Secrets of ‘The Master’
Inside director P.T. Anderson’s ‘Scientology movie.
by David Ansen
He’s
a man who’s spent his life running away, even from the girl he
professes to be the love of his life. And then Freddie meets and falls
under the sway of “the Master,” Lancaster Dodd (Philip Seymour Hoffman),
the founder and leader of a spiritual movement called the Cause.
Anderson freely acknowledges that this flamboyant character—a
self-described author, sea captain, physicist, and philosopher—was
inspired by L. Ron Hubbard. Once word of this leaked out, The Master
immediately got tagged as Anderson’s “Scientology movie.” “I was
naive,” the director says, somewhat ruefully. “I should have known
that’s what people would latch onto.” But if you’re expecting to see an
exposé of that controversial “religion,” you’ve come to the wrong movie.
This is not to say Scientologists are going to like what they see. But
Anderson, who gets a bit stressed when the subject comes up, finds
himself “much more defensive and protective of [Scientology] than I
would have thought.”
When
the Master first meets Freddie aboard a private luxury ship in San
Francisco Bay—one of his wealthy followers has donated the vessel to the
Cause, and Freddie has snuck on board, hoping to find a job—Dodd’s eyes
light up at the challenge. Dodd claims that mankind can overcome its
animal nature and reach its innate perfection through his methods, which
involve the exploration of one’s past lives, in order to expunge one’s
ancient demons. And here before him stands a beast desperately in need
of taming. But there’s more to it: Freddie’s wildness titillates him,
and so does his homemade booze. He’s found someone to play savior to,
but he’s also found a naughty playmate, a lower companion who allows him
to take a breather from his public role as the all-knowing guru.
Freddie
is taken into the inner circle of the big Dodd family. There’s Dodd’s
quiet but powerful wife (Amy Adams), his grown son, and his pretty
daughter, whose shipboard marriage takes place as they set off for New
York. For Freddie, it’s the chance to have at once a father figure, a
drinking companion, and a family he never had—if he can submit to the
rigorous rituals of the Cause. A question looms over the story, the same
one that hung over the anarchic anti-hero of A Clockwork Orange: can this tortured, violent animal be civilized?
The Master, the rare movie shot these days on 70mm, feels epic—it
ranges from the beaches of Hawaii to the English countryside—but its
focus remains fixed on the passionate and mysterious bond between these
two men. It becomes clear by the end that the movie is a strange kind of
love story. The mesmerizing scene in the Master’s cabin when Freddie
first submits to Dodd’s interrogation techniques is both therapy and
foreplay. Dodd is a master of seduction. He berates Freddie for being an
animal, then rewards him with the candy of praise: “You are the bravest
boy I’ve ever met.”
Phoenix,
with his spooky laugh that’s both defensive and taunting, is
phenomenal, and scary as hell. It may be the highest compliment that a
lot of people are going to think Phoenix isn’t acting at all—that
they’re watching a genuine nutcase. His explosions are a force of
nature: Phoenix has a scene where he goes berserk in a Philadelphia jail
cell that makes De Niro’s raging bull look genteel. This is the role
he’ll be remembered for.
Hoffman,
a brilliant shape-shifter who’s been in every Anderson movie but one,
is working in an entirely different style, and it’s thrilling to watch
them play off each other. If Freddie is all inarticulate instinct, Dodd,
who speaks with a formal, literary flourish, is almost always in
performance mode, the self-appointed master of ceremonies. Hoffman can
turn on a dime between self-deprecating charm and attack mode: when he
snaps it’s a different kind of scary. The Master may be a fraud and a
fabricator, but he’s no villain. He genuinely wants to heal his flock,
and his belief in his own benevolence gives him power. Adams, as Mrs.
Dodd, may not have a lot of screen time, but she makes the most of every
moment. She’s the true believer, the power behind the throne, ever
vigilant of her husband’s reputation. Her public face of calm
subservience masks a steel-willed woman always on emotional high alert.
The Master (in theaters Sept. 14) feels of a piece with There Will Be Blood,
the first film in which Anderson traded in his hyperkinetic style for a
simpler, more concentrated focus. At 42, he’s no longer the hotshot
wunderkind, intent on dazzling us with every bravura Steadicam shot. In
his personal life, he has put his past excesses behind him—he’s married,
to actress Maya Rudolph, and the happy father of three young kids. He
can look back with humor at the brash young filmmaker who fought with
his producers over every frame of his first film, Hard 8. “No one could possibly tell me anything, because I’d painted them as the enemy,” he says. “By Punch Drunk Love I’d mellowed, I felt more confident in myself. I didn’t have to defend every B+ idea I had.”
