DVD: White of the Eye

Performance director's near-masterpiece about a possible serial killer's marriage

Donald Cammell made two films that were close to his intentions: Performance and this. There were only four films altogether, in almost 30 years of trying. Wild Side, studio-savaged as Demon Seed had been, was restored to something like his wishes after he shot himself in 1996, defeated.

White of the Eye is, then, the only untarnished testament to Cammell’s talent away from his Performance co-director Nic Roeg. It’s a 1986 film about a possible serial killer, Paul White (David Keith), and his wife Joan (Cathy Moriarty, pictured below). Each anonymous murder is highly stylised: a meat cleaver crashes down, and blood and wine explode across pristine white surfaces; a hand-mirror is held up so a woman can watch herself drown. Michael Mann’s Manhunter, made the same year, comes to mind in such moments. But these killings are brief, artistic side-effects of Cammell’s penetrating interest in fractures in personalities and relationships. Keith, seen here and there around this time in films such as Jack Nicholson’s The Two Jakes, makes Paul a likeable, charismatic powder-keg. Like James Fox and Mick Jagger in Performance, he never suggested there was so much in him again. Moriarty, best-remembered for Raging Bull, matches him blow for blow. Her following of a golden thread of hair in the family bathroom has a queasy, Bluebeard beauty Cammell only intermittently sustains, his grip agreeably distracted by Apache shamanism, occult ritual, eccentric characters and eye-popping, high-contrast use of colour.

Copious extras double the value of this restored, dual-format DVD/Blu-ray (a UK debut in both). An interview with cameraman Larry McConkey reveals the element of on-set chaos Cammell required. The Kevin MacDonald co-directed 1998 doc The Ultimate Performance, participated in by Cammell until his suicide, calls on a rich cast ranging from Barbara Steele to Mick Jagger to do justice to a life as exotic, sensual and rebellious as his films. An essay and commentary by his biographer and deleted scenes help complete the picture.

Add comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
The killings are brief, artistic side-effects of Cammell’s interest in fractures in personality

rating

4

explore topics

share this article

more film

Joachim Lang's docudrama focuses on Goebbels as master of fake news
The BFI has unearthed an unsettling 1977 thriller starring Tom Conti and Gay Hamilton
Estranged folk duo reunites in a classy British comedy drama
Marianne Elliott brings Raynor Winn's memoir to the big screen
Living off grid might be the meaning of happiness
Tender close-up on young love, grief and growing-up in Iceland
Eye-popping Cold War sci-fi epics from East Germany, superbly remastered and annotated
Artful direction and vivid detail of rural life from Wei Liang Chiang
Benicio del Toro's megalomaniac tycoon heads a star-studded cast
Tom Cruise's eighth M:I film shows symptoms of battle fatigue
A comedy about youth TV putting trends above truth
A wise-beyond-her-years teen discovers male limitations in a deft indie drama