Jan 15, 2013
“Poor Lily. Xavier just used her body, and not even the right side!” In his film “Damsels in Distress,” Whit Stillman explores “non-procreative sex” in ways that are shocking, simply shocking: it just isn't proper to question sexual relativism in a “Hollywood” movie. Later on in the film, another character named Jimbo asks Lily, “How could he do that to you?”
This is precisely what we need to know about porn – not the “that,” but the “how” and “why.” Why are we men (I can't speak for the unique folly of women) drawn to reducing women to objects of commerce and triviality? How is it possible that otherwise reputable, upstanding citizens wish to have their way with women in the most disagreeable ways?
But let's start with something positive. In another film by Stillman (“Barcelona”), Ted says longingly, “Instead of a fantasy built on the pretty slope of an eyebrow or curl of an upper lip, (I want) to see the real person, maybe even look into her eyes and see her soul.” Yes, a real communion of persons rooted in reality. This is what men want. In our better moments.
In our less-than-Ted moments, we are like Hugh Hefner: delighted by shapeliness and ever hopeful of a woman's perpetual availability for lewdness. With Hugh (and his disciples), it's always a zero-sum game: the higher the woman is raised up as a goddess, the lower her humanity dips until she is scarcely more than a Barbie doll with a pulse. Each of us can judge where we fit between Ted and Hugh, but that's not my purpose here.