Loading Events

« All Events

Performance

September 10 @ 6:00 pm

Presented as part of CCA’s monthly series on arthouse classics and underseen cinema, Closer Looks.

Performance is a 1970 British crime drama film directed by Donald Cammell (Demon Seed, Wild Side) and Nicolas Roeg (Walkabout, The Man Who Fell To Earth, The Witches), featuring Mick Jagger in his acting debut. The film stars James Fox as a violent and ambitious London gangster who, after killing an old friend, goes into hiding at the home of a reclusive rock star (played by Jagger).

The film was produced in 1968 but not released until 1970, as Warner Bros. was reluctant to distribute the film, owing to its sexual content and graphic violence. It initially received a mixed critical response, but its reputation has grown since then, and it is now regarded as one of the most influential and innovative films of the 1970s, as well as one of the greatest films in the history of British cinema. In 1999, Performance was voted the 48th greatest British film of the 20th century by the British Film Institute. In 2008 Empire magazine ranked the film 182nd on its list of the 500 Greatest Movies of All Time.

“Transgression A’ Go-Go. You’ve heard, perhaps, of sex, drugs and rock ‘n roll? How about Sixties decadent lovemaking and life/mind-altering psychedelia starring peak Mick Jagger? Add James Fox, in such a committed performance of a sexually confused East End gangster that when filming ended Fox committed himself into an institution. He had lost himself in the role, a theme of the film.

Glamour/fashion/cooler-than-cool icon Anita Pallenberg – Keith Richards’ girlfriend – plays Jagger’s paramour. Richards stalked outside the shooting location day after day, insane with jealousy, when Jagger and Pallenberg were filming sex scenes. There were lots of them.

Co-director/cinematographer Nicholas Roeg made two masterpieces – Walkabout and Don’t Look Now. Roeg shoots in over-saturated colors and edits as if in a dream. Co-director/screenwriter Frank Hammel made the deranged, whitehot Wild Side. Hammel was famous for his love of Jorge Luis Borges and, uh, threesomes. Both feature prominently in Performance. Roeg and Hammel offer a rock ‘n roll fable on the uncertainty of self and the uneasy friendship between madness and art.

Fox, a vicious, uptight Mob enforcer – all action, no soul – needs a hideout. He stumbles upon Jagger’s Moroccan-tapestried, rich-hippie mansion. Jagger’s a rock recluse rendered a hermit by the loss of the inner fire that made him a star – all soul, no will. Jagger sees in Fox the demon(s) he’s lost. James – attracted/repelled by this household of sinister free love – sees in Jagger the freedom of expression he craves. Gradually, through inspired cross-cutting and knife-edge dialogue, Mick and James recognize their common ground and merge identities. Or do they?

Jagger is mesmerizing as he howls out an unforgettable acoustic version of John Lee Hooker’s “Jesse James Blues.” It’s eerie, sexy and cool, just like Performance.” -David N. Meyer

$15
1050 Old Pecos Trail
Santa Fe, NM 87505 United States
+ Google Map
(505) 982-1338
View Venue Website