But in another sense his movies have become fiercer, and more formally and emotionally challenging. The Master
is a slap in the face of the screenwriting rulebook that insists on a
clear three-act structure, tidy resolutions, and characters whose “arcs”
make a neat trajectory from A to C. He likes, he says more than once,
to keep things “liquidy,” and there are scenes, like one in the balcony
of a movie theater, that blur the line between reality and dream. Like
Jonny Greenwood’s gorgeously dissonant score, the movie keeps you off
balance and on edge. The spell it casts is both passionate and cool,
like a fever dream from which any trace of sentimentality has been
expunged.
When he first started writing The Master,
Anderson had no idea what it was, where it was going, or where it would
end up. “I was first writing scenes that didn’t have a home. I do that a
lot, and then finally they come together. I like to write every day and
keep working and not wait around for something to happen,” he says.
“Richard LaGravenese [the screenwriter] once said that writing should be
like ironing a shirt: you keep going over the same spot, and you go a
little deeper and a little deeper. I don’t want to sound all mumbo
jumbo, but it gets to a certain point, if things are going well, where
you’re not writing it; the character is going where he’s going.”
Kind
of like the mixologist Freddie, who makes booze from whatever is at
hand, be it guavas or paint thinner, Anderson gathered pieces for his
movie from disparate sources. There were scenes he’d written early on
for There Will Be Blood he’d never used. There were stories Jason Robards had told him on the set of Magnolia
about his drinking days in the Navy during the war. Chunks of Freddie’s
experiences as a migrant field worker and wanderer were lifted from
John Steinbeck’s life story. There was his fascination with the
larger-than-life Hubbard. “But I didn’t want it to be a biography. It’s
not the L. Ron Hubbard story,” Anderson says. He was inspired by a quote
he read that the period after wars was a particularly fertile time for
spiritual movements to start. “That was a hook you could hang your hat
on.”
He
knew from the start he wanted Hoffman to play the Master, and his
actor-friend was an integral part of the writing process. “He was my
first audience. I’d hand him chunks and hear what he responded to.” For
the longest time Anderson wasn’t even sure whose story it was. It was
Hoffman who clarified it for him: “This is Freddie’s story.” He also had
Phoenix in mind as he was writing, and he knew the actor would keep his
writing from sounding too literary. “At a certain point, Joaquin is
just incapable of faking it.” Anderson was amazed by Phoenix’s
discipline on set. “He’s like Daniel [Day-Lewis], his level of
concentration. He just got in character and stayed there—for three
months he didn’t stop. Joaquin is very unpredictable. A lot of the time I
didn’t know what he was going to do.” In one scene Freddie has to be
restrained by a cluster of policemen. He laughs remembering the head of
the stunt crew advising his men to take it easy on the star. “Six of
these stunt guys couldn’t hold him down!”
When I mention that The Master,
like so many of his movies, is about the creation of a makeshift
family, and that there are similarities between the monomaniacal,
alcoholic antiheroes of his last two movies, he seems slightly
embarrassed. “I know, it’s the same thing again. No matter how hard I
try to set out to do something different,” he says. “I wish I would have
more diversity as a filmmaker.” It’s a complaint no one else has made.
Because
his über-stylish movies are so immaculately shot and edited, and
because there have only been six in the past 16 years, and because he’s a
bit of a control freak, Anderson has often been called a perfectionist.
Terrence Malick, whom he reveres, gets the same label. But in fact
they’d both be better labeled imperfectionists, for they are instinctual
artists, who often don’t know what they’re after until they see it in
front of them. The last shot of The Master, for example, was
something he discovered in the editing process. “It just felt right. I
can’t tell you why. If I have a strong instinct, I go with it, and try
to get the intellectual chatter out of my head,” he says. He’s absorbed
the lessons of his idols, the formalist Scorsese and the improvisational
Altman, and merged them into a passionate style all his own. It’s there
in every haunting scene of The Master, the impeccable, classical
craftsmanship in search of the live-wire moment of emotional truth.
you really should link to the original article instead of copying and pasting the thing on your site.
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ReplyDeleteThis article says he's maried to Maya Rudolph and she referred to him (a "Big Time Director") as her husband on Leno, when did this happen?
ReplyDeleteAmazing article. Beautifully written.
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ReplyDelete