Within the opening moments of Todd Haynes’s Might December, scandalous tabloid subject-turned-homemaker Gracie (Julianne Moore) opens a fridge, dramatically accompanied by a sudden piano sting and an ominous digital camera zoom.
The twist? They won’t have sufficient sizzling canine for his or her upcoming cookout.
If that strikes you as humorous, you’re not alone. It is a movie that reportedly had audiences laughing out loud throughout its debut, a narrative the New York Instances referred to as “essentially the most enjoyable movie” at Cannes 2023. And but, it’s additionally a movie based mostly on the horrifying real-life story of a sexual predator and her baby sufferer.
Viewers have been debating since its December 1 platform launch. Is it camp? Is it alleged to be humorous? Is Natalie Portman a nasty actor or is she simply superb at enjoying a nasty one?
These are all attention-grabbing questions to think about, however they arguably obscure the largest query of all: What does it imply that audiences are laughing at a narrative as darkish as this one — and does that say extra concerning the movie or its viewers? Is Might December critiquing the exploitative nature of media, or is it an instance of the very factor it seeks to deconstruct?
[Note: This review contains spoilers.]
Might December adapts a real-life tabloid scandal
Might December fictionalizes the story of Mary Kay Letourneau and Vili Fualaau. The pair met when she was a instructor and he was in second grade. After years of plying Fualaau with presents and particular consideration, Letourneau turned pregnant by Fualaau when he was simply 13. Convicted of rape, she was launched after simply three months however instantly violated parole to turn out to be pregnant with Fualaau’s second baby. In 2005, after serving a seven-year sentence throughout which she continued her relationship with Fualaau, Letourneau married him. The couple separated in 2019, shortly earlier than Letourneau’s demise from most cancers.
This crime can be correctly considered right this moment as that of a kid predator who efficiently spent years grooming her goal. Within the ’90s, nonetheless, the media framed it as a star-crossed love story, permitting Letourneau to direct the narrative, a lot in order that even Fualaau’s circle of relatives defended her, insisting the pair have been in love and that Fualaau was “extraordinarily mature” for his age.
The movie picks up the place our cultural reminiscence leaves off. The fictional Gracie and her sufferer, Joe Yoo (Charles Melton), have been collectively 24 years. Nonetheless dwelling in Savannah, Georgia, the place the scandal occurred, they’re getting ready for the commencement day of their youthful daughter and son. Into this dynamic saunters a fictional movie star, Elizabeth (Natalie Portman). However Elizabeth, who’s making an attempt to get to know Gracie to be able to play her for an upcoming movie adaptation, isn’t an goal observer.
Haynes’s directorial selections make it extraordinarily clear that this relationship was removed from rosy, indicting not simply Letourneau however the onlookers, too — the tabloid media who hyped the story as a romance, the Hollywood machine that made it the stuff of Lifetime film lore, and the real-life audiences who ate it up. To do this, he makes use of a tonal strategy that means his three fundamental characters are in three completely different films throughout the film, each clashing with the opposite.
Might December makes use of clashing views to maintain us discomfited
Gracie is inside a film about star-crossed soulmates who discover one another in opposition to all odds — a film the place she is the hero and the entire world is rooting for her. The new canine scene is our first inform that Gracie’s world is a delusion. It’s the type of overly dramatic stinger we’d discover in a ’90s made-for-TV film, utilized to one thing vapid. In Gracie’s narcissistic standpoint, nonetheless, little issues turn out to be magnified. At this time, her tightly managed world may very well be disrupted by lacking sizzling canine; tomorrow, it may very well be one thing a lot worse.
Her lawyer reveals to Elizabeth at one level that Gracie’s pals are all Norma Desmonding her — humoring her makes an attempt to set herself up as a baker by ordering truffles they don’t eat, simply to offer her one thing to do. Gracie clings to this imaginative and prescient of herself; the smallest disturbance leaves her sobbing, determined for consolation from Joe. She depends on him for all the pieces, and he shoulders all the pieces from emotional help to parenting duties.
