Page
1 / 2 - Home
In
casting Petra as a woman of color, Rozema
chose to both challenge and reinforce racial stereotypes. While
it is refreshing to see a woman of color characterized as a confident,
“out,” feminine, and seemingly feminist lesbian (take
note of the performance piece with the iron), Petra also plays
the dual role of the circus “freak” in the eyes of
Camille. Camille characterizes Petra by her “racy”
clothes and unabashed sexuality.
The
fact that the character of Petra is played by a woman of color
begs the question of whether her race is one more thing the viewer
is supposed to see as “exotic” about her.
The
sad comparison that comes to mind is Sara Baartman, the African
woman who was kept naked and caged as a circus act in Europe during
the early 1800’s, condemned to display what the white culture
of that time believed to be the inherent sexual lasciviousness
of all black women. With such a loaded historical reference, the
casting of Petra as a woman of color in this particular role seems
at the very least to be ill conceived.
Strangely,
the racial dynamic is alluded to but never explicitly discussed
by the main characters. When caught by the Reverend in what seems
to Camille like a compromising position with Petra, Camille lies
to him and says that Petra is a “street kid” who is
“highly disturbed.” There is nothing about Petra that
would suggest she could be mistaken as either a kid or from the
street, except for the fact that she is not white. When Petra
overhears the offensive comment, she is disgusted and is next
shown back at the circus highly upset; Camille comes to Petra
that same night, and with absolutely no discussion at all about
the offensive comment, they have sex for the first time.
Given
all the loaded racial issues between them, the idea that these
two would get together as a couple seems unlikely and almost dangerously
self-hating on the part of Petra.
Despite
my problems with the racial politics,
When Night is Falling has a distinctly visual beauty
that develops the love story into one that is heartwarming and
endearing. There are several scenes that make tremendous use of
the circus setting. From elegant trapeze artists to humorous anecdotal
scenes of circus life on a shoestring budget, you can see why
Camille is tempted to join Petra and run away with the circus.
The warmth and humanity of Petra’s world is starkly contrasted
with the cold, austere stone facades and stony faced people at
Camille’s Christian college.
Like
the story Camille tells Petra about Cupid running away with his
lover because “gods and mortals were forbidden to be together,”
you want Petra and Camille to overcome all obstacles for the sake
of true passion and blossoming love.
With
gorgeous cinematography, elegant and symbolic references to mythology
and a deliciously satisfying sex scene between two feminine women
with amazing chemistry, this movie is certainly a must see. One
can only hope now that Rozema has tried her hand at an even bigger
budget film, Mansfield Park, she won’t stop making
films that successfully marry attention to cinematography and
explicitly gay content.
Get
When Night is Falling on DVD
Page
1 / 2 - Home