Sex, race, and that opening scene
James Toback gets outrageous in Black and White
Someday James Toback may actually do what he's always promising and make
America's first great all-out sex movie. Maybe it will be his next project,
Harvard Man, which was recently greenlighted, a fictionalized version of
his own drugs-and-Dionysian days circa 1965 at tawdry Harvard
University. Until now, we've got to thank him for some fine soft-X sequences
sprinkled through his pictures, though the hottest of the hot of these --
Toback, you blatant sexist pig! -- are ménage-à-trois male
fantasies: footballer Jim Brown with two chicks chewing on his chest in
Fingers; Robert Downey Jr. doing his post-Last Tango lessons on
Heather Graham as moist Natasha Gregson Wagner lounges about in Two Girls
and a Guy; and the super fly-open opening -- girl-on-girl kissing and
finger probing of white high-schoolers with a black rapper -- in Toback's new,
typically out-there, sometimes wildly entertaining Black and White,
which opens this Friday at the Copley Place, the Harvard Square, and the
Allston.
It's not only sex that obsesses this outrageous writer/filmmaker: in Black
and White, James Toback tackles race in contemporary America! ("Skip" Gates
and Cornell West, move over?) Much of the movie takes place in his fantasy
version of rapperland, a New York apartment where a collective of young
African-Americans practice their raw street poetry amid the distractions of
elephantine TV screens and sprawled-about takeout food, exploitative white
producers (Toback himself in a spirited co-star turn), ditsy white
documentarians (a hilarious duo of Brooke Shields and Downey Jr.), white
anthropologists (model Claudia Schiffer, stiff as an academic femme fatale),
white undercover cops (a fabulously sleazy, motormouth Ben Stiller), and white
teen groupies (Bijou Phillips, Jared Leto, former Ford model Kim Matulova).
It's the last group that most has the director's sympathies. Himself a sort of
Maileresque "White Negro" hipster, Toback certainly relates to their desire to
walk and talk and gesture black. For his lead teen, he's uncovered a mini-star
in the mini-skirted, uninhibited Phillips with her Natalie Wood demeanor, gold
tooth, and masterful hip-hop lingo; and the best of Black and White's
improvised screenplay is located in the amazing, anti-standard-English sentence
structures emanating from his much-integrated cast: "It was a chill mellow
environment until you showed up" and "There's some disrespect goin' down."
Black and White falters a bit when it turns sociological and neo-realist
with plot: a contrived storyline runs through involving a black basketball
player (the Knicks' Allan Houston) and his decision whether to take a $50,000
bribe and shave points. Toback's movie is far more successful when his cast
just let go: a colorful screwball scene in which Downey Jr.'s character, barely
in the closet, cruises a cute young guy on the Staten Island ferry; some
startling set pieces in which Mike Tyson as Himself spars linguistically with
the actors. The ex-champ's oratory is heavyweight: "This is what I'm
deciphering from your vernacular," he explains to a rapper, adding, "I'm
fastidious with my words."
When we conversed at last fall's Toronto International Film Festival, I told
Toback (who's the most entertaining interviewee I know) how impressed I was by
Tyson's conversation. He, of course, smiled and agreed. "What's the point in me
writing dialogue for him? How am I going to get dialogue half as good as that?
I've done a full 180 degrees on improvisation, and I don't think anyone else
does that amount. The most interesting moments in my movies in the last four
years have been outside my scripts. It's embarrassingly idiotic to choke off
actor impulses when later you can be God in the editing room. What are you
afraid of? If you're that uninterested in what they invent, why are you using
them?
"We shot widescreen super 35mm, with a Steadicam going all the time. It had to
be quick, jagged, like the lifestyle. Ben, Brooke, Bijou Phillips, they're all
fast talkers, fast movers. The cameraman, David Ferrara, is a fucking genius. I
couldn't have a conventional cameraman. Caleb Deschanel had a
protégé I liked but then he said, `I'm a little nervous without a
script.' Then I said, `Okay, you won't be shooting it.' "
I wanted to know about Robert Downey Jr., who in The Pickup Artist and
Two Girls and a Guy has been an obvious stand-in for the famously
womanizing Toback. (The first time we met, years ago in Cambridge, our
Casablanca lunch was mostly Toback-in-fever hustling our waitress.) But this
time, Downey plays swishy and passive and comes out at the end. Is that
Toback's tale?
"The story made me look at gay behavior," Toback admits. "I had to look in the
mirror and squint and examine my gay possibilities. Mike Tyson calls Downey a
`cum drinker,' and Downey finally says, `Mike was right! I'm a cum guzzler!'
Downey's got a serious gay self in there. I think there was more than an idle
desire to do this role."