But Joe, very like Fualaau towards the tip of his relationship with Letourneau, undergoes an awakening through the movie. Over a collection of heartbreaking moments superbly acted by Melton, we see him slowly come to know what the remainder of us already do: He was a sufferer, not a prepared participant, within the “love story” deliberate out for him by Letourneau. In a single devastating scene, he watches his son smoke a joint with a glance of palpable craving, reminding viewers that he by no means received the prospect to do one thing so mundane as a teen as a result of he was robbed of a traditional adolescence.
Of our three completely different narratives, solely Joe’s is an correct reflection of actuality. That actuality is filled with troubling battle; Joe’s devastation at his misplaced childhood mixes with delight in and love for his youngsters. He strikes by the movie with quiet take care of his kids, for Gracie, for the butterflies he’s been nursing, serving to defend them till they, like his personal kids, can depart their cocoons and fly away.
As he begins to grasp his scenario, Joe seeks assist and understanding from Elizabeth; later, he unsuccessfully pleads for assist from Gracie herself. However any hope that Elizabeth could be a ethical arbiter right here rapidly dies. As an alternative, throughout the tableau of views on Gracie’s crime, she represents the tabloid view, one which sees the “Might-December romance” as not solely surprising however titillating — finally erotic relatively than harmful. She reminds us all through that in actuality, Vili Fualaau was a sufferer, not simply of Letourneau, however of a media machine and a society that was fast to sexualize him.
As soon as we perceive this, Portman’s efficiency turns into something however phoned-in. She turns into the important thing to unlocking the entire film.
Portman’s efficiency is essential to understanding Haynes’s venture
If this have been a typical cautionary story, Portman’s character can be the automobile for the viewers’s ethical outrage — the character we’re allowed to narrate to and empathize with who serves as our tour information by the distorted panorama of Gracie and Joe’s relationship.
However Elizabeth winds up aiding and abetting the distortion. Portman performs her like an ingenue, a starlet who’s nonetheless in her starlet mode, though on the planet of the movie, she’s an trade veteran of 36 — the identical age Gracie was when her relationship with Joe got here to gentle.
Over the course of the movie, she falls for the fantasy of turning into Gracie. She smiles flirtatiously at teen boys. She will get misplaced in a wildly inappropriate description of filming intercourse to a bunch of excessive schoolers. Later, she pantomimes intercourse on the literal scene of the crime — within the pet store stockroom the place Gracie and Joe have been finally caught.
In a single charged scene, she permits Gracie to do her make-up and reacts to their intimacy with a homoerotic mixture of repulsion and elation. In the end, she has intercourse with Joe — then, lastly, absolutely transforms into the older seductress by performing certainly one of Gracie’s love letters as a monologue.
The extra she is drawn into this model of the story, the extra callous Elizabeth turns into. After viewing footage of 13-year-olds auditioning for the function of Joe within the film she’s in, she complains to the director that they aren’t “horny sufficient.” When Joe angrily insists to her that his life isn’t a narrative, she says calmly, “There’s no must get so labored up about it” — precisely the type of factor Gracie herself may say. She turns into absolutely swept up in a narrative that’s all about her and her repressed sexual wishes coming to the fore.
The problem audiences have had in parsing what Portman is doing reveals simply how good her efficiency is: She’s so plausible that not everybody believes she’s appearing. (Portman first championed the script to Haynes, so it’s possible that she was fascinated about the layered dynamics at play right here lengthy earlier than anybody else.)
Our pissed off expectations of Portman’s function are additionally tied to confusion over the movie itself. With two divas every getting carried away with the thought of themselves because the hero of a fantastical (however in truth disintegrating) love story, it’s straightforward to see how claims have arisen that Might December is a piece of camp. It doesn’t assist that Haynes has a penchant for lush, indulgent dramas (Velvet Goldmine, Carol) that typically nudge the campy line between melodrama and farce.
