About five years ago I made
my way over to Montana Street in Santa Monica to attend a screening of Paul
Verhoeven’s magnificently loopy adaptation of Robert Heinlein’s Starship Troopers at the Aero Theater in
Santa Monica. The screening was a star-studded affair, featuring Verhoeven in
an on-stage with Ed Neumeier, the film’s screenwriter, and a couple of the
other artists and craftsmen who were involved in the making of the film. (They
were stars to the packed house anyway, even though I can’t for the life of me
remember who comprised the panel.) Before the screening, Verhoeven set up shop
to sign copies of his recently published book, the somewhat controversial Jesus of Nazareth, a historical account
of Jesus’ life written with matter-of-fact detail and iconoclasm from Verhoeven’s
singular perspective as a member of the group of biblical scholars known
collectively as the Jesus Seminar.
Of course I had to get a
copy of that, and since he was
signing ones purchased on site I thought, well, an autograph would be nice,
yes? But the lineup of film nerds at Verhoeven’s table (of which I was certainly one) had more than
just copies of the book in hand to sign— they came bearing posters, record albums,
CDs and of course DVDs, all related to the director’s prodigious (mostly
American) film output and all wanting for Verhoeven’s signature in Sharpie. I
too took advantage of the opportunity. When my turn came, he signed Jesus of Nazareth, but I also presented him with my copy of the Showgirls 15th Anniversary Edition
Blu-ray and asked him if he would autograph it as well. He enthusiastically
agreed, and as he began scratching out his name on the cover I told him that of
all the movies of his which I admired, I thought Showgirls was his very best. He looked up, a mischievous twinkle in
his eye, leaned in to me as if he were about to impart a scandalous secret,
laughed and said, "So do I!"
It’s an admission that
certainly dovetails with his attitude toward the film as expressed in an interview for the current issue of Rolling Stone in which he describes the impetus behind the making of the film,
which he considers “perfect” and “the most elegant movie I’ve ever done,” as
well as the critical crucifixion that awaited not only Verhoeven and
screenwriter Joe Ezsterhas, but especially star Elizabeth Berkeley, and the
responsibility he accepts for guiding her performance, which was precisely the
one he claims he wanted:
“People have, of course, criticized her for being over-the-top in her performance. Most of that comes from me. I pushed it in that direction. Good or not good, I was the one who asked her to exaggerate everything — every move — because that was the element of style that I thought would work for the movie.”
“People have, of course, criticized her for being over-the-top in her performance. Most of that comes from me. I pushed it in that direction. Good or not good, I was the one who asked her to exaggerate everything — every move — because that was the element of style that I thought would work for the movie.”
The movie, of course, is
perceived as being heavily stylized. Well, Verhoeven’s not having any of that:
“I asked David Stewart of the Eurythmics, who was our
composer for the film, to write the music for the big Vegas shows in a kind of
banal way, because I was thinking an American audience seeing a show called 'a musical' was probably expecting these numbers to be written by
Leonard Bernstein and choreographed by Jerome Robbins. So I didn't do that. I
wanted to push the fact that it was all not-so-good stuff. I won't say ‘shit,’
but that's what it would be. It was basically over-the-top Vegas. And I'm
responsible for a lot of those things. I always felt that it was
what you might call a hyperbolic approach to filmmaking. Yes, it was over the
top. And that was on purpose. The environments were very flashy. There
were too many lights, too many idiotic things, and too much Vegas — not only in
the surroundings, but 'Vegas' in the way the people behaved, in the
dialogue, in the acting. As for the finished product: I thought it was perfect.
Otherwise I would have changed it.”
The Rolling Stone piece is timed as a commemoration of the movie’s
release 20 years ago, on September 22, 1995, and, of course, as a tribute to its
longevity— though it was perceived initially as a box-office failure and one of
the most significant nails in the coffin of the NC-17 rating as a viable
alternative to the stigma of porn associated with the “X,” the movie has been a
huge hit on home video, has become a cult midnight movie attraction and even
spawned a stage musical.
Nine and a half years
ago, a group of bloggers, myself included, gathered on January 11, 2006 in the
vapors of the newly coined blogosphere to celebrate the 10th
anniversary of the movie’s release in Verhoeven’s home country of Holland. It
was one of the first blogathons in the heady early days of what some of us like
to think of as Movie Blogging’s Golden Age, and we had a great time revisiting
and discussing Verhoeven’s controversial epic. I was particularly looking
forward to seeing it again, because I hadn’t much liked it when I first saw it
some two years after its theatrical run, on that grand old format so beloved by
movie geeks, the laserdisc. And I was very surprised by what I found, on the
screen in front of me, and in my own reaction to it, when the movie finally
began to unfold for me again.
