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Review of The Image,
directed by Radley Metzger
By Julian Robinson
Posted with the author's permission, all rights reserved
Connoisseurs of whips-and-chains cinema,
rejoice -- Radley Metzger's sadomasochistic masterpiece The Image
is finally available on DVD! The transfer is magnificent, the action is
uncensored, and the intensity is unparalled. Also known as L'Image
and The Punishment of Anne, Metzger's elegantly severe adaptation
of Jean de Berg's 1956 SM literary classic is far truer to its subject
than is Just Jaeckin's soft-focus, dreamily romantic version of The
Story of O (also released in 1975). The Image is so extreme,
so explicit, and so erotic that it's a miracle it was ever produced.
The story (a plot it's not) is simple. At a swank Parisian party,
rake-about-town Jean meets his old friend Claire. Having always found
her impeccably aloof, Jean has never approached Claire romantically.
Claire introduces Jean to Anne, a beautiful young model, explaining
simply, "She belongs to me." Jean is invited along to witness,
and later, to participate in their progressively debauched rituals,
beginning with Anne's embarrassment, piercing with a rose thorn, and al
fresco urination on command in a public garden. The Image's title
derives from photographs of Anne in which she is depicted chained naked
in various uncomfortable positions, bearing the welts of a whip. The
dramatic tension derives from Anne's increasingly harsh treatment, the
unstable nature of triangles, and Claire's motivation: Why did she
invite Jean to join them in the first place?
Highly faithful to the slim novel (which, the excellent liner notes
point out, was written by a woman: Catherine Robbe-Grillet) to the
extent of full-screen chapter titles and first-person male narration,
the film is, much more importantly, faithful to the novel's spirit of
pervasive, guiltless perversity. Says Claire, "Nothing that I like
is allowed." And she gets away with it -- the morality police are
nowhere to be found.
Marilyn Roberts as Claire is formidable, all cold control and cruel
invention. Not a gesture is wasted. The mere act of putting on her
sunglasses becomes a dire warning. Even in a suede minidress and
thigh-high boots, she remains dignified and devastating, never a
caricature. With a touch of envy, she taunts Anne for her conditioned
response: "She loves it when we put her on her knees so we can whip
her, doesn't she? It gets her all excited; she's wet already."
Why does Claire objectify, humiliate, and torture Anne? Not because she
can, or because Anne lets her, but because Anne wants her to. The
Image explores the delight of the masochist, a subject far more
taboo, far less comprehensible than the joy of the sadist. Mary Mendum
as Anne (at the time, fresh from Hair on Broadway) is utterly
convincing, her wide-open eyes instantly conveying the excitement, fear,
and shame that simultaneously possess her. Sent to fetch the chains so
that she may be fastened for more severe punishment, shuddering with
delicious dread, Anne says to herself, "Forgive me, for I know what
I do."
There's some silliness: the Freudian tower shot and Jean's flashbacks to
Anne's urinating on the rose interspersed with shots of Parisian
fountains, not to mention Jean's demanding that Anne's whipping be
resumed while she's giving him head; he must have tremendous faith in
her jaw control.
As Jean, Carl Parker contributes little beyond his organ and his smirk,
but then Metzger's female characters are always far more interesting
than his men. Get The Image for the potent chemistry and sublime
acting of its female leads. As well as ultra-hot, their play is
ultra-wet, and with more than piss. Claire exults in constantly fondling
Anne until she's on the verge of losing it. The restaurant scene where
she stands between Jean and Claire, each of whom has a hand under her
dress, while Jean orders an excruciatingly detailed salad, provides some
much-needed comic relief. With Anne's masturbation on command, the
threesome in the lingerie store fitting room, and all the public
blow-jobs that Anne's ordered to provide Jean, there are plenty of
orgasms for everybody but Claire.
The electricity between Anne and Claire is extraordinary, building to a
shattering climax in an extended dungeon scene that rapidly goes over
the top and then just keeps going. The unflinching honesty of The
Image's SM scenes makes them far more difficult to watch than much
gorier conventional Hollywood brutality. There's no
isn't-this-awful-here's-some-more hypocrisy and no coy cutting away. Add
the classy production values and it becomes nearly impossible to believe
it's only a movie.
Restored from the original, uncut 35mm negative in Metzger's personal
archive, the picture quality is superb, with sharpness, detail, and
color saturation that few DVDs can match. The cinematography of Paris
exteriors, the rose garden, and Mary Mendum's exquisite face and flesh
is quite lovely and unmarred by the obsession with miniature, distorted
reflections that compromised Metzger's Camille 2000. This uncut version
features a toe-sucking scene, our hero's stiff cock, and lots of
fellatio that didn't make it into the original theatrical release. (It's
not quite hardcore -- there are no come shots and penetration is shown
only from the side.)
Metzger's upscale oeuvre includes his essential lesbian schoolgirl
adaptation Therese and Isabelle and, directing as Henry Paris,
some of the wittiest, best-produced porno films of all time, among them The
Opening of Misty Beethoven and The Private Afternoons of Pamela
Mann.
He has my eternal gratitude for making The Image. There's
never been a film in its genre remotely like it, before or since. In an
orgy of understatement, Metzger says, "Theatrically, it was a
little ahead of its time." It's still ahead of the times. It always
will be.
~~~
Copyright 2005
This review is reprinted here with the explicit permission of the
author. If you would like to share it with others, please link directly
to this page or contact the author for permission. It is a violation of
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20% of the total text. Please respect the integrity of this work.
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