Ripeness is all
The Marquis de Sade has his day in Quills
by Scott Heller
QUILLS. Directed by Philip Kaufman. Written by Doug Wright. Starring Geoffrey Rush,
Kate Winslet, Joaquin Phoenix, Michael Caine, Amelia Warner. A Fox Searchlight
Pictures Release. At the Flagship and Showcase cinemas.
Banned or bleeped or stickered, the shock artists of
today have it easy compared to the Marquis de Sade, whose novels and
essays scandalized 18th-century France. For crimes real and imagined, he spent
a third of his life behind bars, dying in prison in 1814. Yet his influence
lives on, stronger than ever. Check the nearest bookstore if you have any
doubt: a pair of recent biographies chronicle his debauchery, a story whose
outlines have become so familiar that one book can cheekily promise to put the
reader At Home with the Marquis de Sade.
Sade matters today less as an artist than as an icon of artistic freedom. In
these moralistic times, the provocateur who tore through the boundaries of the
permissible makes a perverse poster boy. His famous novels -- Justine,
120 Days of Sodom -- aren't really that famous any more. Undergraduates
still get fascinated by Bataille; Pasolini has his
movie-mad advocates. But who do you know who's read the Marquis de Sade
lately?
The culture wars were raging when Doug Wright's terrific play Quills
opened Off Broadway a few years back. Training one eye on contemporary debates
over artistic censorship, Wright imagined Sade's last days as a jet-black Grand
Guignol comedy broadly acted and dotted with shock effects. Locked away in an
asylum, the aging degenerate got all the good lines, his wit a lethal weapon
against the narrow forces that conspired to silence him.
Richly appointed and ripely cast, Philip Kaufman's screen adaptation remains
audacious, if a little less timely. Opening up his chamber drama, Wright
doesn't stint on the juicy banter and malevolent monologues, making
Quills a hissing cousin to Dangerous Liaisons. Yet Kaufman never
finds the precise visual style that gave Stephen Frears's decadent round robin
its magnificent sheen. The new film opens brilliantly, with a bit of
directorial sleight-of-hand that conflates pleasure and terror in the shadow of
the guillotine. Kaufman rarely delivers on this promise, choosing too often to
underline the obvious, a risky move with material so big and theatrical.
Powdered and wigged like an decrepit fop, Geoffrey Rush plays the marquis with
lip-smacking relish. Even under lock and key, he lives the good life: his cell
is appointed with a luscious featherbed, an ornate writing desk, and enough
fancy quills to produce blasphemous accounts of mutilated wives and deflowered
nuns. Although banned from publishing his incendiary prose, he smuggles out his
latest provocations in the arms of admiring laundress Madeleine (Kate Winslet),
who eats up every naughty word. He'd like to nibble back, but she keeps him at
arm's length. Their clandestine meetings crackle like a French Provincial
Silence of the Lambs: Lecter and Clarice in corsets and lace.
Of course, the truly evil figure in Quills isn't the writer at all. It's
the cruel Dr. Royer-Collard (Michael Caine), who's been dispatched by Napoleon
to stop Sade from writing again. Arriving with gruesome torture devices that
give tough love a bad name, Royer-Collard quickly clashes with Abbé
Coulmier (Joaquin Phoenix), the progressive-minded cleric who's the
asylum's director. Until the doctor appears, the inmates pretty much do run
this asylum, coming and going at will and staging crazed costume dramas to
entertain the aristocracy. (These Marat/Sade moments, implied but not
staged in the play, are something of a drag.)
In cracking down on the marquis, Royer-Collard takes away his tools but not his
imagination. Without quills or paper, Sade scrawls furiously on his waistcoat
and later, in blood, on his own naked body. Try as he might to squelch the
freethinker, Royer-Collard is doomed to fail. Language is a virus, as William
Burroughs put it centuries later, and Sade's titillating words will find their
way to willing readers, even the doctor's young wife, who hides the pages of
Justine inside a more ladylike book of poetry.
Quills would be stacking the deck if it merely staged a contest between
the pleasure-loving artist and the suffocating scientist. In The Unbearable
Lightness of Being and Henry and June, Kaufman placed himself firmly
on the side of free speech and free love. Yet Wright's play makes the bold case
that true artistic freedom is dangerous and sometimes must be welcomed at
painful personal cost. Kaufman faithfully follows suit in the film's ghoulish
final reels. The tormented abbé, wrestling between the call of the
spirit and Madeleine's nearby flesh, becomes the doctor's reluctant ally.
Meanwhile, Sade's own debauched writings get the best of him. Whispered from
cell to cell, his final story brings to a boil the simmering brutality in his
fellow inmates, and the innocent Madeleine pays the price.
The real Marquis de Sade requested an anonymous burial when he died, hoping
that traces of his tomb and his memory would disappear with him. In neither
case did he get his wish. He was buried in the cemetery of the asylum pictured
in Quills. And now he's the star of a showy Hollywood movie. Somewhere
he's laughing a bitter laugh. After all, Quills is rated R. No one under
17 can see it -- unless a parent or guardian comes along.