of a college educated snob who surrounds himself with unintelligent people and takes jobs lower than his abilities just so he knows he’ll always be the smartest guy in the room. James Mason comes off more like the child of a very harsh British prep school, all the mischief long since beaten out of him, employing a dry. almost Ronald Coleman-ishness as a carpet to cover the wormy floorboards of his megalomania. Thus he’s a perfect fit for the part since his character in the film is going to such great lengths to conceal his true economic straits that it leads to a physical collapse, which leads to a rare disease, which leads to cortisone treatments, and thence to madness, i.e. the carpet finally being taken up, and the wormy floorboards broken through to reveal the hideous heart of a warped maniac within. Moira Finnie explains the origins of his collapse in notes in her excellent review on Movie Morlocks:

“After a prosaic night of bridge with friends whose conversation centered on children and vacuum cleaners, in a rare moment of candor he points out their essential mundane nature and that of their friends gently. “Let’s face it–you are, I am, let’s face it, we’re dull.” He asks his visibly uncomfortable wife, “Can you tell me one thing, that was said or done by anyone here tonight that was funny, startling, or imaginative?” As if the act of uttering such insightful words were blasphemy, Avery is knocked unconscious by that recurring pain onto the bedroom floor.”

That’s a keen observation, as there’s a lot of bizarre incongruency here which fits a religious/blasphemous reading. So, I’m going to bring in some autobiographical detail as I think it’s relevant: My father is a retired pharmaceutical market research analyst, and when we saw the film together last Xmas, he told me that if Mason is participating in medical trials for the effect of a new cortisone drug he likely doesn’t have to pay for them– and at any rate would get said experimental meds directly from the doctor instead of the local pharmacy. Drunk and megalomaniacal as he was, my dad was adamant about this point And why didn’t he try selling some on the side, I added, at which point he struck me on the head with his newspaper, (your honor.)

Despite all this, we both got deep into it and appreciated the ingeniousness of Ray’s gradual use of shadow and light to turn the Avery household from a banal zone of faux-cheery Apple Pie delusory togetherness to a dark haunted, shades drawn nightmare world, where the father’s shadow looms over the son like death itself and mom is trapped in paralyzing denial.

As a genius auteur, Ray implicitly understands that even the banal surface of the “before” must be as thought-out and studied as the harrowing “after.” We don’t often see this anymore in our harrow-dramas, wherein the “before” is hurried through with a few dissolves of slow-mo dandelion blowing and maybe an Irish setter running through a field, and dad’s every hand movement is cued in the score via ominous bass notes, like a serpent always poised to strike. Nicholas Ray delves into the same cliches but he knows how to twist them, just slightly into slow psychic poison.

However, though he invests plenty of detail in the “before” it’s not enough to leave us overly rooted, which makes the change to monster almost reassuring. At least the kid is beginning to know where he stands. But the terror only intensifies as we see, for example, how badly the mom (Barbara Rush) handles the situation. While we can excuse Mason’s character for not knowing what hit him as far as the cortisone touching off his buried megalomania, the wife is perhaps even more at fault, for letting denial and fear prevent her from contacting the doctor, putting her own child in danger rather than risking hurting her husband’s feelings.  Back then we must remember, there was no Lifetime Network to guide you in your decisions regarding delusional and abusive husbands!

Through her behavior, we can see the roots of much of the systematic child and spousal abuse of 1950s America, wherein mom deals with the problem by praying it will all go away on its own, or ignoring it via Valium and TV — denial at its most destructive and terrifying.

Which brings us to the big terror in BIGGER THAN LIFE: the endangerment of a small, innocent boy who never hurt anyone… by his own father. Poor Ritchie can only speculate why his dad has veered from a dull but genial fellow to a cold-hearted monster, while mom hides in the kitchen with her eyes closed hoping it will all go away. For me, one of the most torturous scenes is the one wherein Mason keeps his son running for football passes until he collapses from exhaustion, or has him studying until he’s ready to collapse, while the wife waits in the kitchen, frozen with worry but still unwilling to call the doctor. Few things are more frightening (and less explored in American horror) than parents who for whatever reason refuse to intervene in the abuse or murder of their own children. Only the most bravely compassionate and poetic of auteurs ever go there, and the only one that comes recently to mind is Val Lewton’s THE LEOPARD MAN (1943) in the scene with the blood under the door (though a similar terror occurs when saintly Frederic March turns into Hyde before the eyes of a pleading Miriam Hopkins in the restored 1933 DR. JEKYLL & MR. HYDE – but that film lacked much overall warmth). LIFE, like the LEOPARD MAN, has the rare and precious mix of humanism and expressionism — while at the same time being trapped in societal norms even as it rebels against them, and that my friend is pure Nicholas Ray.

As a devastating critique on petit bourgeois aspirations of intellectual and economic class climbing, BIGGER THAN LIFE certainly hits a home run, but it’s also the “How I would up in Al-Anon” for a child of alcoholic and co-dependent parents’ very first share!! Welcome, Richie! Keep coming back! As an indictment of “see no evil” spousal co-dependence, it’s pretty brutal too. More than anything, it’s an actor’s showcase, something James Mason needed and deserved to do and does well, but let’s face it, the ending is pretty weird. After nearly killing everyone he’s just sorry and all better cause the drugs have worn off? Puh lease. What is that phrase about if it happens twice, shame on you?

