Addiction, The (1995)

reviewed by
Richard Scheib


THE ADDICTION

USA. 1994. Director - Abel Ferrara, Screenplay - Nicholas St. John, Producers - Denis Hann & Fernando Sulichin, Photography (b&w) - Ken Kelsch, Music - Joe Delia, Production Design - Charles Lagola,. Production Company - Fast Films. Lili Taylor (Kathleen Conklin), Edie Falco (Jean), Christopher Walken (Pena), Paul Caldaron (Professor), Kathryn Erbe (Anthropology Student), Annabella Sciorra (Casanova)

Plot: Philosophy student Kathleen Conklin is bitten by and transformed into a vampire. As she succumbs to the vampiric urges she comes to understand that the vampire is really a mirror of the cruelty and violence that is at the heart of human nature.

The concept of the vampire was inherited into Western popular culture via Bram Stoker's `Dracula'. As a result of Stoker's legacy the vampire has always been rooted in Christian concepts of good and evil with the vampire representing an animal sexuality hidden beneath the decorum of mannered society being despatched by confident men who stride a resolute line between science and religion. The cinematic vampire was popularized by the Bela Lugosi ‘Dracula' in 1931 and the hundreds of vampire films that have followed since have almost all fallen into this symbolic resonance. But in the 1970s and 80s the vampire film began to abandon classical notions of good and evil. Firstly it was the tacit recognition of films like ‘Count Yorga, Vampire' (1970), `Dracula A.D. 1972' (1972), `Blacula' (1972) and `Love at First Bite' (1979) that the Victorian trappings of the vampire film only had limited potential and that the vampire in cape and dinner-suit cut a rather absurd, unthreatening figure when brought into the present.

In the 1980s and beyond, the vampire film began to implicitly accept the death of the traditional reason and religion vs bestial nature dualism. But ironically instead of dying out the vampire film began to flourish more than ever before. The resulting films could be thrown into three rough categories - those which overtly spoofed and parodied the traditional vampire (the likes of ‘Dracula: Dead and Loving It', `I Bought a Vampire Motorcycle', `Vampire Trailer Park') or conducted generic pastiches (ie vampire cop show - tv's `Forever Knight', vampire getaway film - `From Dusk Till Dawn', vampire mafia - `Innocent Blood'). Or else those films which dragged the vampire into the modern world and transformed the character into a kind of badass punk - `The Lost Boys', `Near Dark', `Blade'. And thirdly those which inverted the metaphors of Bram Stoker about sexual repression to turn vampirism into a kind of dark, sensual forbidden romance - the `Graveyard Shift' films, `Bram Stoker's Dracula', `To Die For', `The Nosferatu Diaries: Embrace of the Vampire'.

The rarest among the new vampire films have been those which have sought to reinvent and question the metaphors of vampirism. The first film to try this was ‘Incense for the Damned' aka `Bloodsuckers' (1969) which ambitiously tried to develop vampirism as a metaphor for sexual impotency. But the film that really succeeded here was the exceptional `Martin' (1976) which pared all classical mythology away with rather startling effect - contrasting a pallid and weak bloodsucker up against his family who insisted with absurdly cruel inappropriateness on classical religious symbolism. Other notable examples might be the German film ‘Jonathan' (1970) which transformed vampirism into a metaphor for Nazism and feudalism and the underrated ‘Interview with the Vampire: The Vampire Chronicles' (1994) which conducted an elegant vampiric existential quest with the hero setting out with the question if he is not evil, what then is the purpose of his condition.

`The Addiction' is another of these rare attempts at re-evaluation. The film was directed by Abel Ferrara, who has made the likes of `Driller Killer' (1979), `Ms. 45' (1980), `Bad Lieutenant' (1992) and `Body Snatchers' (1993). Throughout almost all of Ferrara and his writing partner Nicholas St John's work lie twin themes - a fascination with the darkest depths that the human soul is capable of scouring and the belief in the redemptive power of Catholicism. These twin fascinations find their most potent expression in `Bad Lieutenant' - a muck-scouring excoriation of human degradation that eventually finds Catholic redemption in the forgiving of a killer. And in some ways `The Addiction' is almost like a reiteration of `Bad Lieutenant' with Lili Taylor's vampire philosophy doctorate in the place of Harvey Keitel's drugged-out, woebegone cop, conducting in philosophical terms the same descent into all that is vile before finding its salvation.

`The Addiction' has a tendency to make one feel like they are being hit over the head by the collected works of Western nihilist philosophy. The film quotes Sartre and Kierkegaard and engages in debates about determinism and redemption through guilt while Ferrara-regular Christopher Walken turns up as a vampire who sees himself as an avatar of Nietzschean meta-morality. It is quite the weightiest film that one has seen in some time. But at the same time Ferrara and St John turn it into an extraordinary meditation on human nature and its fundamental predisposition toward evil. They see the vampire as a complex metaphor for an evil that is endemic to human nature. "The old saying that `Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it' is a lie," meditates Taylor. "The real question is what can be done to stop the blight spreading." The film bombards one with images of Me Lei and the Holocaust - in the opening scene alone Taylor exits a Holocaust museum and debates what the point is of convicting political leaders of war crimes when war crimes are crimes of mass guilt. The complexity of this metaphor leads to some startling reinventions of classical vampire mythology - the vampire cannot stand to look in a mirror because mirrors reflect the raw, exposed face of evil; the reason they are undead is because evil cannot die. Ferrera also offers up some strikingly modern images of vampirism - in one scene Taylor shooting up blood with a syringe like an addict. Although after conducting such an extraordinary and gloomily bleak excavation of the human condition, Taylor and Ferrara's acceptance of the redeeming power of Catholicism at the end seems a little glib and even cursory.

In the end it is not the best of Ferrara's films. The philosophical heaviness of it stands in the way of easy entertainment value and some corner-cutting lower-budget values are apparent at times. But what cannot be denied is that it is a powerful and complex reworking of the central metaphors of vampirism. Compare it to `Nadja' which was released only a few months after `The Addiction'. Both are very similar films - both are shot in black-and-white and both feature a predatory female vampire stalking the modern world. But whereas `Nadja' was merely content with conducting a stylistic pastiche of `Dracula's Daughter' (1936), `The Addiction' tackles the challenge of mounting an entire philosophical reconception of vampirism.

Copyright 1998 Richard Scheib


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