Title: Postmodern Moulin Rouge
1Postmodern Moulin Rouge
Henri Ramone de Toulouse-Lautrec At the Moulin
Rouge (1895)
2Outline
- 1. Introduction
- A. Starting Questions
- B. Setting Plot
- C. Major Argument
- 2. Structuralist?Marxist Approach
- Binaries
- Plot and Motif ? Toulouse roles
- Actants ? Who is the real opponent?
- 3. Semiotic Approach -- MR as a postmodern
pastiche on love - Songs in the Musical Scenes
- Self-Reflexive Signs
- Signs of Minorities
- 4. Moulin Rouge in Todays Context
- Next Time
3Starting Questions
- Do you like the film? Is it a great love story?
How is it compared with some other famous love
stories, such as Titanic? - What patterns have you found in the story?
(plot, intertext, genre, irony, pun and innuendo,
etc.) - How do you relate the film to contemporary views
of love?
4Introduction Fin-de-siecle Setting
- Montmarte -- Many artists, from Berlioz to
Picasso, lived, worked, and played here. These
creative spirits (and their cafe, the Lapin
Agile) helped keep this area the city's
intellectual and artistic center up until the
first World War. - Moulin Rouge (The Red Windmill) A kingdom of
night-time pleasures where the rich and powerful
came to play with the young and beautiful
creatures of the underworld.
5A. Setting (2)
- Bohemian spirit
- The state of mind and way of life began in about
1830 and continued until 1914. It was a time and
place where misfits spent their lives outside
society, choosing penury, squalor and freedom
over prosperity and convention. They protested
against the bourgeois, against a social structure
based on money, against the increasing uniformity
and drabness of existence. Bohemia had always
been a lotus land for misunderstood and
unproductive genius it had given an artistic
aura to vagrants without talent.
6B. Plot
- narrator (1) Toulouse narrator (2) Christian
- Story Christian/Satine vs. the Duke
- The story within the story Indian
courtesan/penniless sitar player vs. maharaja - Intertexts the myth of Orpheus, La Bohème
courtesan story Madame Butterfly, Dumas
Camille/Verdis La Traviata ??? more later
7Note
- Orphean myth Orpheus, the son of Apollo and
Calliope, has the power to enchant with his
music. When his love, Eurydice was killed,
Orpheus descended into the Underworld to plead
for her return. Enchanting Hades, monarch of the
Underworld, with his music, Orpheus is permitted
to leave with Eurydice on condition he does not
look back to see if she is following him. When
Orpheus nears the entrance to the underworld,
fear overpowers him, he turns back to see if
Eurydice is following, and he loses her forever.
8Main Idea Postmodern Pastiche of Love
- a story about love. A love that will live
forever. The end. - Love cannot be represented except with pastiche
(all-in-one) and repetition. - Pastiche paintings, musical, melodrama,
burlesque, dances, animation, songs - Repetition and punning funny feeling inside
The greatest thing youll ever learn Is just to
love and be loved in return, death of the
outcast and loyal woman.
9Structuralist Analysis (1) Binaries
- 1. Bohemia underworld (Toulous) vs. Bourgeois
world (The duke). - 2. Idealistic/Love (Christine) vs.
Practical/Money (Zilder) - (Satine) in between
- 3. The romantic or melodramatic vs. burlesque
- 4. The black and white vs. the colorful vs. the
surreal (artificial) colors
10Structuralist Analysis (2) Plot
- Motifs
- misidentification ? recognition, attraction ?
commitment? trial (Duke) the supper, the ending
? jealousy and misunderstanding ? love - Repetitions of Children of the Revolution and
Nature Boy - Bohemian spirit wins over materialism?
- No. The use of Toulouse is only
superficialfor plot development and setting.
--one that confirms love, and has his paintings
set the tone of Moulin Rouge (see images of
posters in Zidlers office)
11Toulouse
- 1. introduce the nature boy, 2. undercuts the
love scene, 3. confirms Satines love, 4. reveal
the dukes plot.
12Biography of Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
- His stunted physique earned him laughs and scorn,
and kept him from experiencing many of the
physical pleasures offered in Montmartre, a
sorrow that he drowned in alcohol. At first it
was beer and wine. Then brandy, whiskey, and the
infamous absinthe (???, the green fairy) found
their ways into his life. - Art and alcohol were his only mistresses, and
they were mistresses to which he devoted all of
his time and energy. He was doing one or both
almost every day of his life until he died.
(source)
Lautrec dressed as a clown circa 1895
13Moulin Rouge A Structuralist Analysis (3)
- 3 Quests and 2 Missions
- The Bohemian artists want their play "Spectacular
Spectacular" accepted. They sends Christian to
persuade Satine. - Christian (subject) searches his ideal love, who
turns out to be Satine (object) in the underworld
of Paris. - Zidler (sender) sends Satine to persuade the Duke
to support their show, promising that she will be
a real actress.
