Sunday 10 December 2017

Sleuth, Part 2


An aspect that has pointed out by many reviews regarding Mankiewicz’s work was the emphasis of ‘life as performance’. Indeed, in Mankiewicz’s most famous film, ‘All About Eve’, the plot was about the female protagonist trying to intrude and impersonate a big star’s life and her belongings, when she acted as an assistant to the big star. It seemed to strike a parallel to the scenario in ‘Sleuth’. Andrew and Milo belonged to 2 different worlds, and Milo, working hard all his life, wanted to improve his social status, and that eventually led to a conflict when he attempted to steal Andrew’s wife. In Eve’s case, she was using all sort of craftiness to steal the possessions and lifestyle from the big star, and she was no more than a performer acting as someone else’s life. The irony in the story was that even if Eve has succeeded to become a big star herself, another woman came to be her assistant, and was ready to repeat exactly the same thing again on Eve. Just like in ‘Sleuth’, the destructive cycle would not stop if no one was willing to step up and stop it once and for all.

In the case of Sleuth, both Andrew and Milo have been satirized for their pretentiousness, because other than their theatrical and playful behaviors throughout the films, they were committed to show others that they were high-cultured and civilized. Andrew’s artful attitude might seem to make him look well bred and blue-blooded, as his infidelity and contempt towards his wife meant that he did not feel any real love or concern, and he viewed Milo’s stealing of his wife as if Milo was taking away his possessions, like any of his dolls around the house. He was a man of the interior – because he was committed to stay in this comfort zone, and assumed a higher status than any common people he looked down on.


 In Milo’s case, his behaviors were portrayed in a more simplistic manner, and that seemed to fit in the stereotype his characters were illustrating. A comical part was that Milo’s parents, who were Italian immigrants,  changed their surname from Tindolini (an Italian surname) to Tindle because they wanted to make that sound more British and fit better to the community   - and Andrew immediately retorted, ‘you cannot become English’. Then, for his salon, Milo changed the name to ‘Tindolini’ again, because as Andrew observed, ‘English too wholesome for the ladies.’ One can see things are just so nominal, and there are no beliefs people can hold up to all the times. Beliefs are changed accordingly to fit into the purpose that will lead to the best outcome for the individual, people merely perform in the appropriate way to lead to the most reward for themselves. I suppose why Mankiewicz would be interested in this project is not only it had a great potential for staging an interior mise-en-scene, the message also fitted his visions expressed in many of his other films.


One can see that both characters were concerned about surface and appearance, yet the morality and motivations they have could not stand up to the status they tried to convince others they were. Much like in Eve’s case, they were just performing roles they desired in their cinematic existences.


Mankiewicz and Shaffer were very fair about the two characters. They did not stage a ‘good-versus-evil’ situation in ‘Sleuth’. The plot was approached in a rather objective way. Yet, I feel that the actions and quotes from Andrew reflected more about the sort of personality he was, and for Milo, as I have said before, he was portrayed in a more simplistic manner. I believe the reason was because the film was trying to address the cultural concerns of its era - the 1970s, therefore Milo, who was the underdog in the story, was portrayed in a more sympathetic manner and the posh Andrew was portrayed as more snobbish and old-fashioned. Let’s look a bit closer to the two characters. 

I feel that Andrew should be seen as a tragic (it would not be too ridiculous to call him a Shakespearean character, and Lord Olivier was of course a fantastic Shakespearean actor himself) rather than an evil character. Because, at least, his only intention was to humiliate Milo rather than causing any harm worse than that, if his perceived plans worked as the way he wanted. Yet, his character flaws were very much the reasons why he would arrive at such a tragic end.


But if there was a reason that led to both characters’ destruction, it was pride. I guess what Mankiewicz was trying to drive at was to say that whatever decisions one may feel good for himself/herself, it will likely have undesirable consequences for others – a double-win scenario is often not possible, because our nature dictates us to get everything for ourselves. Milo and Andrew, no matter how they pretended to be civilized and reasonable towards each other, had very fundamental differences and contradictions that would guarantee both of them to lock in this mode of mortal combat. While on the surface it was like a class struggle between two men from very different backgrounds, they both desired to win and outwit the others because of their own pride. Andrew, on the one hand, wanted to show Milo he was a man of a higher step on the social ladder and would not allow a ‘jump-up pantry boy’ like Milo to steal his trophy wife from himself. Milo, who came from a humble background, has strived hard himself to improve his social status and he felt that he deserved everything he got nowadays. He just wanted respect and acknowledgment from someone like Andrew, and he wanted to defeat Andrew, a writer of best-seller mystery novels, by beating him intellectually. Both men had loads of hubris to fuel their drives to compete with each other in the mind game, and they just did not know when to stop.

Both men were giving up anything they could in order to win the game of death. When Andrew was tricked by Milo’s Inspector Doppler, followed by Milo’s fabricated game on Tea’s murder, everything was even and Andrew had every good reason to stop the process, if he was an open-minded person. Both men have already outwitted each other once, and have proven their intellectual power to the other. They certainly had the required wisdom to settle everything towards a more peaceful and happy ending. But, that did not happen. Andrew was indeed ashamed that he has been so thoroughly outwitted by such a young underdog that he was desperate for revenge and wanted to defeat Milo once and for all. For the whole film, the two men were just playing with deceptions and fabrications – they were merely performers for rounds and rounds of theater they have been writing for themselves. When Andrew loaded real bullets into his revolver, that was the end of the game. It was pride, just like the other characters in Mankiewicz’s cinema, which has driven Andrew to cast a wrong move in the chess game of his life.

Milo won the game by the most chilling manner – through his own death. When Milo was dying and laughing at Andrew’s impulsiveness, Andrew could not help but starred blankly at the all the mechanical dolls that have been activated by Milo to attract the police’s attention. Life starts and prospers with performance, and ends with artifice. Then, it is time for the Fade Out.

-End-

(2/2)

Next time:

by Ed Law
10/12/2017

Film Analysis