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The
cast is excellent across the board, but the film really
belongs to McDormand and Beckinsale. McDormand is perfectly cast
as a woman who is old enough to have a full-grown son, and sexy
and appealing enough to make Alex's (and Ian's) attraction to
her believable. She flows effortlessly between aging hippie, producer-under-pressure,
concerned mother, and passionate lover, and McDormand's Jane is
refreshingly unapologetic (a rarity for this kind of female character
in Hollywood).
Beckinsale
is also well-cast as the conflicted Alex; she's so convincing as
a woman torn between what she wants and what she thinks she should
want that you can't help sympathizing with her character even when
she's cheating on her boyfriend. Bale as the universal conflicted
son trying to make sense of his relationship with his mother and
his girlfriend is also impressive, as is McElhone's Sara, who manages
to aggressively pursue Sam without alienating the audience.
Most
reviews of the film have glossed over Alex and Jane's relationship,
dismissing their kisses as merely "experimentation" and
focusing on Alex's interest in Ian, but I want to offer a more radical
interpretation of the text: that Alex's journey in Laurel Canyon
is really about her attraction to Jane.
Jane's
bisexuality is treated very matter-of-factly in the film (so much
so that the only explicit reference to it is when Sam mentions one
of Jane's previous lovers, Veronica), and although it isn't stated
that Alex has never been with women before, we are led to believe
this is true. So it is interesting to note that both times Alex
and Jane kiss, Alex is the initiator, not Jane--in the pool, Jane
holds back until Alex comes over to kiss her, and in the hotel room,
when Ian draws Alex in for a kiss, Alex reaches out and draws Jane
into their liaison, running her hand along Jane's thigh and then
turning away from Ian altogether to kiss Jane.
The
chemistry between Alex and Jane (and Alex and Ian) builds slowly
and realistically, so that when Alex and Jane finally kiss, you're
emotionally rooting for them, even if intellectually you're recoiling
at the the thought that this woman is kissing her boyfriend's mother.
While
Alex and Ian discuss their attraction to one another a few times
in the film, Alex and Jane never do; indeed, Alex avoids any
acknowledgement of what is transpiring between her and Jane, as
if it's too deep and dangerous to voice. Having a relationship with
Ian is morally wrong, but still conventional in its own way; a relationship
with Sam's mother is so taboo it's beyond merely "unconventional,"
so the fact that Jane gets involved with her anyway indicates that
her desire was too powerful to resist.
Even
the poster for the movie emphasizes the relationship between Jane
and Alex over the others, featuring the two women prominently in
the front with only a smaller Ian standing between them--and Alex's
boyfriend just a small image at the bottom.
Watching
the movie through this lens, Ian begins to look like merely a go-between,
a conduit for Alex to get to Jane through semi-conventional means
without appearing that Jane is who she is really after. Although
in the end Alex tells Sam that she wants him, not "them"
(Ian and Jane), the fact that moments before she explained her liaison
with Jane with the passionate plea "I didn't think!" betrays
her true desire: when she's leading with her heart, not her head,
she wants Jane.
But
since she still ultimately follows her head, not her heart, Alex
reverts to damage control with Sam in the end, telling him "[the
encounter with Jane and Ian] didn't mean anything to me" and
"I don't feel anything for them, either of them." While
this experience may have opened her up, she ultimately retreated
back into the safety of the conventional life.
Because
the film is so effective at drawing us in and getting us
to care about Alex and Sam's journey, the abrupt ending is highly
unsatisfying: Sam and Jane resolve some of their issues, but the
fate of Alex and Sam's relationship is left hanging. Cholodenko
states in the DVD commentary that she deliberately left the film
open-ended as an homage to old movies, but that isn't much consolation
to viewers.
On
the other hand, the open ending does leave room for lots of different
interpretations, including the possibility that Alex eventually
admits her true desire isn't Sam after all, but Jane. It may not
be the conventional interpretation of the film, but as Laurel
Canyon demonstrates, convention doesn't have much sway over
the emotional response.
Get
Laurel Canyon on DVD
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