What follows is the article I posted on January
11, 2006, originally titled "The Glorious Excess of Showgirls," here reprinted with only slight cosmetic modifications.
It’s a movie which has been misunderstood, avoided, dismissed and derided, and yet it has
blazed forth beyond its reputation with a gaudy, hyperbolic energy completely appropriate for its
gaudy, hyperbolic subject. Happy 20th birthday, Nomi Malone and
company! Here’s to a continued revision of opinion that will bring Showgirls ever more of the respect befitting
a glittery, glorious, grotesque and genuinely American original.
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One of the major bonuses of
living in the DVD/home theater age is the relative ease of revisiting films
from our past which we remember with fondness, or sometimes more accurately,
those for which we have fondness that we don’t remember so well. It’s a
chance to confirm and re-experience what it is about the film we loved so much
in the beginning, and see what time has added to that experience. And, of
course, sometimes it’s an exercise in demonstrating how time and the events of
our own lives will serve to subtract from a film’s overall effect and its hold
on our sensibilities.
But in the recent past I’ve begun to discover that, opposed to reapproaching beloved films, it’s often even more interesting and rewarding to go back and have a look, divorced as one can render oneself from the attendant hype generated by the distributing studio and filmmakers, as well as the ossified consensus (which only grows more rigid with time) arrived at by the entertainment press and even the general critical community, at a film which one felt pretty strongly about in the negative upon the first (perhaps only) viewing.
But in the recent past I’ve begun to discover that, opposed to reapproaching beloved films, it’s often even more interesting and rewarding to go back and have a look, divorced as one can render oneself from the attendant hype generated by the distributing studio and filmmakers, as well as the ossified consensus (which only grows more rigid with time) arrived at by the entertainment press and even the general critical community, at a film which one felt pretty strongly about in the negative upon the first (perhaps only) viewing.
I recently took up a challenge from a fellow writer whom I respect who has always loved Body Double, a
film by a director (Brian De Palma) whom we both admire which I had always
found repellent, ill-advised and deficient, both from a narrative and visual
standpoint, given the filmmaker’s usually high standards. Revisiting the movie,
I still found it largely ill-advised and lacking in both narrative and visual
consistency, but also not nearly the misogynistic crime it seemed in 1985. My
admiration for Body Double hadn’t increased significantly, but it was a
valuable opportunity to test my own sense of how a movie “changes” in one’s
mind over the years.
In fact, I suppose it’s not all that uncommon to revisit a reviled movie and have one’s initial reactions confirmed. And I’m never too surprised, whenever I take another look at a beloved film from my past, if it either holds up well against my memory, or even if it is revealed as less than what I once thought, as merely an ethereal byproduct of my nostalgic imagination or fond recollections of the time and place in which I first took it in, or colored by thought processes that have been perforated and exposed by the passage of time.
In fact, I suppose it’s not all that uncommon to revisit a reviled movie and have one’s initial reactions confirmed. And I’m never too surprised, whenever I take another look at a beloved film from my past, if it either holds up well against my memory, or even if it is revealed as less than what I once thought, as merely an ethereal byproduct of my nostalgic imagination or fond recollections of the time and place in which I first took it in, or colored by thought processes that have been perforated and exposed by the passage of time.
The rarest circumstance, however, at least in my experience, is one in which I
choose to revisit a movie that I hated upon first viewing, and then see it
again some years later, only to have my eyes opened, my blinders stripped away,
in order to discover the terrific movie that was there all along. The most
obvious occurrence of this phenomenon in my moviegoing life was my complete
turnaround on Nashville, a film I hated (and one which I was not
equipped to comprehend) when I saw it at the tender age of 16. A couple of
viewings later, during my university days, and Nashville quickly became
my favorite film, one which I saw three times in one day my senior year of
college, one which has held that “favorite film” status for 26 years.
But that experience with Nashville could be chalked up to simple immaturity. How often does it happen that you revisit a film by which you were initially repulsed as an adult, your critical faculties presumably alive and engaged and ready for bear, only to find out that you were completely and utterly wrong, that you were either a victim of or a willing participant in a smothering groupthink that seeped into your mind, forming unshakable preconceptions and preventing you from seeing the movie that was right in front of your eyes?
