The Phenomenal *Personal Shopper* starring Kristen Stewart, directed by Olivier Assayas
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by Michael Todd Steffen
There is
an empty empty house at the beginning of the new film starring Kristen Stewart,
*Personal Shopper*, directed by Olivier Assayas, which makes an apt setting for
a long opening of silence, situating the viewers precisely in their seats, in
the act of watching. As Michael Nordine in his City Pages review observes,
“*Personal Shopper* is a quiet movie, all the better for us to hear every
creaking floorboard and let our minds follow sounds that might not be emanating
from our realm.” Nordine’s term “quiet movie” recalls the old original “silent
movie,” so called after “talkies” were invented. It’s not too simple to
remember here that we call them “movies” because they are pictures in sequence,
that move. Any director or film that includes significant silence, or
scenes thereof, is citing the art at its origins. The way Assayas has the
camera following Maureen (Kristen Stewart) through the empty house, room to
room, in this long opening scene is reminiscent of Stanley Kubrick’s following
little Danny on his tricycle through the empty halls of the vast resort hotel
in the mountains in *The Shining*.
Another reference to Kubrick in Assayas’
astonishing ghost story comes by way of the material opulence encountered in
the fashion luxuries Maureen shops for. These high-priced glitzy dresses and
leather handbags and spike-heeled shoes are not for her. Maureen seeks the
items out to rent for a high-profile vedette whose career status is uncertain,
yet whose fate (you’ll have to see this for yourselves) stuns both the viewer’s
sense of humanity and better-knowing. (It might be added that the star’s fate
is not unusual in terms of the dynamics of Inspiration/follower, and the
character Maureen comes under suspicion.)
Hence the film’s title, *Personal
Shopper*, serving as the film’s primary scenario. Celebrities of whatever
profession, movie stars themselves, must have helpers of all kinds, among them
clothing shoppers. It is assumed in the film that Maureen is bodily identical
(shoe size, dress size, height, etc.) with the vedette she shops for. An
interesting element of the film is how Maureen feels about trying on and at
times wearing these luxury items, which is a kind of taboo for her. For though
she and the star are dimensionally parallel, they are of distinctly separate
personalities. One thing the film does is to remind us of the dangers of vanity
involved in just being a star, in belonging to the capricious circle of
affluent, important people. Stewart’s character Maureen otherwise dresses down,
in just jeans (uncomfortably stiff and narrow at the calves) and sweatshirts
and awkward bright white running shoes.
The film’s driving scenario and back
stories are calibrated into a delicate balance that actually evokes a lot about
film making (any creative or artisanal vocation, even cabinet making, for that
matter), acting, and the lives around the profession. Most of us know something
about shopping for clothes, to some extent. What most of us perhaps do not know
much about is waiting in an empty house for the phenomenon of a ghost or
poltergeist to make itself known. It is odd and enjoyable that the film
reverses the terms of familiarity and the exotic or odd, to underscore our
capacity for personal loneliness, with the Internet configured into our cell
phones. While we probably communicate more with one another than ever before,
we are likely more personally and bodily alienated from one another, and full
of strange ideas about “others,” to the extent of the paranoia that makes a
murder/horror film credible as a psychic mirror. At one point in the film a
mystery texter asks Maureen what she hates. The audience gets a good laugh at her
reply: horror movies.
For a viewer attuned to the genre, there’s
a lot more humor throughout the film, particularly in the fleeing (moped)
scenes ensuing the film’s intensely scary moments. Even veterans will feel the
hair on their necks rise. The ghost is convincingly intractable and dominating,
with awesome special effects. Yet the outcome of the film leaves one wondering
whether the star Maureen shops for isn’t more terrible. In our times it isn’t
so farfetched to think that it is we humans who haunt our world.
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