In the past decade, there have been three great films about
guilt, denial and the return of the repressed: Mike Leigh's Vera Drake in 2004,
Michael Haneke's Hidden in 2005 – and this is the third, La Mujer Sin Cabeza,
or The Headless Woman, directed by Lucrecia Martel and co-produced by Pedro and
Agustín -Almodóvar. It is a masterly, disturbing and deeply mysterious film
about someone who strenuously conceals from ¬herself the knowledge of her own
guilt.
Each time I have seen it, this film has swirled residually
in my subconscious for days, and each time I have witnessed exactly the same
spectacle outside the cinema afterwards: knots of people ¬excitably, grumpily
arguing about it. Some denounce it for ¬being boring, ¬wilfully obscure
arthouse stuff – and, yes, be warned, it is a ¬difficult, challenging film –
while others, like onlookers trying to piece together events leading up to a
robbery, ¬frantically ask each other what happened and where and how and why.
Then there's a smaller group, including me, dazed and ¬wondering if what we
have seen is not a portrait of a guilty person, but rather the
¬autobiographical and minutely realistic dream this person is having.
The Headless Woman is set among an extended wealthy family
in ¬Argentina. Maria Onetto plays Verónica, an ¬elegant, middle-aged woman who
works as a dentist. Driving back from a ¬family ¬get-together, Verónica hits
something in her car – bang! – her ¬forehead lunges ¬forward and appears to
smash either into the steering wheel or the ¬windshield, and whiplashes back.
Verónica brakes and for a long, long ¬moment, Martel's camera holds the shot of her profile: as she sits immobile
and silent in the car. Is she in shock? Is she gazing at what she has hit in the
rear-view mirror? For the first time, we see a child's handprint on the
driver's-side window, a handprint which, in some kind of nightmarish
¬continuity error appears to change ¬position in the next shot.
But couldn't that just be from the kids who were larking
around her car at the party earlier? We turn with Verónica, and all we can see
at this stage is a dead dog in the distance, which in an earlier scene had been
with some boys playing by the roadside.
Verónica returns home: clearly ¬traumatised. She cannot
answer simple questions; she is ¬confused. But it is not merely the physical
impact. Verónica is dealing with the awful suspicion that she killed not merely
the dog, but its owner. She has killed a child. Verónica confesses as much, in
a quiet, wondering voice, to her ¬husband, perhaps ¬conveying an unspoken
¬instruction that he and the menfolk of the ¬family – ¬doctors and medical
types well -connected with the cops – should ¬handle this situation.
Martel's movie intuits and imitates her concussed state, a
state which -embraces evasive semi-consciousness. Shots are asymmetrically
composed in such a way that we can't be sure what we are supposed to be looking
at: Verónica, with her faint, not-all-there smile, will be in one part of the
screen, while someone else, in another part, will be quietly getting something
sorted. Like Verónica, the film glimpses the truth out of the corner of its
eye. The sound design is such that voices that we think are emanating from just
behind the camera, near Verónica, are ¬coming from people talking in the middle
-distance: belatedly, we match the sound to their moving lips.
Often, people talking to Verónica will be seen only from the
neck down – they are headless, like the famous photo of the "headless
man" in the 1963 Duchess of Argyll divorce case. Her disorientation
becomes most disturbing when she goes with a family party to visit an ancient
aunt, who is suffering from dementia, and who complains that her apartment with
its ancient furniture is filled with squeaks, like the sounds of the dead. In
the same state of -suppressed panic that she ¬perceives ¬everything else,
Verónica sees that this old woman is a kindred spirit; she too must now live
with ghosts.
But even here the complications and agonies are not
complete. This is not the first time Verónica has had to swallow a secret and
live a lie. There is another elephant in the living room she has to feed. A
long, mysterious trip to a hotel just after the accident, and sexualised
encounters with two different ¬family members, indicate that avoidance, ¬secrecy
and denial are lifelong habits.
This is not an easy film to watch, or to understand, but the
potency with which it resonates in the imagination is remarkable. Lucrecia
Martel's other films, The Swamp (2001) and The Holy Girl (2004) have both had
something of this spacey, floating style, but never before has it been applied
to something so painful, so relevant, and never before has she delivered such a
psychologically real portrait: demonstrating in both style and content what
happens when we go into denial. I'm as certain as I can be of the towering
talent of Lucrecia Martel, but I can't quite be certain of exactly what The
Headless Woman is about. For example: the child's handprint changing position …
did I just -imagine that? You tell me.
Source: theguardian.com
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