Then there’s the little matter of Walter Matthau. Now if he had been the father it would have been amazing. As the gym coach, Matthau comes off as so perverse and odious it’s as if he’s slithered his way all the way back around to normal. Showing up at the Avery’s to see how the patient is doing, preparing health shakes for him in their kitchen, and maybe coming onto Barbara Rush, or maybe you saw STRANGERS WHEN WE MEET (1960) not too recently and are getting confused. Either way, the Walter Matthau persona carries weird vaguely Semitic self-hatred that seems out of place in homicidal-Imperialist middle America. But of course, he’d be allowed to drop the self-loathing act and be a great cranky old son of a bitch in a couple decades. In fact, come the early 1970s, Walter would have his groove in the arms of… Neil Simon! The age of squeaky clean freckled families and their dark-eyed dads would be gone and the age of big, happy Jewish families–shouting over the crowded table–would begin.  Did Nicholas Ray help make that happen? Ding Dong! Come out of your shtetls, my brothers. The man in the gray flannel suit at last is dead!

Posted by Erich Kuersten

8 Comments to “Bigger than Life: Nicholas Ray in the heart of the gray flannel darkness”

  1. saltobello says:

    I think your review is spot-on. I love the film for its intensity but also for its obscurity. It was so difficult to find for so many years, it took on mythic status, but I still find it to be an important film to see.

    I’ve always had mixed feelings about the casting of James Mason–even if it was his own call. You’re reference to Jack Nicholson in The Shining is a great way to make comparisons, too.

    I’ve been meaning to write about this on my own blog, and you address the film on different angles than I would, which makes perfect sense. Because, good or bad, Ray makes films that are FULL of conversation-prompting notions.

  2. J.D. says:

    “Only the most bravely compassionate and poetic of auteurs ever go there, and the only one that comes recently to mind is…”

    Let’s not forget TWIN PEAKS: FIRE WALK WITH ME which also features a monstrous father figure, an oppressed mother who either doesn’t want to know or is drugged by her husband and the poor child who is tormented and abused. After seeing BIGGER THAN LIFE I am really curious to know if Lynch is a fan of this film. These two films would make for a pretty interesting (and emotionally exhausting) double bill.

  3. saltobello says:

    Hi, J.D. I must admit I’ve yet to see FIRE WALK WITH ME, however, when I saw Bigger Than Life, I did think of Blue Velvet. I’ve always enjoyed films that begin with normal, idyllic suburbia and then tear the roof off and show the dark side lurking underneath. To that end, my first exposure to this idea was Hitchcock’s Shadow of a Doubt, and I’d say that, along with Life and Blue Velvet (for me) play as in interesting triple bill of films that shatter the notion of a passive, easy life. In all three, characters are faced with the idea that they have to use their own wits and resources to stop evil. And pretty in much in all three, the resolution is a loss of innocence. (I remember the first time I saw Bigger Than Life, when it ended I thought: Oh my God. How can they go back to normal after all this?)

    And now to put Fire Walk with Me at the top of my Netflix queue!

  4. J.D. says:

    saltobello:

    Yeah, BLUE VELVET definitely also feels like it was influenced by Ray’s film with Frank Booth as the malevolent, psychotic father figure, perhaps? It’s interesting that in Lynch’s film, Jeffrey’s father is largely out of the picture, rendered inactive with a stroke that traps in some Frankensteinian contraption.

    I hope you enjoy FWWM. I’m curious to hear what you think of it, esp. in relation to BIGGER THAN LIFE.

  5. Thanks Saltobello! I’ll have to check out your blog after I post this. I too was searching for Bigger than Life for awhile, then burned it off TCM and it took me like five tries to get all the way through it was just so painful (in a good way).

    And JD, very sharp observations about the similarities with Lynch and the figure of the monstrous father looming, impeling the son through the flaming hoop of initiation into adulthood, though Ray is much more grounded in a sense of realism and almost fanatical need to create some kind of loving father relationship (the kids plead for love even as the dad comes at them with a knife (or an apron)). Lynch’s dads split off into the castrated/ineffectual (like gary busey in Lost Highway, the laid up pop in Velvet, the crying hysterical ‘other personality’ of Leland Palmer)

    For me a telling moment is in Blue Velvet wherein Jeffrey recognizes the detective at Dern’s house as a friend of Frank’s, and Dern’s father–Detective Williams– recognizes that Jeffrey recognizes him, and when Jeffrey doesn’t react, just keeps it cool and normal, even lying to Laura Dern, Williams says “good boy, Jeffrey.” That’s to me the classic moment of initiation – instead of looking up to someone who ‘pretends to know’ (the way say Jeffrey used to look up to his dad – and now looks down at him in the hospital bed) you yourself assume the mantle of the one who ‘pretends to know’

    The equivalent in Ray’s film is of course horribly messed up, as the father figure is unimpeachable in that era – so it’s as if Frank, Jeffrey’s real dad, and Sheriff Williams were all rolled into one Jekyll/Hyde figure. He takes the “one who pretends to know” all the way back around the bend into the territory of the obscene.

  6. The influence of Ray on Lynch is undeniable. In the pilot episode of TWIN PEAKS, the romantic scene between Donna and James in the woods at night looks like something straight out of REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE, and the resemblance of the actors playing Donna and James to Natalie Wood and James Dean was surely no accident.

  7. Matthew Sorrento says:

    I appreciate your take on this one, Erich — fine stuff, as usual. I know I’m the dissenting opinion, but I also reviewed BTL (coming up on FilmThreat.com) and found it to be well-filmed but absurd. The school-scare film strain in the film, for me, is too much — with daddy’s going berserk played more for exploitative giggles than insight. I kept hearing the Something Weird theme music in my head, especially when Mason tries to turn himself into Abraham and his son, Isaac. (I don’t remember Ray ever hammering his viewers over the head like this.) I want to call the film “Cortisone Madness.”

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