REVIEW 089
he rough and tumble of suburban Rotterdam’s amateur motocross
scene is at the centre of this very weird and very enjoyable early
missive from the Dutch maestro Paul Verhoeven. What begins as a bawdy
teen movie, with all manner of japes, larks and monkeyshines, slowly
evolves into a depressive and violent nightmare, encompassing gang
rape, religious rage, crippling depression and a very public suicide. The
director’s I-don’t-give-a-fuuuuuck attitude towards the conservative
predilections of the local audience caused mass scandal in his home
country, leading him to haul ass to Hollywood where such aggressive
provocation would be welcomed with open arms.
It sees three young studs attempting to hone their motocross
skills so they can tread the same mud-splattered path as their hero,
Gerrit Witkamp (Rutger Hauer). A girl named Fientje (Verhoven
regular Renée Soutendijk) enters the fray, and suddenly the carefree
aspirations that come with any healthy motocross fixation make way
for more base desires. Even though the screenplay and the characters
aren’t funny per se, Spetters is a comedy in many ways, as Verhoven
and his co-writer Gerard Soeteman take the privileged position of the
artist to wreak unspeakable violence and cruel bad luck on their hapless
pawns. One of the boys spends his time assaulting and stealing money
from gay cottagers in an underground shopping mall, and his eventual
comeuppance makes for one of the film’s most lurid and politically
incorrect sequences. Taken with his other Dutch language work, Spetters
stands as an obvious calling card for his eventual mainstream crossover.
It’s the least artistically accomplished and nuanced of those early films,
but is still a vital, jagged piece of the Verhoeven puzzle. DAVID JENKINS
s historians have pointed out time and again, the beginning of the
dissolution of the American studio system, which would ultimately
take more than 20 years, coincided almost to the year with the poisonous
surge of anti-Communism in the United States which, in its first decade
of predatory prosecution and harassment, claimed the careers of dozens
of Hollywood leftists. Chief among the star casualties was Wisconsin-born
and New England-educated Joseph Losey, who remains one of the most
worldly of all the great American directors who are still awaiting a level
of appreciation commensurate with their extraordinary achievements.
By the late ’60s, wandering the wilderness suited Losey just fine,
and anyway, it was no longer wilderness: his affinity for esoteric,
experimentalism-tinged drama had been tipped very early on (recall his
friendship and collaboration with Bertolt Brecht), and the world had finally
begun to catch up. Deep into an era of cinema that would empower all
kinds of haunting strangeness, Losey could at long last enter his own house
justified. On the steam of arthouse hits The Servant and Accident, Losey
teamed up with Elizabeth Taylor twice in the space of one year, both for the
Tennessee Williams adaptation, Boom!, and Secret Ceremony, taken from
a short story by Marco Denevi. Both are equally “far out”, all things being
equal, but it’s Secret Ceremony’s more placid waters that produces an even
more haunting, lingering spell – a mystery story whose crimes happened
years ago, or are imminent. The film’s small handful of vivid star etchings
coordinate perfectly: Taylor’s sexy-matronly heft ideally complements Mia
Farrow's porcelain doll, always close to shattering, while Robert Mitchum,
flexing an uncharacteristic knack for earthy insolence, stalks the fringes
in a vile raincoat and a torpid chin-curtain of a beard. JAIME CHRISTLEY
Spetters Secret Ceremony
Directed by
PAUL VERHOEVEN
Starring
RENEE SOUTENDIJK
RUTGER HAUER
JEROEN KRABBÉ
Released 2 DEC
Blu-ray
T A
Directed by
JOSEPH LOSEY
Starring
ELIZABETH TAYLOR
MIA FARROW
ROBERT MITCHUM
Released 25 NOV
Blu-ray
1980 1968
Credits
MGM