When William Shaksper Junior the Fifth [sic] arrives on a post-Chernobyl apocopyptic beach house filled with strangeness, mafia-esque characters, and Molly Ringwald, audience expectations inevitably run high.
Actually, I suppose that I've exaggerated the inevitably of the height of the expectations. My expectations were fairly meager. I wanted to see Woody Allen as the Fool and to see Peter Sellers clowning it up a bit. I had to wade though almost the entire film before Woody Allen showed up, and I quickly learned that William Shaksper Junior the Fifth was played by Peter Sellars, not Peter Sellers.
The film is an Avant-garde derivative of King Lear, and it's not without its merits. The general idea is that the world has fallen apart, but William Shaksper Junior the Fifth is gathering bits and pieces of King Lear in an attempt to restore it—and, presumably, though it, the art, literature, and humanity of the ages.
With that as a premise (and with Jean-Luc Godard as a director), the play is necessarily fragmented. It wasn't an enjoyable film to watch, but the idea behind it is intriguing. I got the feeling of being T. S. Eliot's Fisher King, constantly hearing the line "These fragments I have shored against my ruins" (The Waste Land 431) running through my head.
That isn't to say that I did not also think "Why then Ile fit you" (The Waste Land 432) from time to time, exasperated at the way the idea was playing itself out and plotting my revenge.
Still, Woody Allen! The Fool! Sort of!
So that you don't have to roll up your cuffs and make your way through the opening hour or so, here's the big payoff:
"the world has fallen apart, but William Shaksper Junior the Fifth is gathering bits and pieces of King Lear in an attempt to restore it—and, presumably, though it, the art, literature, and humanity of the ages."
ReplyDeleteWhen I was in college, late 1980's, I was working at the supermarket as a cashier. One of my fellow night shift cashiers was a lady who'd been an English teacher in her previous life. I asked her opinion on Shakespeare's work. She told me, and I've never forgotten this, "If the entirety of human civilization were to disappear tomorrow, and only one piece of literature could remain as evidence that we had ever existed, that piece of literature should be King Lear." I wasn't really prepared for that answer, and it's stayed with me some 25 years.
Now I'm left wondering whether she'd just seen this movie, which I see came out in 1987.