Most people, I’d wager, who comprised the meager audiences that turned out in theaters for Showgirls when it was first released in the U.S. in September of 1995, were fully aware of all the brouhaha over the NC-17 rating, director Paul Verhoeven’s previously announced intentions regarding the project (something about fully erect penises on view—or was that Basic Instinct?—and a no-holds-barred look at Vegas show life), and screenwriter Joe Eszterhas’s reputation as an overpaid sleazemeister, and by the time the first print actually screened the film’s early critical reputation as a notorious bomb, a reeker on the order of Myra Breckenridge or Plan Nine From Outer Space-- a candidate, in other words, for Worst Movie Ever—became generally accepted as fact.
But that experience with Nashville could be chalked up to simple immaturity. How often does it happen that you revisit a film by which you were initially repulsed as an adult, your critical faculties presumably alive and engaged and ready for bear, only to find out that you were completely and utterly wrong, that you were either a victim of or a willing participant in a smothering groupthink that seeped into your mind, forming unshakable preconceptions and preventing you from seeing the movie that was right in front of your eyes?
Most people, I’d wager, who comprised the meager audiences that turned out in theaters for Showgirls when it was first released in the U.S. in September of 1995, were fully aware of all the brouhaha over the NC-17 rating, director Paul Verhoeven’s previously announced intentions regarding the project (something about fully erect penises on view—or was that Basic Instinct?—and a no-holds-barred look at Vegas show life), and screenwriter Joe Eszterhas’s reputation as an overpaid sleazemeister, and by the time the first print actually screened the film’s early critical reputation as a notorious bomb, a reeker on the order of Myra Breckenridge or Plan Nine From Outer Space-- a candidate, in other words, for Worst Movie Ever—became generally accepted as fact.
(After its U.S. debut, it trickled out all over the world over the next few months, into January 1996—in fact, on this very day, 10 years ago, it made its debut in Verhoeven’s homeland The Netherlands, by which time negative reaction to the film had become a toxic fog bank of conventional wisdom.
I didn’t see it myself until it arrived on laserdisc, sometime in 1996. By then
that fog bank was mighty thick, and my initial reaction wasn’t so much
repulsion as boredom. Verhoeven had made a movie that was as packed with nudity
as I’d ever seen, but rather than getting me excited about all that flesh
constantly on display, Showgirls had succeeded, through sheer visual
repetition and matter-of-fact presentation, in numbing me to its presence. I was
repulsed, however, by the berserk, feral presence of Elizabeth Berkley, or more
accurately by the use to which she was put—completely unmodulated, in-your-face
attitude and (surprising to me) an entrenched hostility shoved front and center
within that big Panavision frame. (That rape scene, and the subsequent violent
reprisal it inspires, was no pretty picture either.)
Of course, I saw
Verhoeven’s Vegas as a tawdry condemnation of the values of show business and,
by extension, American taste, and I’ll admit I got my back up about someone
from another country, to whom America had been quite generous, from a career
and financial standpoint, making such a bold and corrosive “statement” about
the tackiness and bad taste of the entire nation, especially when the statement
was apparently being made by Verhoeven and Eszterhas, two men never known for
subtlety and nuance. (At least Verhoeven made his movie in America-- right, Mr.
Von Trier?)
I had been quite comfortable ignoring Showgirls after that screening,
relatively assured that my reaction, although strong, was justified. Then, in
March of 2004, Charles Taylor, at the time the senior film critic for Salon,
published an appreciation of the film (unattached, as far as I’m aware, to any DVD release or other Showgirls-themed
event that would have sparked a synergistic impulse in his editor’s mind) that,
despite my initial insistence on eyeball-rolling, resisted my condescension
though the sheer clarity of his response and argument for the film. His
argument was reasoned, reasonably pitched, and convincing. But how convincing
would it be after having actually watched the film a second time?
Nearly two years after Taylor’s piece, which pricked the skin of my interest in revisiting Showgirls, I got an invitation to write a piece which would stand as a commemoration of the 10-year anniversary of the movie’s Netherlands release date (January 11, 2006), a commemoration intended to extend over as many blog sites as wished to participate. There was no stipulation as to the attitude of the piece, negative or positive; it only had to be about Verhoeven and Estzerhas’s notorious spectacle. I printed out Taylor’s article, vowed not to read it again until after I’d seen the movie, settled in on my couch a couple of evenings ago, at the end of a very long day, and invited Showgirls into my home theater one more time.
