{"id":13042,"date":"2013-03-18T09:53:23","date_gmt":"2013-03-18T09:53:23","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=13042"},"modified":"2013-03-18T10:02:20","modified_gmt":"2013-03-18T10:02:20","slug":"the-shower-scene-in-silver-linings-playbook","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2013\/03\/18\/the-shower-scene-in-silver-linings-playbook\/","title":{"rendered":"The shower scene in Silver Linings Playbook"},"content":{"rendered":"
When Hitchcock’s\u00a0Psycho<\/strong> came out in 1960, its shower scene was instantly a
sensation. Three minutes and fifty cuts, it broke rules previously
sacrosanct: for starters, coming about forty minutes into the film, it
killed off Janet Leigh, the film’s protagonist – with whom the
audience had been invited to identify from those first opening shots of her
carefully nondescript underwear.\u00a0Not only this, its fifty cuts served
the purpose of (in the director’s own words) ‘transferring the
menace from the screen into the mind of the audience’. Viewers were no
longer the blonde; they were the psycho. An uncomfortable shift.<\/p>\n
<\/a>In
Silver Linings Playbook<\/strong>, the menace is all in in the mind
– it’s a film about mental illness. It is presumably for
this reason that director David O. Russell has chosen to reproduce that
shower scene in it – though, represented via a series of
individual flashbacks, he’s added some more visceral cuts into it,
as well as a middle-aged professor who’s having an affair with
this Norman Bates’s wife.<\/p>\n
The film follows Pat (Bradley Cooper), who is bipolar, and his quest
to get his marriage back together after returning home from a
psychiatric hospital. We learn that his most recent breakdown was
precipitated on discovering his wife Nikki in the aforementioned
shower with a colleague; he attacked the man, which brought him up
against assault charges and eventually landed him in the institution.
Back home at the beginning of the film, Pat wants to get Nikki, and
his marriage, back – despite his continuing mood swings, refusal
to take medication and restraining order.<\/p>\n
Then he meets Tiffany (Jennifer Lawrence), a young woman whose husband
has recently died in traumatic circumstances. She is similarly
Troubled (she’s been fired for sleeping with all her co-workers)
and they hit it off, in a vague way. She agrees to take a letter to
Nikki if Pat will partner her in a dance competition.<\/p>\n
The inevitable happens.<\/p>\n
<\/a>If you
listen to Hollywood, there\u00a0are dance competitions happening in
every small town, every three minutes, just waiting for someone to do
some self-actualisation through dance – as in dance movie
stalwarts such as
Strictly Ballroom<\/strong>,\u00a0Flashdance<\/strong>\u00a0or, its British equivalent, the Arts
Council-funded\u00a0Billy Elliot<\/strong>. This one brings plenty of opportunities
for personal development, which – though not so pronounced
as the ur-dance movies – is actually why Pat agrees to do
it: he wants to prove to Nikki that he has changed, and grown,
since the shower incident. Cinematic history tells him this is
the way to do it.<\/p>\n
But nonetheless, in
Silver Linings Playbook<\/strong>, development through
dance is not really the point: the dancing pops up towards
the second half of the film, and while the rehearsals do
force the characters to spend a lot of time doing semi-erotic stuff<\/a>\u00a0together,
it’s not the primary impetus behind their falling in
love.<\/p>\n
Indeed, if you accept that dance in golden-era Hollywood
is usually\u00a0implied sex1<\/a><\/sup>, often in the context of
romantic relationships between show-people who dance as
part of their job (here,\u00a0Fred Astaire tries to win Ann Miller
back as his g\/f by getting her to do the dance they
perform on stage<\/a>),\u00a0you could say
that\u00a0Silver Linings\u00a0<\/strong>is less about sex than
it is about Feelings.<\/p>\n
Feelings (that’s a capital F), are by contrast
the preserve of the classic romcom, which – a
true product of the Eighties
–\u00a0features\u00a0extended, over-analytical
examinations of the Self. It’s Hugh Grant and
Woody Allen being neurotic and too self-aware;
it’s realising you’re in love just in
time to run down an aeroplane. It’s the power
of the mind – its hopes, fears and wants
– to overcome practical obstacles. And
in\u00a0Silver Linings Playbook<\/strong>, as I say,
it’s all about the mind. It’s a romcom
for the post-Hugh Grant generation, if you
will.<\/p>\n
Now, personally, I didn’t find the
treatment of mental health as offensive as I
know some did – David O. Russell has
commented in interviews that he drew a lot from
the experience of having a son with bipolar
disorder, which does help. One thing that did
bug me, though, was its pairing of a bipolar man
with longstanding mental health issues with a
hypersexual woman recovering from a traumatic
bereavement. Pat’s problems are
longstanding, but Tiffany’s troubles
clearly have their origin in grief, and they
happen to manifest themselves in a pattern of
sexual behaviour that, as recounted, elicits
visible salivation from her male companion. We
might say, in fact, that in this film, there is
Serious Mental Illness, and there is Sexy Mental
Illness. That Pat’s initial crime puts him
in the cinematic shoes of Norman Bates, whose
murder is at root sexually motivated –
though it is repeated here as a grotesque
husband-on-lover attack – underscores
this, though admittedly at one remove.<\/p>\n
This is why the\u00a0Psycho<\/strong> crib, for me, was a key
moment – and partly because its
appearance in the film is so downright weird.
It parallels the dance competition trope as an
interjection of popular film history, but I
suppose it also draws together some of the
film’s key themes: notably, though
arguably ironically, psychosis
(Hitchcock’s film played a major part in
popularising the slang word\u00a0psycho<\/em>) and what you might very
crudely call Hollywood
‘monster-cam’.<\/p>\n
I suppose one reason for including the
scene (something I spent a long time
puzzling over) was that, by putting the
audience in the eye-view of a man
mid-breakdown unleashing his rage upon two
people who happen to be naked (and one of
them a woman) shows the terrible power of
the mental threats the film explores: we
see their vulnerability, and we are
invited to consider the gender issues the
attack brings to the surface. Within the
context of the plot, it makes sense of
Nikki’s need for a restraining order
and perhaps even makes an ironic comment
on the thigh-rubbing Hitchcock is widely
accepted to have been doing throughout his
own shower scene. It certainly makes you
think back to the portrayal of mental
illness in the deeply
exploitative\u00a0Psycho<\/strong>. In that
sense,\u00a0Silver Linings Playbook<\/strong>
actually comes out reasonably
well.<\/p>\n
So, should you go and see it?
I’d imagine if you were going
to, you’ll have done so by
now. But I think it’s worth
seeing – despite those dodgy
gender politics, it certainly makes
you think.<\/p>\n