14Moulin Rouge A Structuralist Analysis (3)
- B. Quests and 2 Mission Frustrated or in
Conflict - The play becomes an arena for battle between the
Duke and Christianeach wanting their script
written. - The intersection of the two stories e.g chap 22
C because she doesnt love you Duke
accept this as a gift to the courtesan from the
maharajah (she is mine) - Ideal love faces the trial of money
- Dream of becoming a real actress vs. the Dukes
desire for possessing her. neither realized
why?
15Moulin Rouge A Structuralist Analysis (3)
- 3. Helper and Opponent
- Nini Opponent
- This endings silly. Why would the courtesan go
for the penniless writer? Whoops! I mean sitar
player. - Dont worry Shakespeare, youll get your ending,
once the Duke gets his end in. - Chocolate Helper -- saves Satine twice
- when Satine falls down from a Trapeze
- when the duke (opponent) wants to rape her.
16Moulin Rouge Who is the real opponent?
- 3. Zidler?
- Helps Satine -- chap 19
- Wavering,
- calling her little pumpkin, little sparrow,
- Why does he have to tell Satine that she is to
die? To save Christian? - He insists that the show must go on. Another
hero, another mindless crime Behind the curtain
in the pantomime. On and on, Does anybody know
what we are living for? (chap 27)
17Moulin Rouge Who is the real opponent?
- 4. The illness revealed at the beginning,
confirmed when S is faced with the first choice,
terminating her life at the end. - Never fall in love with a woman who sells
herself. It always ends bad. (tango dance chap
23 a contrast to the use of tango in Rent.) - 5. Pastiche style
- Meant to foreground the love, but also undermines
it - e.g. after loud and frivolous burlesque in the
elephant room ? chap 13 One day Ill fly
away. - e.g. after Chap 21 Come what may
18MR Postmodern Pastiche of Love
- Songs
- Self-Reflexive Signs
- Signs of the Exotic
19The Songs Musical Scenes
- All the Songs
- Chap 8 innuendo
- woman as muse to inspire artistic creation and
sexual act ? - funny feeling of sex, of love, of suspicion
and jealousy - (later) Nini Christian can have his ending if
the Duke has his end in. - Your Song--Christian to Satine
- Your Song--Satine to the Duke
20A. Songs Love Medley chap 14
- Love Is Like Oxygen
- Love Is A Many Splendored Thing
- Up Where We Belong
- All You Need Is Love -
- Lover's Game
- I Was Made for Lovin' You
- Just One Night -
- Pride (In The Name Of Love)
- Don't Leave Me this Way -
- Silly Love Songs
- (Repeated) Up Where We Belong -
- Heroes -
- I Will Always Love You -
- Your Song
What do you think?
21B. Songs
- a. American songs V.S. English songs
- ref. (the point of a group of students)
- songs performed by American singers represent
materialism - songs performed by English singers represent
the theme of love
22B. Myths within the songs (2)
- 2. the example of Hindi
- lyrics? She is mine male dominance
- ?Satines part yielding to the domination
- Hindi melody? exotic, dangerous, tension,
sexual, male dominance
23C. language (songs) meanings arbitrary
relationship
- . a. Emptied out and filled with a new concept
- In the Name of Love, Nirvana, Roxanne
- b. Meaning changes according to different
contexts - Its a little bit funny, this feeling
inside - c. Songs with different meanings are combined to
present a new theme - Elephant Love Medley
24Self-Reflexive Signs stylistic pastiche
- Genre musical cartoon styles (green fairy like
Tinkerbelle) the gold flakesrepresents dream,
magic and money - camera styles e.g. changes from the romantic to
the comic/burlesque - music video (fast-changing scenes)
- theatrical showswhirling
- Burlesquequick cuts matching quick actions fast
zoom-in and zoom-out, - Melodramatic aura around the protagonists and
clouds underneath them - architectural styles
- gothic tower
- elephant house
- combination of the realistic and artificial
(including the colors and the words - Lamour, love, besides Christians attic.)
25Self-Reflexive Signs of the Theatric and Writing
- Typewriter A red velvet curtain framed by a gilt
proscenium arch.
26Signs of the Theatric Another Stage
CHRISTIAN Love lifts us up where we belong. .
. SATINE Get down, get down! CHRISTIAN Where
eagles fly on a mountain high.
27Signs of the Digitally Animated
28Signs of the Exotic
- The Bohemian and the Argentinan
- The Indian (Bollywood) and the blacks
29Moulin Rouge Pastiche Today
- Courtesan The Story of a Geisha the issue of
prostitution - Moulin Rouge -- Dinner, Show and Souvenir
(Toulouse-Lautrec Menu) - Hollywood films pastiche
- ??????. Date Movie
- Shrek
- Is pastiche the language of love?
30Next Time
- Chap 12
- Morning
- Notes on a Scandal