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Bibi Andersson and Paul Newman |
Robert Altman's Quintet has a rather dire reputation. Certainly upon its release in 1979 its critical defenders were few. Variety summed up the prevailing opinion of the day by describing the film as "an impenetrable exercise in self-indulgence." I do not neccesarily disagree with these words, but, then as now, I prefer auteurist self-indulgence to soulless corporate projects. I think it is Altman's best and most personal film during his long fallow period between 3 Women and Vincent & Theo. It is a hard film to follow or penetrate, but I think it fully expresses the depths of Altman's misanthropy.
The film is set in a post-apocalyptic dystopian world in which humanity struggles to survive amidst a new ice age. Whether this is the result of a nuclear war is unremarked upon. Indeed, obfuscation is the hallmark of the film. Nearly every shot in the film, with one significant exception, is cloudy around the edges (see above) as if cinematographer Jean Boffety (Thieves Like Us, The Lacemaker) used gauze or Vaseline on his lens. This mirrors the plight of the protagonist, Essex (Paul Newman), who wanders around in the film as if in a fog. We first meet him and his pregnant girlfriend Vivia, (life, baby) played by a luminous Brigitte Fossey, as they make their way to a city to stay with Essex's brother, Francha. They are warmly, if guardedly met and Vivia's pregnancy is greeted with great joy and surprise, as infertility seems to be the post-apocalyptic norm. However, this respite is brief as Vivia and Francha are murdered in a seemingly pointless bombing. To prevent Vivia's corpse from being eaten by dogs, Essex carries her body to the river in the film's most affecting scene.
Essex is bent on revenge, but first must figure out why the killings occurred. The actual murderer, Redstone, is himself dispatched by the mysterious St. Christopher (Vittorio Gassman), a Savonarola type preacher. Essex assumes Redstone's identity, a further obfuscation, and becomes involved in the local pastime, a dice game that resembles the I Ching called Quintet. The game is merely a pretext for a test of survival among its participants. This is a dog eat dog world in which no one can be trusted: not the proprietress of the hotel where Essex stays (Altman regular Nina van Pallandt), not the amoral judge of the contest (Fernando Rey, droll as ever), or the comely Ambrosia (Bibi Andersson). The array of different accents on hand was criticized at the time, but I think it works in the film's favor. The world of Quintet is truly a post-Babel world in which people are at cross purposes and all attempts at mutual understanding have been abandoned.
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A monochromatic world |
One aspect of the film that has aged well and seems to have anticipated the internet is the town's information center that Essex consults to hunt down people. The info center is really a series of silk-screened glass panels that Altman delights in overlaying over each other. The message is that though this information center provides knowledge, it also functions as a hall of mirrors that people can get lost in. A moral that applies to both the internet and Quintet itself. Quintet is a defiantly odd, pipe-dream of a movie whose ultimate obfuscation may be that Altman lacked the final cut. It ain't the masterpiece the similarly cloudy McCabe and Mrs. Miller is, but Quintet proves that even the failures of cinematic masters may ultimately prove more interesting the successes of lesser filmmakers.