Sunday 14 November 2021

Streaming - John Baxter gives attention to a film that slipped under the Covid radar - MY SALINGER YEAR (Philippe Falardeau, USA, 2021)

Margaret Qualley and that portrait

MY NEW YORK YEAR. 

            My first American literary agency was a three- or four-person operation occupying a cluster of rooms on the twenty-somethingth floor of a ‘thirties building in mid-town Manhattan.  It subsisted almost entirely on tending the estates of past clients, now long-dead, whose portraits decorated its walls. 

            The proprietor, then in his eighties, had known all of them as friends, and could be amusing about their eccentricities. He was not without a few himself. Outside his window, Astroturf covered a terrace the size of a golf green. On quiet days, he would step out with the Ben Hogan driver he kept in the corner of his office and, indifferent to where they landed, whack a few Titleists into the smog of East 24thStreet. 

            His assistant, une dame d’un certain age  who had been, and perhaps still was, his lover, satisfied my curiosity by taking me down into the sub-sub-basement where a room was crammed with steamer trunks, each stencilled with an illustrious name. Within them was the accumulated correspondence and memorabilia of that particular literary great.

            A treasure trove for the biographer, I suggested. She glared.

            “Those vultures? Never. They know nothing about these....”  She ushered me out,  slamming and double-locking the door. “....and they never will, as long as I’m alive.” 

            I thought of her while watching My Salinger Year (aka My New York Year), the latest film by Quebecois director Philippe Falardeau.

Director and co-writer Philippe Falardeau

            As the walking wounded movies of the pandemic begin to limp into the light, it’s become more interesting, at least in France, to monitor broadcast video and streaming outside Netflix and the other major sitesThe 2021 My New York Year/My Salinger Year had some kind of release, even, apparently, in Australia, early this year,  but otherwise sank without trace. It deserved better, if only on the basis of Falardeau’s  tragi-comic The Good Lie, (2014) about a well-meaning Reese Witherspoon trying to integrate the remnants of a tribal Sudanese family into white middle-class Canada.

            Mike Nichols’ 1988 Working Girl set the bar high for stories of modern young women striving for business success. Sigourney Weaver dominated that film as the manipulative boss who is also a role model for upwardly mobile Melanie Griffiths. Weaver appears again in My New York Year  as the literary agent, blessed (or cursed?) with reclusive author J.D. “Jerry” Salinger as a client.  In a manner which, probably not by accident, echoes Anne Hathaway as the neo-fashionista in The Devil Wears Prada, Weaver’s naive assistant Joanna Rakoff (Margaret Qualley) must stifle her own creative ambitions to help insulate Salinger from his intrusive public. 

            The story has its basis in fact. In the mid-nineties Rakoff left California to work at Harold Ober Associates, a revered New York literary agency. Sigourney Weaver is a thinly-disguised portrait of senior partner Phyllis Westberg. 

Sigourney Weaver as Phyllis Westberg

            Falardeau, who co-wrote the script with Rakoff, wisely declines to concentrate on Salinger. Tim Post plays him in a couple of near-anonymous appearances but he’s mainly present as a husky telephone voice and that familiar portrait from his Catcher in the Rye days, prints of which dominate the Ober office like a religious ikon.

            The film focuses instead on Joanna’s struggles to reconcile real life with the fantasy of literary success.  In typical bildungsroman fashion, she learns that, when life and legend conflict, printing the legend is only a short-term solution. 

            She tries anyway, dumping her well-meaning Californian lover for an edgy New Yorker, only to impair that relationship by exercising her new-found critical abilities on the manuscript of his novel. At the office, she tries to second-guess her boss about a new book from young-adult author Judy Blume, pleading the cause of art against money. Most disastrously of all, she’s tempted, a la Miss Lonelyhearts, into replying personally to one of the weekly harvest of letters to Salinger which it is part of her job to shred. 

            At the end of her year, Joanna must decide whether to join Margaret on the battlements, defending commerce from the attacks of art, or take arms with the hungry generations battering at the gates. No prizes for guessing which way she jumps.

             My New York Year, uncertain with whom to sympathise and anxious to show every facet of Joanna’s dilemma,  bites off more than it can chew. As in The Devil Wears Prada, the late introduction of a back-story for her boss, revealing a complex private life, forces us hurriedly to reassess the character of Margaret, something done more deftly by Aline Brosh McKenna in the earlier film. 

            Nor does Margaret Qualley’s Joanna convince as someone who might, in time, succeed as an  author. Her total published work, two poems in The Paris Review, doesn’t suggest it acts on Salinger’s advice to write every day, while her near-reverence for The New Yorker, a visit to the offices of which is staged like the pilgrimage to some sacred site, argues against the independence of spirit that might earn success. She’s first and last a fan, and long before she sees it, we accept that Salinger is right to isolate himself from such people. The love of one’s admirers, even those as sincere as she, can be toxic.  Look what happened to Orpheus. 

***************** 

MY SALINGER YEAR was released in Australian cinemas nationally by Palace Films in January 2021. It came out on DVD and Home Entertainment (iTunes, Fetch, Amazon etc) through Madman Entertainment on 21 April.

It is presently also available to stream on Binge and Foxtel Now.

 

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