Mark Kermode, Observer film critic 

Maps to the Stars review – David Cronenberg enters the dark heart of Hollywood

A towering performance by Julianne Moore drives the Canadian director’s study of the terrors of Tinseltown, writes Mark Kermode
  
  

Julianne Moore gives a 'magnificently horrendous' performance in Maps to the Stars.
Julianne Moore gives a ‘magnificently horrendous’ performance in Maps to the Stars. Photograph: Allstar Picture Library Photograph: Allstar Picture Library

Films that purport to satirise, examine, or eviscerate the vacuous horrors of Hollywood often end up as fatuously empty and self-involved as their subject. Look at Paul Schrader and Bret Easton Ellis’s pitiful The Canyons, a classic case of people in glass houses merrily throwing bricks at themselves. Good job, then, that perennial outsider David Cronenberg clearly isn’t the least bit dazzled or seduced by the cultural cesspool of his latest movie, a tale of terminal Tinseltown wastrels with the twisted structure of a Greek tragedy and the rictus grin of a freshly poisoned sitcom.

On the contrary, Cronenberg observes the assortment of pestilential players in Bruce Wagner’s self-reflexive script with characteristic detachment, like a scientist watching bacteria multiplying in a Petri dish. The symptoms may be cultural rather than physical, but as with early films such as Rabid and Shivers, Cronenberg’s primary response to the display of disease is one of wry detachment – fascination rather than infatuation.

Mia Wasikowska stars as burn-scarred Agatha, returning to the alienating womb of California after a lengthy period of enforced separation. Via the vagaries of social networking (a very Cronenbergian viral malaise), Agatha lands a job as “chore whore” for fading actress Havana Segrand (Julianne Moore, looking like Lindsay Lohan’s wicked stepsister) whose broiling neuroses are being treated by self-help media quack Dr Stafford Weiss (John Cusack). Havana longs to land the lead role in a remake of a film that originally starred her mother (Sarah Gadon), a Hollywood legend who died in a fire and who now haunts her embittered, twisted daughter. Meanwhile, Bieberesque brat Benjie Weiss (Evan Bird) finds his star-crossed path inevitably intertwined with that of Agatha despite the best efforts of his mother, Cristina (Olivia Williams), to preserve and exploit the precocious monster whom she and her charlatan husband have spawned.

If The Brood (an early body-horror gem starring Samantha Eggar) was Cronenberg’s Kramer vs Kramer, then Maps is his Sunset Boulevard, with sprinklings of Chinatown, Beyond the Valley of the Dolls and Mommie Dearest thrown in for good measure. At the centre of it all is Moore, magnificently horrendous as the needy-greedy Havana, wallowing in the amniotic fluid of her own narcissistic self-loathing – a sick, siren-like performance of parasitic perfection. There’s something of Eggar’s Nola Carveth in Moore’s Gorgon-like creation; watching Havana sitting in the lotus position, screaming in fury at the world, you half expect her to sprout boils from which the ravenous children of her rage will spill to wreak bloody havoc in the Hollywood hills.There’s more than a hint of The Brood’s “Psychoplasmics”, too, in Dr Weiss’s hands-on therapy, which physicalises Havana’s fury with no discernible benefit beyond the financial; the genre and shape of rage may have changed, but Cronenberg’s core psychodramatic concerns remain a constant.

After the suffocating sterility of Cosmopolis and the stagey psychoanalysis of A Dangerous Method, Maps to the Stars finds Cronenberg returning to the kind of movie-making that prompts physical response, in this case laughter, the nervous sibling of horror. To say that this is Cronenberg’s funniest film sounds like damning it with faint praise, but anyone who tittered in terror at the spectacle of the exploding head in Scanners will recognise the queasy laugh/scream dilemma provoked by the sight of Havana dancing on the graves of children in a fit of ecstatic, psychotic celebration. Moore deserves an Oscar for her performance, although considering the nefarious use to which Cronenberg’s own Genie statuette (for Spider) is put to use in this film, judges may run shy of handing the makers of Maps to the Stars any sharp, heavy objects.

Against the radioactive toxicity of Moore’s performance it’s hard for anyone to hold their own, but Wasikowska provides ice-cool counterpoint to Moore’s sweltering self-regard, Agatha’s quirky composure covering deep wellsprings of barely contained chaos. Williams, too, is terrific as the steely stage mom who talks percentage points and urine tests over breakfast with her cash-cow progeny, while Robert Pattinson keeps things nicely underplayed as the dorky chauffeur (Wagner drove and wrote when he first came to Hollywood) whose supporting role puts a sly spin on his limo-riding star turn in Cosmopolis – this time, he’s in the driver’s seat.

Beneath the jet-black humour there is real horror – a rampant existential panic that eats away at the lives of the rich and famous, conjuring visions of ghosts from the empty spaces where their souls should be, infecting those who feed upon them and who are desperate to share their disease. Along with Videodrome, which playfully wondered whether movies really could make you sick, I was reminded at times of David’s son Brandon Cronenberg’s underrated Antiviral, in which fans pay huge sums to contract their idols’ cold sores – and worse. Anyone satirising Hollywood runs the risk of such infection, but surrounded with his usual team of collaborators (cinematographer Peter Suschitzky, composer Howard Shore etc), the Canadian Cronenberg maintains a protective barrier between himself and his subject – slicing into its body like a surgeon with a scalpel, laying bare the great malignancy that lurks beneath its pallid, ghastly skin.

• Comments have been reopened to time with this film’s Australian release

 

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