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Martha Nichols's avatar

Susan, how strange - I watched “May December” last night and was so flummoxed by my response that I felt I needed to read a recap or reviews of the thing (I came to it cold, beyond the Netflix blurb about it being a strange “comedy”) - and then here was your post. Thank god. You did a great job of picking this apart at the same time that you gave Todd Haynes and Julianne Moore their due. I think “May December” is occasionally brilliant, those shots of vulnerable Monarch caterpillars in their cages, Moore’s ability to convey self-deception that’s both pitiable and narcissistic - but this movie is very far from a comedy, and the fact that critics, audiences, and marketing hacks have labeled it as such floors me.

You’re right that Haynes makes some missteps (miscues?), especially with the overbearing music and titles. But otherwise, the wry nods to tabloid media, unintentional cutting (and banal) dialogue, and the constant scrutiny of the woman at the center is the kind of painful wit that might make me nod or twist my lips - but laugh out loud? Nope, no way. It’s like labeling Bergman’s “Seventh Seal” as an oddball comedy about the plague.

I think I’m more literal than many film critics or the elite of Cannes, but this left me wondering where such viewers’ hearts and minds had gone. I was so disturbed by “May December” that I had to watch a bunch of sitcom repeats and still couldn’t sleep. Thanks, as always, for getting under the surface 🙏🏽

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Camila Hamel's avatar

I agree with you and Martha Nichols you that there is little humor in this film, not even unintentional humor. The material is just too creepy to make light of. I'm not sure why people would laugh at the card either, but I'd say it was out of a kind of embarrassment. There is plenty of tension and some terribly awkward moments, but that's not 'dark comedy'.

What it does have are brilliant performances all around.

While watching Julianne Moore, I was reminded a little of Vivian Leigh as Blanche Dubois. The roles are not 100% analogous, but there are parallels one could draw. Gracie wants so much to believe that Joe at 13 was in control, but he's no Stanley Kowalski. It was the chilling and pathetic moment when Gracie is unmasked as an abuser/predator. It also serves to mirro Elizabeth's predatory behavior.

Joe had been trying to maintain a lie of his own—his emotional armoring—that he was not a victim. These two lies dovetail, but his misconstrual is shattered when he has sex with Elizabeth. The disgust he feels has the effect of opening his eyes, so when Elizabeth says, "it's what adults do", aside from being a shitty, bitchy thing to say, it's like code for "Now you can finally grow up."

Regardless of what he says about himself Joe's victimhood is symbolized by his fascination for butterflies, and the fact that he is seduced in the pet shop, as if he were a specimen himself.

I agree that the music was a misstep. There was no reason to signal "something's wrong here" so stridently.

And by the way, seeing Oppenheimer made me rewatch Spielberg's Lincoln, which has reams of dialogue as well, but manages to pull that off better. Something to ponder.

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