The
Lure *** / *****
Directed
by: Agnieszka
Smoczynska.
Written
by: Robert
Bolesto.
Starring:
Marta
Mazurek (Silver), Michalina Olszanska (Golden), Jakub Gierszal (Mietek), Kinga
Preis (The Nightclub Singer), Andrzej Konopka (Drummer), Zygmunt Malanowicz (The
House Manager), Magdalena Cielecka (Boskie Futro), Katarzyna Herman (Milicjantka),
Marcin Kowalczyk (Tryton / Dedal).
If there was an award for
weirdest film of the year, than Agnieszka Smoczynska’s debut feature The Lure
would be a shoo-in for the win. This is a horror/musical/comedy about two
mermaids in Communist era Poland, who come ashore to join a nightclub act. One
of them falls in love with a man she shouldn’t – dooming her to a tragic end –
and the other is more likely to rip out someone’s throat than to do anything
else. The film takes weird narratives twists and turns – most of them
completely out of left field, with little holding reasoning behind it. Does the
film work? Not really – at least not in a traditional sense. The musical
numbers are better as set pieces than they are as songs, and it’s impossible to
find your footing in the movie, because as soon as you do, the film flies off
in a different direction. Then again, that’s part of the movies charm. This is
a film that feels more like a dream than anything – a fever dream at that, and
the result is at least always interesting.
The two mermaids are named Silver
and Golden and are played by Marta Marurek and Michalina Olsazanka. They are
drawn out of the water by Mietek as he sings on the water’s edge, and they
follow him back to the dingy club he works in as a bassist. If the pair are
dry, then they look like any other human women – except they lack certain holes
below the waste. Splash some water on them, and they’ll grow enormously long
fish tales. In either form, they’re as likely to be naked as not – and the
crash club owner decides to put them in the show, because, of course, everyone
like duos. They can sing too - and when in fish form, communicate with each
other in some strange fish language.
The one narrative thread the movie
follows from beginning to end is the relationship between Silver and Mietek. She
falls for him, hard, and even though he tells her that “You’ll always be a fish
to me” – she willing sacrifices everything for him. Golden isn’t so subservient
– and is the one responsible for all the blood in the film.
The film plays with ideas of the
male gaze, misogyny and female sexuality in strange ways – sometimes in way
that seem almost literal (a man complaining of a “fish smell” in a slit in the
tail of one of the mermaids, the blood involved in a key sexual encounter
between Mietek and Silver), and sometimes in obscure ways. All the characters
in the movie function more like metaphors and symbols than actual people. There
are levels on top of levels here, than you could spend a long time trying to
piece it all together – the films constantly shifting narrative, and bizarre
visuals and musical numbers keep you guessing to the end.
On its most basic level though, The
Lure is more conventional than it first seems, as it about a girl, who throws
everything away for an unworthy man – who changes who she is to be accepted by
him, and still gets tossed aside. At least Golden’s there too though to set
things right.
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