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« Visual Index ~ 3 Women's Best Shots | Main | Hot Docs '14: Beyond Clueless, The Secret Trial 5 »
Tuesday
May062014

"We don't like the twins" - On Robert Altman's 3 Women (1977)

I've seen 3 Women exactly 3 times. Look at me all numeriffic. Each time it shapes-shift fluidly like its still half submerged in the embryonic waters of pools, aquariums, nursing home baths, and dream floods that keep engulfing the women, particularly Sissy Spacek as "Pinky" (or "Mildred" depending on how you read the picture). She's the most permeable of them all.

Permeable, maybe, but never painlessly transforming; if the movie camera had never discovered Sissy Spacek's face in various stages of psychotic breaks (see also Carrie) it would have missed its calling entirely. 

The first time I saw the film it was like looking a crystal clear umbillical cord between Persona (1966) and Mulholland Dr (2001). The second time it was a singular experience, untethered to other films from my favorite genre (Women Who Lie To Themselves™) and played as a remarkable feat of interiority and actressing (Shelley Duvall won "Best Actress" at Cannes and that jury deserves a prize of its own for going there.). With this third screening 3 Women morphed into a messy horror comedy, a pitch black and deeply uncomfortable but still funny horror comedy about social autism, menstrual cycles, and the terrors of having no center and no support system to reinforce your youness. Follow?

Whichever film 3 Women is while you're watching it, it's impossible to miss its obsession with twins.

We don't like the twins. You'll learn about them soon enough"

Or, I'd argue more emphatically, its obsession with triplets; two identical, one fraternal. Though Altman's undervalued picture spends most of its time with the odd twosome of Millie (Duvall) and Pinky (Spacek) and though Pinky's initial trajectory seems to be very Single White Female in her urge to be with (or just be?) Millie, we're almost always dealing with triplets; the third is easy to miss, never identical and nearly always silent. Whether we're looking at actual twins (unfriendly blondes Polly & Peggy) or one woman reflected who appears to be two, or two women who appear to be three or four (reflections galore and too many images to screencap) or an actual rarer three-shot of the film's stars there's always some sort of triangulation going on when the image is placed in its narrative context.

Which is why my choice for "Best Shot" multiplies the multiples yet further and encapsulates absolutely everything that's so rich and weirdly specific yet vaguely disconnected about Millie and the movie itself. Millie has just been displaced from her own bedroom by Pinky when she returns to work and talks about nothing but Pinky.

I think she'll be back to work next week. The doctors really thought she was going to die. What's worse there could have been brain damage! 

Millie, singular and perpetually out of place Millie (note how Duvall towers over the other women like some absurd weed that needs pruning), trails her oblivious co-workers down the hallway in a continuous shot, talking non-stop as she does for the entire film. No one is listening despite her dramatic flourishes. Each of them are paired with their twin, literal or figurative ("Doris the Chinese one - she and I are best friends") shutting Millie out entirely. The last line as the undifferentiated women begin to dissipate out of the shot is brilliantly apt. It starts out all inclusive before it shuts someone out with its casually exclusive desperation. It's as lonely as Millie's foldout bed outside the now shuttered bedroom door. 

She asked about each and everyone one of you... especially the twins."

There's every reason to believe that Millie didn't like Pinky as her perpetual shadow/other before the medical drama. But now she's alone again. And what could be worse than that?

More 3 Women?
Here's a Visual Index of all the "Hit Me With Your Best Shot" entries 'round the web. 

Oscar Shut-Out
Oscar voters had no time at all for 3 Women despite their fondness for Altman in the 1970s. I'd gladly hand it nominations for Actress, Director, and Art Direction for starters. In fact, an early aborted mental draft of this article was entirely about the art direction. 

Programming Note
One change in the upcoming schedule. I didn't realize that Warner Bros / DC had chosen an official day for Batman's 75th (the date of his birth is complicated) so we'll postpone that Batman-related Best shot episode until July in the second half of this season

 

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Reader Comments (11)

I love every single bit of your reading of the film. And that's a terrific shot: I love how the twins suck up so much of the frame despite being out of focus.

I really think this movie might be the best choice for this series you've ever made. SO complex, and so many amazing images.

May 6, 2014 | Registered CommenterTim Brayton

Sissy Lead Or Supporting.

May 6, 2014 | Unregistered Commentermrripley

mrripley - lead. It's a double-hander despite the title.

May 6, 2014 | Registered CommenterNATHANIEL R

Tim -- i'm trying to be more succinct (you do a great job of keeping to what the series was designed to do) but DAMN i have a lot to say about this picture. I felt like I could write 4,000 more words about... everyting so i totally understand your final paragraph.

May 6, 2014 | Registered CommenterNATHANIEL R

Wonderful article, Nathaniel!

When it comes to the Oscars, I would happily give the film wins for Best Actress (Shelley Duvall, with a nomination for Sissy), Best Art Direction, Best Director, and Best Picture. I realize how strong a year 1977 was for movies, but '3 Women' can't be topped for me.

May 6, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterMike M.

I keep suggesting the Nic Roeg movie Performance. In a visual storytelling sense, it is just sterling.

May 6, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterVolvagia

Tim, ditto.

May 6, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterTy

The Criterion version of 3 Women that my dad got me (because it was the only Altman he could find!) remains one of the Xmas gifts for which I'm most thankful.
Looking forward to reading all the shots.

May 6, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterMike in Canada

Mike - i agree that the Criterion looks great. I only wish i had a DVD instead of the BluRay for screenshot purposes. These shots are form Netflix and they really miss that grainy 70s clarity (even while water warped) for fuzzy streaminess.

May 6, 2014 | Registered CommenterNATHANIEL R

thanks, nathaniel, for finally getting me to see this movie!

love that your shot incorporates the twins (who are just unnerving--grown women shouldn't dress identically!) but also Millie's endless chatter. poor millie, won't someone pay attention to her?!

May 7, 2014 | Unregistered Commenterabstew

It seems as though you might very well be Pinky to my Millie, or Edgar to my Ms. Bunweill, or Polly to my Doris, or Willie to my Dierdre, having just read the lovely bits of momentary fragmentation you hath just vomited upon us all, it occurred to me that I suddenly had found myself accidentally reading something that I myself had already posted eons ago. Your perceptive and insightful impressions (and overall love for and obsession with) 3 WOMEN is in 7,050.41% exactingly aligned with my own love affair with Bob Altman's (not all that far back) least-known, most obscure motion picture experience! Just thought I'd drop a line to express my innate feelings of verisimilitude to/with/unto you and also let you know that I simultaneously cried (crocodile tears of pure, unadulterated joy) and ejaculated whilst laughing hysterically the entire time I enjoyed reading your little love poem to 3 WOMEN!! Thanks, and check out my blog for lots of other 3 WOMEN/Altman/counter-cultural/difficult or barely relatable emotional states and/or psychological anomalies as well as some of the very best, most underrated `outsider' musical moments from the last century at wilma-flintstones-mother.tumblr.com Take care, and, `Don't know why he had to be so mean to her.'

February 29, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterPearl Slaghoople
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