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Black Widow (Blu-ray)
[Blu-ray]
Blu-ray B - United Kingdom - Signal One Review written by and copyright: Paul Lewis (8th April 2016). |
The Film
![]() ![]() A slickly efficient neo-noir picture, Black Widow (Bob Rafelson, 1987) was the first film Bob Rafelson had directed in six years, following The Postman Always Rings Twice in 1981. An early example of 1980s neo-noir, The Postman Always Rings Twice had demonstrated an overt noir heritage by adapting James M Cain’s 1934 novel of the same title, which had already been dramatised as the classic film noir The Postman Always Rings Twice (Tay Garnett, 1946) and by Italian filmmaker Luchino Visconti as Ossessione (1943). Black Widow begins with ‘Catharine’ (Theresa Russell) being told of the death of her husband, who has passed away in his sleep. Meanwhile, FBI investigator Alex (Debra Winger) is convinced that the death of Catharine’s husband, a Mafia don called Maranzano, ‘was a hit’ and persists in her investigation of it – despite the fact that the cause of death was a respiratory disorder called Ondine’s curse, which Alex’s colleague Mike (D W Moffett) tells her ‘It’s rare. It’s real. It happened’. ![]() Catharine, who has renamed herself Margaret, has moved on to another ‘victim’, McCorey (Nicol Williamson). Alex’s investigation leads her to McCorey, who reveals to Alex – who is masquerading as a journalist – that he has an allergy to penicillin. Soon after, McCorey is found dead, and Catharine has once again disappeared. Though McCorey’s cause of death seems to be a heart attack, Alex (correctly) reasons that it might have been precipitated by an allergic reaction owing to exposure to penicillin. Alex leaves her job in order to pursue Catharine, who is now in Hawaii, having set her sights on international hotelier Paul (Sami Frey). Alex enlists the help of a local private investigator, Shin (James Hong). Alex also approaches Catharine directly, taking a leaf out of Catharine’s proverbial book by adopting a pseudonym (‘Jessica Bates’). Alex and Catharine become friendly, but Catharine comes to the realisation that there is more to Alex than she initially believed, and Catharine begins her own investigation into her new companion. When Catharine appears to push Alex and Paul together, maneuvering them like pawns on a chessboard, she seems to be in the early stages of a very elaborate, dastardly plan. ![]() ![]() Many neo-noir pictures established their difference from classical films noir through upping the ante in terms of erotic content, containing nudity and depictions of sexuality that were far more explicit than any contained in classic films noir: this was a characteristic of many neo-noir films revolving around femmes fatales, including The Last Seduction, Fatal Attraction, Basic Instinct, Body Heat (Lawrence Kasdan, 1981) and Rafelson’s own 1981 remake of The Postman Always Rings Twice. What’s perhaps surprising about Black Widow, especially in comparison with some of those films, is that it contains very little erotic content: the film is remarkably restrained in terms of its depiction of sex and sexuality. Especially when compared with the likes of the aforementioned films, which invariably feature at least one scene of explicit nudity or moderately graphic (at least, within the parameters of non-pornographic cinema) sexuality, Black Widow – whose most ‘explicit’ scene is perhaps the suggestive ‘kiss of life’ that Alex gives Catharine during a scuba diving class, which hints at a homoerotic tension between the pair – feels very chaste. ![]() Yvonne Tasker has linked Black Widow with two other roughly contemporaneous films that feature female investigators: Jonathan Demme’s The Silence of the Lambs (1991) and Jon Amiel’s Copycat (1995). All three films, Tasker argues, feature female protagonists who ‘shift between or simultaneously inhabit more than one of the three positions of investigator, investigated and victim’: in other words, they are investigators who become stalked, threatened or framed by their prey, and in turn become the subject of a police investigation (Tasker, 1998: 105). In the latter stages of Black Widow, Catharine concocts an elaborate plan to frame Alex for the murder of Paul, something which causes the police to investigate Alex herself. Tasker suggests that Black Widow in particular ‘sits between genres, drawing on the conventions of film noir, the police procedural and the woman’s film’ (ibid.). ![]() Black Widow was released the same year as two other thrillers which, like Rafelson’s film, have been labeled ‘Hitchcockian’: Arthur Penn’s Dead of Winter (1987) and Curtis Hanson’s The Bedroom Window (1987). Citing the work of Time critic Richard Corliss, Robert E Kapsis has suggested that Black Widow takes a ‘feminist approach to the Hitchcockian theme of the transference of evil and the preoccupation with the double’: both Alex and Catharine are obsessed with their ‘work’ (in Alex’s case, solving crime; in Catharine’s case, committing murder) and Catharine, in essence, presents Alex with ‘a freer, more dangerous part of herself’ (Corliss, quoted in Kapsis, 1992: 180). Other critics have seen a crypto-feminist statement within the film, buried in the suggestion that ‘Catharine’s victims are not entirely sympathetic, and that ‘Catharine’ represents ‘the avenging angel of sexism’: it’s perhaps important to remember here that Catharine’s first named victim, who we never see on screen owing to his death just prior to the narrative beginning, is an underboss in an the mob (Natale, quoted in Kapsis, op cit.: 180). ![]()
