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Oh the controversy.
More than a decade later, you still can't swing a dead theory
around in a room full of feminists without hitting someone who
thinks that Basic Instinct was the most loathesome
film ever made.
If you listened to some critics, the film managed to single handedly
set back the cause of lesbian visibility in Hollywood by decades.
It is the very embodiment of the evil lesbian cliché. It's
also the film that revived Michael Douglas's flagging career and
made Sharon Stone a star in the time it took for her to uncross
and re-cross her legs.
They could very well be right, but I think there's some wiggle
room for disagreement here. The story centres around bad boy cop
Nick (Michael Douglas) who is assigned to a murder case where
the killer may or may not be horror writer Catherine Tramell,
who has written a book that seems to describe the killing in lurid
detail. Is the book a spooky confession of guilt, or the ultimate
alibi? Who would be stupid, or clever, enough kill someone in
the exact same manner as in their book? Only a psychopath.
Nick's partner Gus, a cowboy at heart, warns his partner off
getting personally involved with both Catherine and his ex-lover
Dr Beth Garner, the woman who is also in charge of evaluating
his fitness to perform his job. Catherine's lover Roxy tries to
kill Nick after Catherine and Nick share a night of hot sex and
ends up dead herself. Also, as it turns out, Beth Garner used
to be a woman named Lisa Hoberman, an obsessed ex-lover of Catherine's
from college who may or may not have murdered her first husband.
Could she be killing men and trying to frame Catherine in revenge?
The plot thickens.
The most damning evidence against Catherine appears to be that
she's so good in bed and skilled at wielding an ice-pick, the
very weapon used in the murder. Catherine seems to genuinely care
about Nick, as far as she is able to anyway, but we soon find
out that Catherine has a thing about befriending people who have
killed other people. She seems to get off on it, presumably because
she's been obsessed with death since her parents were killed in
an accident and her ex-boyfriend died in the boxing ring. Nick
himself once killed a whole family of tourists while high on cocaine
(but is somehow, insanely, back on the job anyway). They're perfect
for each other, except for the whole pesky murder investigation
thing.
Catherine we know is bisexual. So is Beth. Roxy is a lesbian
through and through, but winds up dead for it. Beth seems to be
the orchestrator of the whole thing, the one who is truly evil,
driven mad by jealousy. Catherine it would seem is actually innocent,
or is she? Why would an innocent woman keep an ice-pick under
her bed? And are we meant to believe that she doesn't stab Nick
with it because he's so good in bed? Or does she keep it there
merely as self protection believing that Nick himself may have
been the murderer? (That's my own perverse theory that no one
wants to back me up on!)
No matter which way we look at it lesbians and bisexual women
in this film are murderers, junkies, suicidal, fetishist, violent,
perverse and downright loony. The question is, do we or do we
not like that in our lesbians? It might seem like a weird question,
but there are some of us in the world who don't mind a bit of
fun and spice in our characters. The only thing that makes it
a slur is the accumulation of dead lesbians in past films. The
characters here are internally consistent (as in, it isn't just
the lesbians who are depraved, pretty much everyone is), and in
the perversity stakes, I didn't feel that lesbians were being
singled out.
That being said, the characters of Beth and Roxy don't have a
salvageable trait to split between them. Catherine Tramell is
a different story, however. She takes sex when she wants it, takes
love where she finds it, does her own thing and takes crap from
no one. She still feels, indulges her own passions and pursuits,
is rich and drives a porsche. She dominates the lovers in her
life and lives by her own rules. For these and many other reasons
Catherine Tramell is a character I'm proud to call queer and to
embrace as a strong and enduring film icon.
As for the film itself, it is a tautly woven thriller with great
acting, a good premise and a suitably ambiguous ending. Basic
Instinct played out as perverse for the straight, white
bread community to which it was pitched, but really in the grand
scheme of things it isn't that bad. I've tried hard to be offended
by it. I've picked it to pieces and back again. It isn't trying
to represent the gay community, the fetishists or indeed any other
social group. It's telling a story using characters with fluid
personal boundaries who all have flaws. Some of those flaws turn
out to be truly fatal. Depending on how you personally read the
narrative, perhaps the femme fatale doesn't get her deserved punishment,
but I like that about this movie. In real life we don't always
get what we deserve.
Perhaps the most evil thing about this film was that it did so
well the writer/director team thought they'd try again and produced
Showgirls. Now there's a film to call
loathesome.
Got a comment? Write to me at nancyamazon@gmail.com
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