+ Interview with Roman Polanski
director of The Ninth Gate
+ another review of The Ninth Gate by Todd R. Ramlow
Made in Heaven
Roman Polanski and Johnny Depp. The match seems made in heaven, these two notoriously eccentric, fascinating, and difficult geniuses, plying their crafts, inspiring brilliance in one another. With The Ninth Gate, Polanski directs his first feature since 1995's dark and difficult Death and the Maiden
and Depp stars in a role well-suited to his particular talents,
that is, he plays an awkward, slightly strange and anti-heroic
protagonist with a killer smile on the rare occasion that he uses
it. And the story includes other hopeful elements: twisty-turny
characters and sumptuous old world locations (France, Spain,
Portugal). If nothing else, we might hope for a film that is
perverse, elegant, or imaginative. Sadly, The Ninth Gate is
only a little perverse, and surprisingly ungainly and obvious.
It begins well enough. Based on Arturo Perez-Reverte's novel, El Club Dumas, it concerns Dean Corso (Depp), a cynical young man
who makes his living tracking down rare books for wealthy
collectors. At the start of the film, he's commissioned by the
ignominiously named Boris Balkan (Frank Langella) to find
alternative versions of his own precious discovery The Nine Gates of the Kingdom of the Shadows, a manual of satanic
invocation published in 1666, featuring engravings reportedly
made by Lucifer himself. So far, so not-bad. And the moment
when Corso and Balkan make their deal is actually rife with
possibility: they stand amid Balkan's stacks of super-rare books,
on a top floor of some towering NY building, huge windows
revealing the city stretching for miles, as they fidget and gawk
over Balkan's copy of the exalted tome. So much drama. Corso
flips the pages, listens carefully and opines, "Sounds kosher.''
Depp is, of course, the perfect man for the job, even if the
mercenary Corso ends up being in over his head. Depp's singular
mix of edginess and goofballness (which he has used so adeptly in
his films with Tim Burton), lends The Ninth Gate a lightness of
touch that it desperately needs. His quizzical expressions denote
the comedy in scenes where it might not be obvious, as when he
discovers a corpse, tongue lolling horrifically, and he only
looks puzzled rather than alarmed; or perhaps again when he's
about to be consumed by flames while trapped in a hole in the
floor, and his own eyes go wide and roll as if to say, "Here we
go again.''
Throughout the film, Corso is rather caught out by circumstances,
even though he imagines he's in control (in this regard, he's
reminiscent of one Jake Gittes). His insolence has consequences,
mostly for everyone else. His first friend to suffer is Bernie
(James Russo), a slightly lower rent book dealer than Corso.
It's clear as soon as he slimes up against Corso that the
Bernie's deadmeat, but Corso's lack of distress at the murder
scene (arranged to resemble one of those engravings) tells you
lots about him: he frowns a bit, recovers the stash he left with
his erstwhile friend, and within minutes, he's on a jet to Spain,
phoning Balkan to complain about the mess. As it turns out,
Balkan spends much of the movie off screen, directing Corso by
phone, so that Langella's supersmooth performance is mostly long
distance. When he does come back into view, it's only briefly,
to chastise a congregation of very conventional be-caped devil
worshipers for their silliness (a group whose members look sadly
and unimaginatively like the folks who teased Tom Cruise in Eyes Wide Shut) and then to writhe and moan about his own special
relationship with the Horned One.
This means that Depp must carry the film's plodding action, as he
meets a series of idiosyncratic bibliophiles, each with his or
her own continental-roguish accent (including a pair of elderly
Spanish twins, played by Jose Lopez Rodero). Indeed, Corso plods
a bit himself. For all his upscale-urban superiority, he takes
forever to figure anything out. With each copy of the book he
finds, he carefully makes a chart of how the engravings do or
don't match up against Balkan's copy you've figured out the
puzzle long before he does. And when he meets the film's
designated femme fatale, Liana Tefler (Lena Olin), you're way
ahead of him. She actually has to come to his dark-wooded
apartment, seduce him, and then assault him with her blood red
fingernails before he gets the idea that she's untrustworthy.
He's also slow when it comes to the unnamed Girl who comes to his
rescue on several occasions. This mysterious Girl (Emmanuelle
Seigner, Mrs. Polanski) has long wildchildish hair, rides a black
motorcycle, and can kickbox in slow motion. Not to mention the
facts that her catlike eyes glow green when she's aroused and her
likeness appears in one of the engravings, riding a dragon, no
less. Because you see this picture a few times, it's really hard
to miss that she looks like this oldschool demon-chick, but
somehow the resemblance eludes Corso. Or maybe it doesn't. Maybe
he's looking for trouble the way that most of those hard-boiled,
moralistic guys can never admit they are, intuiting the Girl is
his best lead and taking a certain masochistic pleasure in her
efforts to screw him in various ways. She hangs around in
shadows, so that Corso can spot her on his cross-European train
and in his Portuguese hotel lobby, or guns her big bike along a
dark back road just in time to run off a loiterer with sinister
designs on our hero.
Our hero is the film's most beguiling aspect, in that he is so
apparently
apathetic, even lethargic, for so much of the film. While he repeatedly
demonstrates a quick intellect, sense of opportunism, and general
curiosity concerning things demonic, Corso's hardly in avid pursuit of
anything. His entire adventure appears almost accidental, something
that
happens to him instead of something in which he has a vested interest.
Even when he does, as he must, participate in an eerie echo of the
climactic fucking-the-devil scene of Rosemary's Baby, it's so cheesy
as
to seem mundane. As our tour guide through or rather, toward
hell,
Corso seems appropriately confounded, even a little bored. This story
is
so done.