So, to essentially perceive Might December, we’ve to grasp the methods during which it may very well be camp — however finally isn’t.
Might December isn’t camp, however fascinated about it by the lens of camp is helpful
Camp is what occurs when societal expectations collide with a personality or a persona who can’t carry out these expectations convincingly. As an alternative, their try at efficiency unwittingly reveals and magnifies the artifice of these expectations. Camp is carefully associated to queer id and efficiency, which expose the artifice of heteronormativity. Gender and sexual deviance of every kind are likewise camp-adjacent as a result of they usually reveal how absurd the mechanics of repression may be.
In Gracie’s case, she is a real sexual deviant who’s deeply invested in adhering to societal guidelines. They assist validate her model of the narrative. However as a result of she’s a real deviant, finally unable to carry out normative social habits, she breaks the phantasm of normalcy in ways in which border on hysterical.
An ideal instance of that is the second Gracie gushes to Elizabeth a few card Joe gave her years earlier, that includes a banal love notice. Then she casually provides that the cardboard was a classroom task, reminding Elizabeth and the viewers that Joe was a seventh grader. It’s a hilarious, deeply disturbing second. These two feelings converging is the essence of camp.
For one thing to actually be camp, nonetheless, its presentation has to align with the destabilizing worldview. If the topic, the digital camera, or the route is just too realizing, the impact can turn out to be satirical, and in some instances cringe. (That is additionally, by the way, why the Met Gala “camp” theme was a catastrophe; you’ll be able to’t plan camp.) However Haynes by no means permits the factitious, fantasist narratives of Gracie and Elizabeth to overshadow the anguish Melton conveys. As Elizabeth turns into extra entranced by Gracie’s story, her efficiency as Gracie turns into extra campy and fewer efficient. In the meantime, Gracie’s efficiency of the function of excellent housewife fails to persuade anybody however herself.
When Joe lastly confronts Gracie concerning the fact of their lives collectively, the scene is something however camp. It’s a deeply troubling reminder that society gave its stamp of approval to a relationship that left him with lifelong trauma. Including to the discomfort of this second is that screenwriter Samy Burch makes use of dialogue from a jaw-dropping real-life 2018 interview with Australian journalist Matt Doran. Within the phase, the grownup Letourneau and Fualaau have a tense alternate during which she tells him repeatedly, in entrance of a shocked Doran, that he was “the boss” of their relationship.
So many up to date films and reveals based mostly on actual occasions visitors in imitation, with uncanny impressions seen as the very best achievement. What Might December does to include this second is 1000x extra attention-grabbing. pic.twitter.com/hNQIlQtzZQ
— Louis Peitzman (@LouisPeitzman) December 2, 2023
Exterior of the movie, it’s straightforward to be aghast by this clip. Inside the movie, this second shatters the thought of “youthful boy pursuing an older lady” as a legit narrative. “You seduced me,” Gracie tells Joe with full confidence. It’s terrifying how easy Moore makes enjoying a fictional Letourneau appear.
However the movie isn’t actually that involved in condemning Gracie — what can be the purpose? As an alternative, its sharpest castigation rests with Elizabeth. In a single function, she is ready to embody the amoral self-interest of the tabloids, Hollywood, the general public who consumed the story as leisure, and everybody round Fualaau who left him to his destiny.
We would ask whether or not Haynes himself is a part of that internet of exploitation — in any case, isn’t Might December a coy remedy of a scandal?
Sure and no. One operate of the movie’s funnier moments is to permit the viewers its share of nervous laughter, an exhalation amid our escalating discomfort. If Might December have been much less self-aware, it’d belong within the class of camp or failed melodrama; if it have been much less earnest, it’d earn the title of tongue-in-cheek satire. However finally, the film’s discordant aesthetic isn’t coy. It’s about revealing the nightmarish circus that Joe has survived with quiet resilience.
And it’s about us: The circus attendees, arriving with popcorn — ready to snicker, when maybe we ought to be in mourning.