The biggest obstacle
to portraying Humbert's pedophilia on screen, it seems to me, is the
character of Lolita. If a girl of the right age were chosen for the
role--a girl of eleven or twelve--very few of us could bear to watch
the movie. Imagine, for example, the Natalie Portman of LEON: THE
PROFESSIONAL, the Brooke Shields of PRETTY BABY, or the Tatum O'Neal
of PAPER MOON going through those famous--and, in the written version,
hilarious--contortions on Humbert's lap or selling him sex for
quarters. That would be a dark movie indeed, with Humbert's
monstrousness impossible to disguise or mitigate (one shocking picture
easily blowing away a thousand lovely words). But with older girls in
the role--Sue Lyon or Dominique Swain--the question of pedophilia is
easily got around, or could not easily be brought up. The plain truth
is that you don't have to be a depraved predator to be attracted to
girls who look like Lyon or Swain. If you chased after one, you'd be
considered a pathetic fool, no doubt (unless, of course, you were a
teenager yourself), and a potential criminal under the law, but
hardly--and certainly not necessarily--a pedophile.
The same point was put very well by Justine Brown when she said of Sue
Lyon's Lolita: "Of course, that fully formed, lush blond
teeny-bopper -- a girl any red-blooded man would admire -- had nothing
in common with the radiant, coltish, brown-haired child who caught
Humbert's eye." (Brown, "Lusting after 'Lolita,'"
Salon, July 31,1998.) What I'm saying is that until that child, and
not some socially acceptable body double, is put on screen opposite
the Humbert character, you may very well have a funny/sad story
(Kubrick) or a sad beautiful story (Lyne), but what you won't have is
LOLITA.
PRETTY BABY is an
edgy movie in its own right--a good deal edgier than either version of
LOLITA, precisely because an actual little girl is involved, and also
because the photographer who takes Violet in is depicted as a decent
person despite the fact that he has sex with her--but it doesn't raise
the same alarms that an accurate filming of LOLITA would raise. One of
Malle's earlier movies, MURMURS OF THE HEART, is edgier still in
daring to suggest that a bit of mother-son incest might in some cases
be a good thing. In LEON, a twelve-year-old Madonna-cloned waif
becomes dependent upon and then actively pursues the man who has
become her protector--a man who also happens to be a professional
killer. If Leon (a very decent man indeed, at least in his
step-fatherly capacity) had let Mathilda seduce him, and even if they
had gone off to live happily ever after, the movie would no doubt have
been banned. But it's all right, apparently, if he takes her on jobs
and teaches her to kill. (A good part of Mathilda's time is spent
cleaning, and otherwise handling, Leon's guns. As either Freud or
Nabokov might have said, a gun is sometimes only a
cigar.)
For a fascinating
and terribly depressing account of real-life pedophilia in action,
have a look at the attached story from the Los Angeles Times. The
relevance of this to LOLITA is that although Humbert is not a denizen
of the world described in the Times article--he is capable, for all
his faults, of real tenderness and perhaps of morally significant
remorse--this is precisely the world in which Quilty is most at home.
Part of the genius of the novel is to distinguish between these two
men, and the worlds they inhabit, even while suggesting how close they
are to being two of a kind. It is a further part of the genius of the
book that, of the two men, Lolita herself (even children, as the novel
so wonderfully well reminds us, have minds, wills, and dark desires of
their own) vastly prefers the worst of them. It is he who breaks her
heart, and not merely her life. Such complexity--and the complexity of
PRETTY BABY and of LEON--is perhaps part of what Kellie Dawson is
getting at in her dissertation. It is a complexity that we as readers
and viewers and writers can, and should, appreciate to the fullest. In
Sgt. Gillespie's world, by contrast, such considerations might well be
an energy-sapping indulgence. And it's to Sgt. Gillespie that even the
most sophisticated readers (or psychologists, for that matter) would
gratefully turn if their own real child fell into the hands of a real
live monster.
Jim Twiggs
P.S. Justine Brown's
brief memoir is surely one of the best things ever written about
LOLITA. What she says, for instance, about the impact of the book on
one bright little girl many years ago, is highly relevant to a
discussion of the recent essay by Steven Mintz. For those who haven't
read Brown's piece, here's the URL:
http://archive.salon.com/mwt/feature/1998/07/31feature.html