What an embarrassment. And I’m not talking about the movie. I’m talking about having to face up to perhaps my most egregious misread of a movie since dismissing Nashville. Showgirls turns out not to be a work of found comedy, of two sleaze merchants pitching an earnest drama and missing the plate by a mile, but an uninhibited melodrama that dares to not condescend to its subject matter—the backstage milieu of Las Vegas, where sex (or at least nudity and the trappings of sex) are ritualized (or choreographed into routine) and funneled into gaudy stage productions. I really wonder how many of the people who have made a point of slamming Showgirls over the past 10 years would think nothing of plunking down big dollars for a Vegas weekend, perhaps one centered around a “classy” topless show like “Goddess” (the show that makes Berkley’s Nomi Malone a star), take the whole package at face value and enjoy the hell out of themselves. Well, by modeling their story on the backstage musicals of the ‘40s (Brian Darr over at Hell on Frisco Bay provides some excellent context for those jumping-off points in his Showgirls entry), as well as inverting All About Eve and telling their tale of show business back-stabbing and rivalry not from Margo Channing’s perspective, but from the conniving Eve’s, the filmmakers do just that—they provide a narrative context in which to observe the everyday goings-on in the world of these splashy nightclub productions, through which Nomi, the film’s protagonist, attempts to outrun her mysterious past and redefine herself.
But in the process, Verhoeven thankfully forgets to skimp on the vulgar amusements that are one of the defining elements of Las Vegas itself, the neon buzz that fuels Nomi’s frenetic dancing, her relentless ambition, and he doesn’t hold that ambition to anyone’s standard but Nomi’s. As Taylor observes, Verhoeven doesn’t hold her feet to the fire either and insist, per the familiar formula of such tales, that she pay for her ambition and misdeeds. Indeed, Showgirls recognizes that Las Vegas allows Nomi to become, through her ascendance to stardom within this strange show business microcosm, exactly who she seems destined to become, and Verhoeven assures, by acknowledging the charge, the dirty thrill she gets from performing and becoming a part of that world, that any value judgments placed on that ascension will come from the audience, not from him.
Nearly two years after Taylor’s piece, which pricked the skin of my interest in revisiting Showgirls, I got an invitation to write a piece which would stand as a commemoration of the 10-year anniversary of the movie’s Netherlands release date (January 11, 2006), a commemoration intended to extend over as many blog sites as wished to participate. There was no stipulation as to the attitude of the piece, negative or positive; it only had to be about Verhoeven and Estzerhas’s notorious spectacle. I printed out Taylor’s article, vowed not to read it again until after I’d seen the movie, settled in on my couch a couple of evenings ago, at the end of a very long day, and invited Showgirls into my home theater one more time.
What an embarrassment. And I’m not talking about the movie. I’m talking about having to face up to perhaps my most egregious misread of a movie since dismissing Nashville. Showgirls turns out not to be a work of found comedy, of two sleaze merchants pitching an earnest drama and missing the plate by a mile, but an uninhibited melodrama that dares to not condescend to its subject matter—the backstage milieu of Las Vegas, where sex (or at least nudity and the trappings of sex) are ritualized (or choreographed into routine) and funneled into gaudy stage productions. I really wonder how many of the people who have made a point of slamming Showgirls over the past 10 years would think nothing of plunking down big dollars for a Vegas weekend, perhaps one centered around a “classy” topless show like “Goddess” (the show that makes Berkley’s Nomi Malone a star), take the whole package at face value and enjoy the hell out of themselves. Well, by modeling their story on the backstage musicals of the ‘40s (Brian Darr over at Hell on Frisco Bay provides some excellent context for those jumping-off points in his Showgirls entry), as well as inverting All About Eve and telling their tale of show business back-stabbing and rivalry not from Margo Channing’s perspective, but from the conniving Eve’s, the filmmakers do just that—they provide a narrative context in which to observe the everyday goings-on in the world of these splashy nightclub productions, through which Nomi, the film’s protagonist, attempts to outrun her mysterious past and redefine herself.
But in the process, Verhoeven thankfully forgets to skimp on the vulgar amusements that are one of the defining elements of Las Vegas itself, the neon buzz that fuels Nomi’s frenetic dancing, her relentless ambition, and he doesn’t hold that ambition to anyone’s standard but Nomi’s. As Taylor observes, Verhoeven doesn’t hold her feet to the fire either and insist, per the familiar formula of such tales, that she pay for her ambition and misdeeds. Indeed, Showgirls recognizes that Las Vegas allows Nomi to become, through her ascendance to stardom within this strange show business microcosm, exactly who she seems destined to become, and Verhoeven assures, by acknowledging the charge, the dirty thrill she gets from performing and becoming a part of that world, that any value judgments placed on that ascension will come from the audience, not from him.