Video
![]() An incredibly beautifully shot film, with compositions which are often symmetrical, with the subject framed in the centre, Black Widow is also very intricately lit, with strong emphasis on the interplay of light and shadow – from the nighttime sequences, in which shadows taper off into darkness around the characters, to the bold sunlight of the later sequences of the film which are set on Hawaii. The film is the subject of an incredible presentation on this new Blu-ray release from Signal One. The presentation contains a very, very good level of detail, offering a clear improvement over the film’s previous home video releases in this regard. Vibrant colour consistency is evidenced from the film’s opening titles sequence, which features a rich, deep red text on a plain black screen – and carried through the film’s expressionistic use of primary colours in the lighting of various scenes (reds and greens, predominantly). Excellent contrast levels underscore the aforementioned care given to the lighting during the production, offering rich and deep blacks, very carefully-balanced nighttime sequences, and strong and defined mid-tones. There is no overt, damaging evidence of digital ‘tinkering’, and the presentation retains the structure of 35mm film, ensuring an organic, filmlike image – something which is retained by the impressive encode. ![]() ![]() ![]()
Audio
Audio is presented via a LPCM 2.0 stereo track with accompanying optional English subtitles for the Hard of Hearing. It’s a deep track with a strong sense of range; sound separation is immersive without being overly ‘showy’. The subtitles are error free and easy to read.
Extras
The disc includes: - an audio commentary with film historians Julie Kirgo and Nick Redman. This is an interesting, well-researched commentary in which Kirgo and Redman discuss the film’s production and themes, focusing in some detail on the film noir motifs within the picture and the appeal of films noir during the 1980s. There’s a strong engagement with the film’s various contexts (in terms of society, attitudes towards gender, genre and the work of the film’s cast and crew). - ‘The Predator and Her Prey’ (27:05). In a new interview shot this year (2016), the film’s writer Ronald Bass says that he doesn’t agree that there is such a thing as neo-noir: ‘there’s noir and then there’s not’. He discusses the differences between Russell and Winger and their performances. Bass talks about how he became a writer and how Black Widow was written – the script was an amalgam of two stories that Bass had outlined. Winger was approached first and refused to play the killer; she also specified that Theresa Russell must play Catharine. It’s an excellent, thoughtful interview. - ‘Bright Colours, Deep Blacks’ (28:27). Here, in another new interview, Conrad W Hall, the son of Black Widow’s cinematographer (Conrad L Hall), talks about his father’s work on the picture. Hall suggests that his father’s focus on the subtleties of light and dark originated with his work as a director of photography on monochrome pictures such as Morituri, his first film. Hall discusses some of his father’s work generally before focusing in detail on the photography of Black Widow, offering some fascinating insights into the visual design of the picture (eg, the contrast in terms of the costumes between Catharine and Alex; the use of red, which was inspired by the underbelly of the real black widow spider). - Gallery (1:08). - Trailer (1:59). - US TV spots (2:06).
Overall
![]() Signal One’s presentation of the film is exemplary. Given the fact that since its initial release, most people will have only seen the film via television broadcasts, videocassette or DVD releases, it’s easy to forget how spectacular the film’s photography is and how much it contributes to the film overall. This Blu-ray release remedies that with a tip-top presentation of the main feature, which might encourage some viewers to watch the film with a brand new eye. The release also contains some superb contextual material: the interviews with Bass and Hall are illuminating, thoughtful and filled with interesting information, and the commentary makes some very keen observations and provides the film with a strong sense of context. This is yet another of a run of excellent releases by Signal One and comes with a very strong recommendation. References: Derran, Alison, 2000: Lesbian Film Guide. London: Cassell Kapsis, Robert E, 1992: Hitchcock: The Making of a Reputation. The University Press of Chicago Smirnoff, Marc, 1996: ‘Pauline Kael: The Critic Wore Cowboy Boots’. In: Brantley, Will (ed), 1996: Pauline Kael. University Press of Mississippi: 140-60 Tasker, Yvonne, 1998: Working Girls: Gender and Sexuality in Popular Cinema. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
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