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Although
Personal Best (1982) is arguably the second
or third most well-known and influential lesbian film made
to date (behind Go
Fish and Desert
Hearts), it has been joked about for so long that
it has surpassed cult status, and become almost a cliche in
the lesbian community. To wit: it was referenced by Ellen
DeGeneres in the famed "Puppy
Episode" of Ellen.
It
was particularly important for lesbians searching for identity
in the early 80s who had little else to watch except slasher
films and lesbian vampire flicks. But now, over 20 years later,
the clothes are dated, the film looks dated, and everything
has just gone out of style--except good storytelling, which
this film has in spades.
That's
why I think—to paraphrase Kia from Go Fish—everyone
should get past their shallow fashion requirements and start
getting into Personal Best.
In
Personal Best, Chris Cahill (Mariel
Hemingway) is a talented athlete with the ability to go
all the way to the Olympics. She has untapped potential, a
fact that is recognized by Tory Skinner (Patrice Donnelly),
an older pentathlete who takes Chris under her wing and helps
her to explore that potential on the track. Pretty soon the
women start exploring the potential of other things too. Their
emotional and physical relationship is intense, steamy, and
most importantly, very mutual.
After
a good beginning and many beautiful and touching scenes, things
in their relationship take a turn for the worse when Chris
gets a maniacal new coach, Terry (Scott Glenn). Not only does
Terry succeed in supplanting Tory as Chris's mentor, but he
also drives a competitive wedge between the two women as they
compete for spots on the 1980 U.S. Olympics team.
When
one of the two women suffers a serious injury the suffocating
competition between them comes to a head and their relationship
disintegrates. The relationship doesn't die because they're
women. It doesn't die because of self-loathing or homophobia
or any other reason we might suspect. It dies because the
women stop looking at each other as friends and lovers and
let personal rivalries overtake them—feelings that are
only fueled by an ambitious and jealous coach.
The
characters of Chris and Tory, along with the cast
of supporting players, are portrayed differently than in most
sports movies of this kind. Instead of being self-sacrificing,
long-suffering athletic heroes pursuing a lifelong dream,
the athletes and coaches often come off as petty, jealous,
paranoid, and arrogant to the point of being insufferable.
It was an interesting twist on the sports movie concept. After
all, these girls have given away their youth in the mad pursuit
of something that might never come to fruition. But it would
be madness, when faced with the choice, to let just being
human get in the way of perfection.
Along
the way, despite the pettiness of competition, these two women
discover a lot about themselves and each other. Hemingway
is literally a revelation as Chris. She blossoms realistically
onscreen from immature girl to young woman and falls headfirst
into every adolescent pitfall you could ever imagine. Her
relationship with Tory is not just any relationship--for Chris
it is first love, her first experience with being so intimate
with another human being. Her fragility at times is heartbreaking
and contrasts effectively with the strength and independence
she is able to show by the film's end.
As
an exploration of lesbianism within sports, Personal
Best stands pretty much alone in its category. Despite
the fact that we all know that lesbians compete at the highest
levels in all kinds of sports, you can count on one hand the
number who have come out by choice in real life, rather than
being forced out of the closet (à la Billie Jean King).
Films about lesbian participation in sports are virtually
nonexistent, and for this reason alone Personal Best
seems to still demand respect and attention.
However,
this movie is so much more than a lesbian film. The thing
that always struck me about Personal Best was that
it works so much better as a sports film than as a lesbian
film—which is not necessarily a criticism.
We
rarely see lesbians in films that are not explicitly about
lesbianism or gay issues. In contrast, Personal Best is
a film about the sacrifices, rivalries, and nastiness that
make up the world of competitive sports. It features a relationship
between an older athlete and a younger one, and that mentor-protégé
relationship is far more important narratively than the fact
that the two characters are female.
At
the time, director/screenwriter Robert Towne was
one of the most celebrated talents in Hollywood. His primary
purpose seemed to be to tell a story about athletes whose
personal lives were decimated by their need to win; the lesbian
love story is not incidental to the plot, but it doesn't take
over the entire film. The fact that a celebrated male director
and writer made this film may have circumvented the homophobia
that would have crippled the film had it been made by an out
lesbian director (not that there were many of those in the
early 80s).
Lesbian
filmmakers to this day still struggle to create films with
characters who truly just happen to be gay, whose lesbianism
is not the focus and purpose of their existence. It is odd
that a film like this was made so early on and with such success
by someone who isn't a gay filmmaker. In retrospect, it resembles
to some degree the Wachowski Brothers' Bound (1996),
another film where the lesbianism in the plot was by no means
ignored, but the narrative was not a "gay" one.
But
despite these laudable aspects, Personal Best did
not entirely avoid invoking the clichés of lesbianism.
In 1982, Mariel Hemingway was at the peak of her career, which
was probably the impetus behind the inclusion of several nude
scenes that showcase her gorgeous body, few of which really
work to progress the narrative. The lesbian love scenes are
welcome, but other scenes including a pleasure cruise through
the women's locker room and shower seem a tad gratuitous,
obviously meant to titillate the male audience.
Despite
these shortcomings, Personal Best continues
to be relevant and compelling today, more than twenty years
later, and it does so without standing on a platform of "we're
here, we're queer, get used to it." It stands entirely
on its own merit and should be seen by all women who love
film because it's genuinely a great movie, not because it's
pretty good for a lesbian film. The abundance of sexy, skimpy,
80s running shorts is just a bonus.
Get
Personal Best on VHS
(not available on DVD yet)
or read more about the significance of the movie here.
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