Unlike my initial reaction to Showgirls, I came away from my most recent brush with the film thinking that Verhoeven is not condemning Las Vegas or Americans for reveling in bad taste. On the contrary, he’s reveling in it himself, drawing parallels between himself, as a participant in American show business, and the characters on screen, and he’s not making any excuses for anyone’s behavior. But he’s doing so in a much less obvious way than, say, John Waters has in the past, and therefore he runs the risk of being dismissed as a simple vulgarian or a crude camp satirist. I don’t think he’s exclusively either, though to suggest that Verhoeven here is not vulgar or exhibiting a satiric sensibility would be to, again, miss the point. In Showgirls, Verhoeven the visual stylist, with only the slightest exaggeration, heightens the melodrama of Eszterhas’ script with gleeful sexuality (and vulgarity) and deranged life by presenting Vegas as the new model microcosm of the American dream, and Nomi as one of its prime dreamers, and encouraging us to experience the city and its milieu through those wide brown orbs hidden, as they almost always are, behind glitter-encrusted eyelids.
Pointedly, not one single close-up of Nomi
or any of the other women in full production regalia allows us to back off of
the extremity of the costumes and makeup—in this movie, you see just how
exaggerated, how scary, and yet at the same time how sexy these women can look
from five feet away in sparkling getups designed to dazzle the back row of the
theater. At times Berkeley’s overreaching lipstick and pancake makeup
applications make her resemble nothing less than a slimmed-down R. Crumb
cartoon come to life, or a Nick Park creation with pumps and a G-string.
Seen through Nomi’s eyes it makes sense that nudity and sexuality would be seen as everyday, that it would be made routine, less than special, even numbing. Verhoeven and Esterzhas, despite what you may have heard, aren’t too interested in fueling male fantasies much beyond the lap dance Nomi gives to Kyle MacLachlan’s Zach Carey, and Nomi most certainly isn’t. Showgirls is far more concerned with tracking how this hostile girl with a hair-trigger temper sees the world in which she’s chosen to navigate—she attacks everything from dancing to eating fast food to having sex with the same violent, clipped, unfocused energy, and she has very little patience with anyone who doesn’t, can’t, or won’t play with the same energy. (Her impersonation of a boat propeller during the infamous swimming pool sex scene with MacLachlan is ridiculous, but intentionally so, a parody of porn excess.)
Seen through Nomi’s eyes it makes sense that nudity and sexuality would be seen as everyday, that it would be made routine, less than special, even numbing. Verhoeven and Esterzhas, despite what you may have heard, aren’t too interested in fueling male fantasies much beyond the lap dance Nomi gives to Kyle MacLachlan’s Zach Carey, and Nomi most certainly isn’t. Showgirls is far more concerned with tracking how this hostile girl with a hair-trigger temper sees the world in which she’s chosen to navigate—she attacks everything from dancing to eating fast food to having sex with the same violent, clipped, unfocused energy, and she has very little patience with anyone who doesn’t, can’t, or won’t play with the same energy. (Her impersonation of a boat propeller during the infamous swimming pool sex scene with MacLachlan is ridiculous, but intentionally so, a parody of porn excess.)
She even moves up
the ladder into the top spot on the “Goddess” show by literally pushing its
star, Cristal Collins (Gina Gershon), down a flight of stairs. Yet again,
Charles Taylor correctly observes that she’s never punished for her
transgressions because they are recognized as part and parcel of survival in
the movie’s brutalizing show business world—Cristal herself is revealed to be
every bit the schemer Nomi is by her hospital bed confession (and subsequent
reconciliation with Nomi, her “friendly” archenemy) that she grabbed the
spotlight for herself in exactly the same way Nomi has.
Nomi’s past, however, and her attempts to closet it, add an extra element of
uncertainty about her which works in the movie’s favor and provides a little
more context for her seemingly relentless hostility. At one point Carey dangles
her criminal record in her face—prostitution, possession of narcotics, assault
with a deadly weapon—and I thought to myself, “And that’s just what she got caught
doing!” As played by Berkley, Nomi comes across as potentially homicidal at
times, so much so that when she puts the stiletto heel to craven pop star
Andrew Carver (William Shockley) after he facilitates and participates in the
gang rape of her best friend, Molly (Gina Ravera) I had no trouble believing
that, if she didn’t feel she couldn’t escape the charges, she’d have no problem
putting one through this guy’s eyeball and being done with it.
