Doing time
The Limey gets the Stamp of approval
by Peter Keough
For
the most part, screen icons of the '60s have fared pretty well with time.
Probably better than the present
generation -- will Julia Roberts or Gwyneth Paltrow hold the screen as well in
35 years as Julie Christie does now? The men, too, Clint Eastwood, Sean
Connery, Paul Newman, and, less famed but more iconic, Terence Stamp, have been
weathered by the years into incandescence. Stamp for one still shines with an
enigmatic male beauty, an object of desire and also a mirror of the one
desiring. As he has aged, his keen eyes sunken deeper, his brow silvered and
domed, the sensual mouth set with resignation and rigor, he has become less the
object and more the mirror.
Just start with his voice, as does Steven Soderbergh in The Limey:
silken but with the whiplash of a cockney accent, innocent but wily, it seduces
and threatens. "Tell me," Stamp's voice purrs over The Limey's opening
black screen, evoking the keen-eyed cherub from Billy Budd, the
polymorphous tempter from Teorema, even the prickly drag queen of
Priscilla, Queen of the Desert. "Tell me about Jennie." Somehow, Jennie
doesn't seem as important as the voice calling her name from the darkness.
Just so, The Limey's generic storyline is not as important as the
film's disruption of and insight into the conventions of story telling itself,
into the whole nature of time and the self that tells these tales. Like his
previous film, Out of Sight, Soderbergh undermines the expectations of a
generic mainstream movie primarily by playing with chronology. In the earlier
film, though, linearity is bent only enough to jolt a solid Elmore Leonard
adaptation into giddy epiphany. In The Limey, from the very beginning we
don't know whether Stamp's Wilson, an aging ex-con from London in LA on a
mission of revenge, is coming or going.
With the free flow of a fever dream, the film jumps from Wilson arriving or
departing from LAX, unpacking or packing in a motel room, paying a call on Ed
(Luis Guzman), the man who informed him of his daughter Jennie's violent death,
and setting out to find Valentine (Peter Fonda), the epicene '60s record
producer who was the last person to see her alive. Jump-cut flashbacks and
flashforwards lasting seconds are further addled by overlapping voiceovers,
repeated slow-motion sequences, and black-and-white images of Jennie as a child
walking on the beach; it's all centered on Wilson's tormented face, which is
frozen like an image on a Roman coin, staring out one car window or
another.
Despite the Cubist distortions, the elements of the story are soon
evident -- as in the '60s and '70s noirs Point Blank and Get
Carter, which Soderbergh happily acknowledges as influences, the plot
dynamic is revenge served cool. So is The Limey just formalistic
gimmickry, an attempt to disguise a trite story with jazzy style? And as such
isn't it just derivative of previous deconstructions of the genre, going back
not only to Tarantino's Pulp Fiction (1994) and Soderbergh's own The
Underneath (1994) but to Stanley Kubrick's The Killing (1956)?
If so, The Limey still offers its own pleasures, reconfigurations of
clichés that make them revelatory. Such as the scene in which Wilson
breaks into a shady warehouse looking for Valentine and gets beaten up, thrown
out, and taunted to return. Which he promptly does, and the consequences, as
with all the violence in this movie, take place in the distance, on the other
side of a wall, out of sight. Or the unbilled cameo of Bill Duke as a weary DEA
agent responding to Wilson's rhyming cockney slang by saying, "There's only one
thing I don't understand . . . and that's every motherfucking
word you said." Or Nicky Katt and Joe Dallesandro (another '60s icon of sorts,
less fortunate than Stamp) as two of the dippiest hitmen since Travolta and
Jackson.
Without Stamp, though, The Limey would be just a juicier neo noir with
a twist -- his presence makes Soderbergh's free-associative fragmentation seem
not so much like editing-room pyro-technics as the tormented workings of a mind
torn by loss, rage, desire, and the imponderables of time. Even when he's not
in the frame, when the film follows Valentine's flight up the coast and into
memories of the '60s, you can feel Wilson in the darkness, like the voice at
the very beginning of the movie. The Limey at its best aspires to what
film does better than any art: broaching the mystery of time, and timelessness.
-- Peter Keough