Nicholas
Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to
literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree
or disagree with him.
I
recently saw Amando Iannucci’s film The
Personal History of David Copperfield, very loosely based on Dickens’
novel. The film has received much praise and ecstatic reviews. It has won some awards.
Alas, I give you a minority report – always the best sort of report because it
shows an independent mind.
I
thought as a film The Personal History of
David Copperfield was rubbish.
To
forestall your pre-conceptions, I am not bringing in this verdict because the
film omitted many characters and events from the novel. I understand all lengthy
novels have to be abridged and compressed when they are turned into screenplays
for the cinema. It does not faze me in the least that there was no Barkis (as
in “Barkis is willing”) and no Rosa
Dartle, the girl with the scarred lip. In this version, the scarred lip is
given to the villainous Steerforth’s mother. Fair enough. Compressions do have
to be made, although over the years I have come to believe that capacious
nineteenth-century novels are better adapted as television serials than as
single movies, because television serialisations can better convey a novel’s
leisurely pace and (in the case of Dickens) repeated comic effects..
To
forestall another pre-conception you may have, I am not too worried that Dev
Patel, of Indian parentage, was cast in title role. He is an agile and charming
comic actor. I must admit, though, that elements of the determinedly
multi-racial cast did perturb me. Surely I was not the only member of the
viewing public to have my disbelief totally un-suspended when the very English
actor playing Steerforth is given an African mother; or when the Asian Mr
Wickfield apparently has an African daughter.
What
most alienated me were the many foolish decisions the screenwriter had made.
All pathos and warmth were drained out of episodes where David Copperfield runs
away from London and walks all the way to Dover to find refuge with his
eccentric aunt Betsey Trotwood. David is still a little waif boy in the novel
when he performs this feat. In the film, he is a fully grown man, which
inadvertently gives the impression that he is somehow mentally impaired. Why
was this change made? I suspect because the screenwriter wanted to dash on to
later episodes. On top of this, there was much excruciatingly bad casting, even
ignoring the multi-racial aspect. Peter Capaldi is simply wrong as Wilkins
Micawber, having none of that character’s oratorical fruitiness; Tilda Swinton
is simply wrong as Betsey Trotwood, prim and domineering but cold and not
reflecting Miss Trotwood’s generous eccentricity. The only actor who really
comes out of it with credit is Hugh Laurie as Mr Dick, appropriately dotty. I
won’t go into the fussy (and confusing) way this film harps on the story as
pure fiction (laboured sequences of David writing his own story; characters
directly conversing with the author about their roles etc.). I have given you
enough of what I think of it.
I
conclude that much of the praise the film has received is like the forced
laughter you sometimes hear when people think they have to appreciate a joke
they do not really like. There is a multi-racial cast, the director and casting
people are recognising the multi-ethnic reality that is England now, therefore
we must applaud or we will be regarded as reactionary.
So
much for the film.
Now
for related reflections.
Recently,
and particularly in America, Black, Hispanic and Asian groups have protested at
what they call the “whitewashing” of characters in mainstream Hollywood films. This
refers to the frequent habit of casting white actors in roles that were often (in the source material from which
the films are adapted) intended to be Black, Hispanic or Asian characters. How
dare Johnny Depp play Amerindian Tonto in a remake of The Lone Ranger! How dare Ben Affleck play a Latino character in Argo!!
This, so protesters say, is as demeaning as the blackface performances
that were standard practice in the Hollywood of long ago. Often (but not
always) I think this is a fair and reasonable ground for protest.
But
what of the parallel distortion we are now getting in what might be called “blackwashing”
or “brownwashing”? African or Asian actors are now cast in what are clearly
European roles. I can understand this phenomenon when we are dealing with
theatrical companies. Quite rightly, most will now have a multi-ethnic crew of
actors, and non-European actors can’t very well be left out of productions
which are so often European classics or revivals of popular West End or
Broadway plays from some years back. Recently – during the lock-down – I
watched transcriptions of productions put on by Britain’s National Theatre, and
saw some black actors in plays like The
Duchess of Malfi and Terence Rattigan’s The
Deep Blue Sea. Not too convincing in either case, but understandable where
the employment of actors is concerned.
In
contrast, the production company of a film like The Personal History of David Copperfield could draw together any
cast it could afford. Clearly, assembling a multi-racial cast was a deliberate
artistic decision and an attempt to make a statement of some sort. But here’s the big problem. In 19th
century Britain, among middle-class society, the sight of African, Indian or
Asian people would probably make them objects of wonder or curiosity or
ridicule or mean contempt. I’m aware that nearly all fictionalised films set in
past ages create a false impression of what history was. But in The Personal History of David Copperfield
there is a particular form of falsification.
As if Dickens wasn’t fantastical enough, we are presented with the
illusion that all was racial harmony and racial integration in Victorian
England. Nobody raises an eyebrow at an Indian David Copperfield wooing a very
English Dora Spenlow etc. etc. The effect, intentionally or not, is very like
those old Hollywood films that told us all was well in the old Deep South,
there was no tension and disharmony between races, and those were the good old
days.
Whatever
its good intentions may have been, The
Personal History of David Copperfield is peddling the same lie. It’s a new
bottle for old wine.
Footnotes: Check out on this blog my review of Oliver
Schreiner’s dated and bombastic novel TheStory of an African Farm and you will find in its footnote
a brief account of another film which places an African in a role that helps to
falsify the past.
Also,
as proof that The Personal History of
David Copperfield does not necessarily make me pine for earlier film
versions of Dickens’ novel, see my less-than-enthusiastic comments on
Hollywood’s 1930s adaptation of David
Copperfield under the heading WaxworksShows in Motion.
High Major has given me permission to post his comment as follows: These thoughts on casting for films reminds me of suggestions made to owners of the James Bond franchise to give a black actor a go at JB (Idris Alba suggested) or even a woman. Yes, very democratic, but doesn’t it undo the basis of Ian Fleming’s creation - a 1950’s English spy with all the personal features meticulously detailed in a dozen or so novels?
ReplyDeleteBy updating into the 70’s, 80’s and onwards into the next century (JB would be in his late nineties now) Fleming's hero has already long jettisoned the fashions, cars, sexist attitudes and natty devices/weaponry of the mid 20th century. Should the next move be to cast an African in an exclusively European role, or perhaps a Jamie (blond) Bond? Not really.