How it came about was cozily buddy-buddy. "We were lying on my hotel bed in LA.
It's a small room. Four a.m. I'm exhausted. Downey: `What do you want me to
play? What if I'm the husband of Brooke Shields?' I say she doesn't have one.
He says, `What if she does? What if I'm the gay husband? In fact, what if I'm
the gay husband who is compulsively cruising?' "
Toback agreed, and that set up Black and White's most explosive scene,
where the effete Downey smooths up to Tyson. The sequence, as usual, was
improvised, and according to Toback, the ex-pugilist didn't know that Downey
was going to say, flirtatiously, that he'd dreamed Tyson was holding him!
"Robert asked, `What if he kills me?' I said, `It's a great way to go
out!' "
Well, the horrified Tyson did slap Downey and choke him. It's all there in
Black and White. Otherwise, Toback indicated, the former champ was a
pleasure to work with. "He's a great guy, a very decent, generous guy. He's
enormously complex. We have compatible senses of humor and many philosophical
discussions. He's obsessed with philosophy -- death, loss of self, the lurking
sense of chaos underneath. As for violent behavior in terms of women, I haven't
seen that side of Mike."
And his other ex-incarcerated actor, the drug-plagued Downey? "What you get
from Robert is that he's living outside of society's laws. He's heroically
oblivious to what is expected of him. The last thing he wants is pity. We're
very, very close, and I've said to him, `When you want to get high, go to
Amsterdam. Treat yourself to a week of indulgence.' That way he could get high
without going to jail."
What about his unlikely casting of Brooke Shields as a Rasta-haired filmmaker
racing through the New York streets with her digital camera, gay husband always
a step behind her? "I felt she was perfect in this part, and she came out of
the closet with a charge! No mama! No Agassi! Her sexuality in the movie is
quite fascinating. She's married to a queen. She wants either a man who
dominates her or a guy she can bend and fuck. She ends up with Elijah Wood,
seven inches shorter, on his toes kissing her. A very passionate tongue
kiss."
And Allan Houston, the Knicks' gentlemanly guard, as the unsure-of-himself
basketballer who becomes willing to throw a game? Toback had thought of Allen
Iverson or Steffan Marbury. They had too much swagger. "Houston definitely took
a different turn in the road. He's more obedient and respectful. He has that in
his breeding. He's only half at home on the basketball court. That's why, in
the movie, he's the one who sinks himself, seduced by temptation."
Finally, what of his big discovery, Bijou Phillips, daughter of the Mamas and
the Papas' John Phillips? "She has everything! She's cute, pretty, a dymano,
hilarious, naturally hysteric and wild. She says what's exactly on her mind all
the time. If your attention isn't on her -- `JIM! JIM! Come over here! I'm not
having any fun!' She's Natasha Wagner but faster and bigger, She's 5'8" and
ready to provoke at any moment. Hip-hop is just one of her many sides."
And Bijou's generation? "For these kids, 14-to-24, they're into fucking and
music, and in a way, race doesn't exist. Race is a divisive, unreal concept."
Toback hopes that Black and White is for them, especially with its
Wu-Tang Clan soundtrack. "It should attract a very strong young hip white
audience, a very strong young hip black audience, also an intellectually
inclined older white audience, not into hip-hop per se, who like the
ambitiousness of the movie, the newness of the movie."
Pauline Kael, a long-time Toback friend and booster, was less than overwhelmed
by parts of his last Two Girls and a Guy, and she told him abruptly,
"You're not going to get away with that ending." At the time of our interview,
he'd stopped talking to her. "At least initially, she could have asked me a
question about it, saying, 'I was with you until there.' "
Bruised, he was bracing himself for hostility to Black and White. "There
will be people shaken by the quick series of aggressive actions, by being
confronted by new and insistent lifestyles, by the black hip-hop guy with the
two white girls finger-fucking each other, in public, casually, in Central
Park. But I'm not interested in a porno movie because there's no point in
making what won't be distributed. It's in the contract: deliver an R! That's
sexual censorship, and it took Eyes Wide Shut to bring to the fore what
every idiot knows.
"I've got a four-hour version of this movie, what I call my Wagnerian cut. But
the release is one hour and 40 minutes. I had to change one shot, though my
actors were totally with it, without discussion."
Yes, the lesbian finger fucking. "Bijou's elbow was sawing away and they said,
`You have eight elbow jerks.' The MPAA. So I took that shot out and replaced it
with just Bijou's finger moving."
No close-up? Toback sighs about a Black and White opportunity missed for
his Columbia Pictures release. "We didn't have a vaginal camera on Kim
Matulova."
Gerald Peary can be reached at gpeary@world.std.com
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