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Faces (1968)
In writer/director John Cassavetes' stark and grainy
looking, amateurish, ragged marriage drama (made with a hand-held
camera in 16mm) about infidelity - a highly-influential, low-budget
independent cinema verite film; it was an emotionally-intense
work about all the resultant and tragic repercussions of a disintegrating,
dead-end 14 year marriage and the struggle to find love:
- the plot was told as an improvisational character
study and "film within a film" with a highly individualistic
style (including unscripted and often inaudible dialogue during
conversations, and a seemingly-endless series of amorphous scenes
with unpredictable climaxes)
- the extended sequence of divorcing, weary, middle-aged
and drunken Richard "Dickie" Forst (John Marley) and his
friend Freddie (Fred Draper) who were carousing with younger, high-class
prostitute Jeannie Rapp (Gena Rowlands - Cassavetes' wife), the lead
character, who they had just met in a bar; at her house after Dickie
was dancing and singing "I Dream of Jeannie (With the Light
Brown Hair)" with her, Freddie suddenly and jealously asked
Jeannie how much she charged for a trick: "By the way, Jeannie,
whaddya charge?"; his question immediately spoiled the mood,
and although Jeannie went over and hugged him ("Oh no, Freddie,
don't spoil it, Freddie, please"), he defended himself: "Spoil
what? Honey, I'm game for anything. I just wanna know how much you
charge. It's legitimate, isn't it? I know I have to pay. I'm not
too schooled in these things, but I know that somewhere along the
line, your little hand is gonna find its way to my pocket. You're
shocked, aren't ya, old Dickie, old pal? What do you think she is?
You think she's some clean towel that's never been used? My God,
Dickie, you think you don't pay? How many times a week does Maria
ask you for some money? Money, Charlie, is a necessity, and don't
you think that you don't work for it and pay for it. My God, what,
what is this? He thinks I'm insulting you. I'm offering you. Hell,
look, what's the matter? If I went to one of those fancy restaurants,
I'd probably tip the headwaiter, the waiter, the busboy, and a hundred
bucks goes flyin' down the drain -- and I couldn't have any more
fun than I could with Jeannie here"; Dickie became incensed,
but he was calmed down by Jeannie, who also called out the "very
sad" Freddie for being crude: "... you're a man who doesn't
say what you mean very well. What you meant was this was a wonderful
evening, and you enjoy my house and you like me. But like you said,
you're crude"; Freddie apologized and said he was "only
trying to be funny" - and soon left
- meanwhile during Dickie's affair with call-girl escort
Jeannie, his divorcing wife Maria Forst (Lynn Carlin) was having
a girls' night out at the Whiskey A Go-Go with three of her married,
discontented female friends, where the group was seduced by uninhibited,
flirtatious playboy-hustler Chet (Seymour Cassel) from Detroit; after
they left the go-go club with Chet, they returned to Maria's home
- Chet's bold assertions during an alcohol-fueled night
with the nervously-laughing women at the Forst home that his basic
goal in life was sex: "You have a few belts and go up to some
chick's pad and make it, baby...Just make it, baby. You out-and-out
lay down and..."
- later, as Chet encouraged one of Maria's uptight friends,
Louise Draper (Joanne Moore Jordan), to dance with him, he suddenly
stated: "I think we're makin' fools of ourselves...I'm not criticizing;
I'm just saying"; Louise took immediate personal offense:
"I'm making a fool of myself?...Well, who are you to criticize
me?...Well, you don't have to tell me I'm making a fool of myself.
Look, I know how to dance, my way. I don't need you to tell me about
it. I come from a musical background. I take care of a family of five.
I have a college degree, and I don't need you to tell me I'm making
a fool of myself...Don't touch me!" - and after slapping Chet,
she angrily departed
- in the next powerful sequence, Maria's pathetic,
drunken and desperate, fat-faced, married friend Florence (Dorothy
Gulliver) delivered a statement to Maria that dancing made her feel
young: ("Oh, come on. Don't be tired. The evening's young, you
know. You know, these dances, these wild crazy dances -- I think
they've succeeded where science failed. 'Cause you know, I can go
to a beauty parlor and sit there for hours having my hair done and
my nails polished, but I don't feel any younger. I might look it.
These dances, these wild crazy dances -- they do something to me
inside. Well, to hell with Louie. Because, you know, one of these
days I'm gonna croak. And I'm gonna flop down on the ground, and
some goddamn preacher's gonna preach a goddamn sermon over my goddamn
body!"); she ran over to Chet, flung herself at him, asked him
for a dance, and when she fell on top of him and kept slobbering
over him, she finally asked: "Would you kiss me?", he obligingly
kissed her full on the mouth; afterwards, Chet agreed to drive Florence
home, using Maria's car
Florence and Chet's Kiss in Forst Home
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- the tragic repercussions of the characters -- Maria
had a one-night sexual stand with Chet, but afterwards the next
morning, he found her on the floor of the bathroom where she had
taken an overdose of sleeping pills; after calling the emergency
squad, he attempted to keep her awake: "You gotta stay awake.
Please. I don't want you to die. Please, lady. You gotta stay awake";
after he was able to revive her with some slaps, he apologized: "I
didn't want to hit ya, but don't go to sleep on me. Oh! Come on,
now. Cry. That's it. That's life, honey. Tears, tears of happiness,
man. Just do it. Come on, now. Ohh...I caused you a lot of pain
and a lot of grief and, and I almost killed ya. And I prayed, man.
Oh, God, I prayed to God. I said, 'God, please, dear God, don't
let anything happen to her, 'cause I love her so much, and I'll
do anything you say, God.' And, man, I don't even believe in him,
you know"
- in the final devastating sequence, Dickie returned
home from Jeannie - forcing Chet to flee out the window and onto
the roof; Dickie turned to Maria and judged her with insults about
being an adulteress:
"I thought you just had problems. That's wonderful. That's, uh,
something new. A noble adulteress...Rejected for the thousandth time
in 14 years...All I have to do is find that 10-year-old rapist and
kill him...You don't need me, you don't need any man...You get laid
once and everything is solved! Get all the soldiers in Vietnam
laid and the whole Middle East problem is solved! You want violence,
huh? You want me to be violent? Is that it? You want me to slap you
across the face every time you open your mouth?" - she responded
by slapping him twice:
"I hate my life. I just don't love you!"; as they sat in
numbed silence at the top and bottom of the hallway staircase, they
both smoked a cigarette, shared a lighter, and started coughing - the
film ended with the ironic, accompanying Charlie Smalls song: Never
Felt Like This Before
Maria and Dickie Face Off
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"Dickie" Forst Dancing with Prostitute Jeannie
Freddie's (Fred Draper) Crude Comment to Jeannie: "Whaddya
charge?"
Jeannie Rapp
(Gena Rowlands)
Jeannie Hugging Freddie: "Freddie, don't spoil it"
Dickie, Jeannie, and Freddie
Playboy-Hustler Chet With Middle-Aged Women, Including Dickie's
Divorcing Wife Maria
Maria's Friend Louise Draper
Another Friend: Florence
Maria's Overdose After One-Night Stand with Chet
Maria Recovering with Chet
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