**Warning:
some plot points revealed**
If
someone had told me even a few years ago that Nicole
Kidman, Meryl Streep, Allison Janney and Julianne Moore would
all play lesbian or bisexual women in a movie that
would generate rave critical reviews and be the frontrunner
for the Oscars...I'd have asked if them if they wanted an extra
pipe with that crack.
Yet
here we are in 2003 faced with that very scenario. The Hours--debuting
in limited release on December 17th and in theaters nationwide
on January 10th--is a movie based on Michael Cunningham's Pulitzer
Prize-winning novel of the same name, which follows a day in
the life of three women in different time periods: Virginia
Woolf (Kidman), in the middle of writing "Mrs. Dalloway"
in 1923 England; Laura (Moore), a suicidal housewife and mother
in 1951 Los Angeles whose repressed sexuality manifests itself
one day in impulsively kissing her female neighbor (played by
Toni Collette); and Clarissa (Streep), a New York literary editor
in 2001 who lives with her female partner (played by Allison
Janney) and her daughter (played by Claire Danes), but is secretly
in love with her ex-lover who is dying of AIDS (played by Ed
Harris).
The
Hours has already earned seven Golden Globe nominations,
including best motion picture, best director, best screenplay,
best actress (for Kidman and Streep), best supporting actor
(for Ed Harris), and best musical score, and is likely to garner
several Oscar nominations as well.
On
the surface, this film seems like a great leap forward
for lesbian and bisexual visibility on film: A-list actresses
playing complex characters grappling with issues of
(lesbian) sexuality. Almost all who have seen it so far have
praised The Hours as a moving, well-written, and well-acted
film. The Hollywood Reporter, for example, enthusiastically
recommends it because "the themes of repressed desires,
longing for happiness and the need to face one's demons ring
clearly in all three stories."
But
delving deeper into the story, I'm reminded less of "Mrs.
Dalloway" and more of the classic tale of the tragic lesbian
in "The Well of Loneliness."
The
film opens with Woolf's suicide and, although
it can only go up from there, each of the stories is,
as the Hollywood Reporter describes it, "haunted
with the specter of suicide." The characters
are reportedly very realistic and multi-faceted, but the thread
of despair and depression that connects each woman's story is
reminiscent of the days in which lesbians were commonly portrayed
as sick or mentally imbalanced. Julianne Moore has described
her character Laura as "almost underwater. She's not a
person who's even present in her life. Her deep unhappiness
is the state of her being." According to Meryl Streep,
her character Clarissa has more options and gets to be "more
emotional" than the other two women because of the time
period in which she lives, according to Streep, but she's still
a lesbian in love with a man--hardly a happy scenario even in
contrast to the other two women's more distressing situations.
Director
Stephen Daldry maintains that one of his motivations for making
the film was to highlight the everyday heroism of women, since
"often the heroics in women’s lives are underestimated,
or put into the background by the heroics in the lives of men.
Obviously, the struggles are enormous and profound; just as
important, if not more so.” While this statement is true
enough, by putting so much emphasis on the "struggles"
of women's lives and then associating this with issues of sexual
orientation, is The Hours breaking down stereotypes--or
reinforcing them?
It
is a hard question to answer, since the film does appear
to thoughtfully explore issues of sexuality and oppression and
to raise important questions about the cost of repressing one's
sexuality. The high-profile actresses attached to the film and
the sheer force of the Oscar momentum will likely attract audiences
to the movie who might otherwise skip such a film, which means
The Hours is likely to give these issues broader exposure
than a million well-reviewed-but-little-seen indie films.
So
if The Hours contributes to raising the awareness level
of the American public around these issues, even just a little,
isn't that a good thing?
Yes,
of course it is, but....in the context of so few mainstream
films with lesbian or bisexual characters, The Hours
may raise everyone's consciousness and still leave the average
viewer with the strong impression that homosexuality and bisexuality
lead to depression, suicide, and constant struggle. It's an
easy conclusion to draw if mainstream films are the only exposure
you have to the lives of lesbian and bisexual women--which sadly
still applies to many Americans.
Although
most of the professional film reviewers have overlooked this
connection in their rush to praise The Hours, it has
been mentioned in a few reviews like the one by Steve Sailor
of United Press International, who noted: