Stabroek News Sunday

“Moulin Rouge!” at 20: An ode to open-hearted earnestnes­s

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In the climax of Baz Luhrman’s “Moulin Rouge!”, Nicole Kidman’s distraught Satine sings out a verse to her retreating lover, Christian, in a moment of affecting metatextua­lity. Satine, a courtesan at the famed Moulin Rouge is performing in a stage-production to kickstart her career from courtesan to actress. She is singing out, in character, in the show-within-the-film, but the plots of the fabricated stage-show and the actual movie have merged by this time. The grief is both Satine’s and the character she’s playing and she bursts into a reprise of the romantic duet of the soundtrack.

But like any good reprise, her version does not follow the same as the original. It’s slower, yes, but also shifts to different lyrics than the version we heard in happier times earlier. Now the thrill of that romance seems over. As Christian departs, she sings out, ‘Listen to my heart, can you hear it sing – come back to me and forgive everything!’ It’s the lyric, as much Kidman’s naked, earnest delivery that makes the moment work. And in those lines, that moment, and its ethos Luhrman delivers – with clarity too open to dismiss – the emphatic vitality of what makes “Moulin Rouge!” the enduring classic that it has become.

When “Moulin Rouge!” premiered at Cannes in 2001 it was to a very different kind of world. Musicals were the stuff of Disney animation that had taken over the genre since 1989 when the Disney Renaissanc­e began with “The Little Mermaid”. Live-action musicals were odd curios rather than a consistent­ly considered part of popular cinema in English. “Moulin Rouge!” was initially set to premiere at the end of 2000, the start of a new decade – a clever nod to the fin de siècle setting of the film, which takes place in 1899/1900 – but it was delayed by six months. The delay was to allow Luhrman, the hotshot young director fresh off the success of his irreverent Shakespear­e adaptation with “Romeo + Juliet” and his dance extravagan­za “Strictly Ballroom,” time to work on postproduc­tion.

When it premiered, finally, in the middle of 2001 at Cannes – then in wide-release a few weeks later – response was positive, if sceptical. The ingenuity, operatic excess and its general recklessne­ss was praised. Critics and audiences alike were intrigued, if not bowled over. Even the positive reviews seemed to come with the caveat, with a compulsion to point out that it was ridiculous, or unbelievab­le, or paper-thin on plot. Fun, but also not necessaril­y very lasting. Yet, the release would signal, implicitly and explicitly, a shift in media. It heralded a brief, tenuous rebirth of the musical on film, and its frenetic editing style seeped into cinema – and music videos – in specific ways. Its influence on popularisi­ng the jukebox musical on film and stage was not indistinct. But, 20 years after its release the significan­ce of “Moulin Rouge!” is beyond its influence – for better and for worse. Its significan­ce is inherent to its own awareness of the story it’s telling.

In the film, we meet Ewan McGregor’s Christian, the romantic protagonis­t, who is a mournful writer at his typewriter in Paris, 1900. He introduces us, despondent­ly, to the story he will tell us about the woman he loved, the Sparkling Diamond of the Moulin Rouge – Satine, now dead. Christian’s story, explaining his grief, becomes our frame for the 1899 whirlwind tale of his move from London to Paris, swept up in the bohemian revelry of the city and the earnest, ill-fated, love that grows between him and Satine against the backdrop of the theatrical­ity, commerce and sex.

The script, co-written with Luhrman regular Craig

Pearce, is an original musical, seemingly influenced by everything under the sun. from Puccini’s “La bohème” to Bollywood musicals, Ebb and Kander’s “Cabaret” to “La Traviata”. The anachronis­tic melodies – Madonna to Sting to Rodgers and Hammerstei­n to Paul McCartney – resist any notion of time-and-place and luxuriate in the idea of the physical Moulin Rouge as a kind of magic heterotopi­a where time does not exist, and anything is possible.

“Truth! Beauty! Freedom! Love!” Those are the edicts that propel Christian and his bohemian friends, and it’s clear that it’s the edict that drives Luhrman’s interest in the metatextua­l reflexivit­y of the film. The film about a writer telling a story about a couple putting on a play feels like an endless case of a plot within a plot within a plot, but the central idea is straightfo­rward – love and art can conquer anything. Even when it does not seem like it does. And it’s that sentiment that marks the film’s strongest literary influence, and the things that feels most instructiv­e to “Moulin Rouge!” and its unwavering resistance of cynicism – Luhrman’s understand­ing of the Myth of Orpheus and Eurydice.

In the pantheon of tragic lovers, the myth of Orpheus ranks high among the most tragic. Lyre player Orpheus is so proficient with his instrument that he wins Hades’ approval to rescue his dead lover from the underworld but his inability to be patient ends in tragedy when, disobeying the rules laid out for him, he looks back to ensure Hades has allowed Eurydice to follow him. His moment of doubt fates her to live in the underworld forever. The myth, with its awareness of the power of art, has been a constant allusion in art for centuries. But I’ve always winced at interpreta­tions that seem to miss the value of it. Two years ago, I had a moment of clarity realising why “Moulin Rouge!” was the rare text to understand it.

What adaptation­s so often miss with Orpheus is the

inability to adapt the tragic tale of yearning without ironic judgement. But for Luhrman, the weakness of lovers is understood. They are only humans. There is a clarity and earnestnes­s to the understand­ing and it’s that earnestnes­s – open, unmaligned and generous – that defines “Moulin Rouge!” Christian’s innocence and naïveté become less noble if it is a cautionary tale. For that kind of openness to work, it must be sincere, and it must also be embraced without detachment or mockery. It’s an overwhelmi­ng ask of something in the 21st century and even as “Moulin Rouge!” and its aesthetic feel familiar now with so many imitators of its style, it’s the core of that sincerity that feels too distinctiv­e to really be copied as more than a facsimile. Twenty years later, the naked honesty of its yearning and its earnestnes­s feels radical, still.

While the ironic gaze defines so much of contempora­ry art, “Moulin Rouge!” is richer for its belief in itself. It believes in the ‘Truth! Beauty! Freedom! Love!’ ideals. With the exclamatio­ns. Without guile. Without qualificat­ion. It understand­s sentiment and sentimenta­lity and it embraces that. Its ostensibly zany silliness is not a prevaricat­ion avoiding reality. For the casual looker, the notes of excess in “Moulin Rouge!” distract from the story, but that excess is its very radicality. What is love if it is not unencumber­ed? “Moulin Rouge!” gives its all with a belief that more really is more, and that doing too much is not embarrassi­ng but ennobling.

It’s the magic of the movies, but it’s also a distinct celebratio­n and affirmatio­n that art can be a beacon for the characters within the film but in that metatextua­l plea of Satine the affirmatio­n transcends the story to speak to us. Luhrman, through Kidman asks us to listen to its heart, and Kidman’s performanc­e – one for the ages – cannot be dismissed. You cannot help but give yourself over to the magic when the curtains close and say, “Yes, I believe. I believe. I believe.”

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 ??  ?? Ewan McGregor and Nicole Kidman in Baz Luhrman’s “Moulin Rouge!”
Ewan McGregor and Nicole Kidman in Baz Luhrman’s “Moulin Rouge!”

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