Too bad Elizabeth Berkley never had the opportunity to dispatch some of her harsher critics in the same way. She, of course, ended up taking the brunt of the abuse for the box office (and perceived artistic) failure of Showgirls, and her brash, unseasoned performance, which is exactly what the movie calls for, however you feel about the level of rage with which she imbues the character, was an all-too-easy target. Any reasonable viewer ought to be able to see that Verhoeven saw the raw ambition in her that was perfectly realized in Nomi, and that Taylor probably rightly suggests was a source of inspiration, and fear, for Berkeley herself. Why wouldn’t an actress, known mostly for a supporting role on a kids’ TV comedy (Saved by the Bell), who suddenly found herself the focal point of a big budget (but at $40 million, not that big) movie that was itself being held up as the litmus test for the success or failure of the NC-17 rating, feel a little pressure? Fair enough. But heaping blame squarely on her shoulders for what became the Showgirls debacle seems patently unfair, based on what’s on screen, especially when what’s on screen has itself been pretty shamefully misjudged from the word “go.” If Showgirls ever got as fair a shake upon its initial release as it is getting today, through the network of bloggers who are attempting to reshape opinion, frame honest reconsideration in some small way by singing its praises, or perhaps even continue the negative appraisals in the clear light of day, then we probably wouldn’t be gathering forces like this to celebrate the existence of one of modern cinema’s most (unjustly) reviled totems of excess.
I’m really glad Showgirls is out there. I’m glad for Charles Taylor standing up for it from the beginning, and for writing a terrific piece that led me to my own reappraisal of the movie. I’m exceedingly glad to have been invited to participate in this forum (even though my entry is a tad late in the day). And I hope that by reading this, or one of the many great pieces that are available on line through this celebration, that someone else might at least be able to take another look, with fresh eyes, without the pressure of insistent and official opinion ringing in their ears, at a genuinely terrific movie that has been cloaked in ignominy and derision for 10 years.
Too bad Elizabeth Berkley never had the opportunity to dispatch some of her harsher critics in the same way. She, of course, ended up taking the brunt of the abuse for the box office (and perceived artistic) failure of Showgirls, and her brash, unseasoned performance, which is exactly what the movie calls for, however you feel about the level of rage with which she imbues the character, was an all-too-easy target. Any reasonable viewer ought to be able to see that Verhoeven saw the raw ambition in her that was perfectly realized in Nomi, and that Taylor probably rightly suggests was a source of inspiration, and fear, for Berkeley herself. Why wouldn’t an actress, known mostly for a supporting role on a kids’ TV comedy (Saved by the Bell), who suddenly found herself the focal point of a big budget (but at $40 million, not that big) movie that was itself being held up as the litmus test for the success or failure of the NC-17 rating, feel a little pressure? Fair enough. But heaping blame squarely on her shoulders for what became the Showgirls debacle seems patently unfair, based on what’s on screen, especially when what’s on screen has itself been pretty shamefully misjudged from the word “go.” If Showgirls ever got as fair a shake upon its initial release as it is getting today, through the network of bloggers who are attempting to reshape opinion, frame honest reconsideration in some small way by singing its praises, or perhaps even continue the negative appraisals in the clear light of day, then we probably wouldn’t be gathering forces like this to celebrate the existence of one of modern cinema’s most (unjustly) reviled totems of excess.
I’m really glad Showgirls is out there. I’m glad for Charles Taylor standing up for it from the beginning, and for writing a terrific piece that led me to my own reappraisal of the movie. I’m exceedingly glad to have been invited to participate in this forum (even though my entry is a tad late in the day). And I hope that by reading this, or one of the many great pieces that are available on line through this celebration, that someone else might at least be able to take another look, with fresh eyes, without the pressure of insistent and official opinion ringing in their ears, at a genuinely terrific movie that has been cloaked in ignominy and derision for 10 years.
As Eric Henderson stated in his outstanding article about the film which headed up the Showgirls
tribute blogathon (and for which I cannot find a current link), “I'd probably be a lot more worried about the possibility
that I'm overselling Showgirls if it wasn't already patently clear that
most people have already closed themselves off to the pleasures the film has to
offer.” In that spirit, I invite you to check out Showgirls again on
DVD, and if you’re like me and you didn’t before, do it this time with eyes
wide open. You might not like what you see, but then again you might.
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