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Who's
That Knocking at My Door is regarded as the launching
pad for Martin Scorsese's extraordinary career. It is a crudely
shot but effective film that not only introduced us to Scorsese
but several of the themes around religion, love and gender
that he's continued to explore even in his more recent films.
Harvey
Keitel stars as J.R., a young man on the cusp of figuring
out what he's going to do with the rest of his life. Up until
now it's been hanging out with male friends in the bar, uptown,
at someone's place, wherever doing much of nothing. As a group,
the boys are crude, rowdy and shallow. They drink, argue,
get into fights. But they're like a family. They share a loyalty
with one another that no woman can get between.
J.R.
meets a girl (Zina Bethune) and falls in love for presumably
the first time. All of a sudden his world changes. The girl,
who goes unnamed for the duration of the film, commands all
of his attention. Scorsese uses an editing technique of focusing
the camera in tight on her face when she is talking in the
early part of Who's That Knocking to show J.R.'s goo-goo
eyes for her. After a day with her, J.R. goes to hang out
with his best friend Joey (Lennard Kuras). The camera maintains
J.R.'s point of view and shoots Joey's chest rather than his
face. J.R.'s in love and the boys are suffering for it.
With
the girl, J.R. is comfortable. He can be himself. Although
she is admittedly not a big fan of Western films, she happily
accompanies J.R. to go see John Wayne classics and talks about
them afterwards. However, there's still an uneasiness for
J.R. He has little experience with women outside of his mother
and the Virgin Mary so he doesn't quite know how to handle
this girlfriend. In reality, it's simple. But he over complicates
things. This is because J.R. is tinted by guilt. He says he's
saving himself for his wife. But at night J.R. has very lucid
dreams about women other than his girlfriend.
Things
take a further change when the girl tries to take their relationship
to a deeper level. She confides to J.R. that she was raped.
J.R. flips, accusing her of lying and being a whore. J.R.
sees women in two different lights. They can either be a woman
or they can be a broad. Women are good. They are pure. His
mother was a woman. So was Mary. A broad, on the other hand,
is an object. They can be bought for a price. Broads get around.
Men possess broads. So when J.R. accuses his girlfriend of
being a broad, he is in turn reversing the relationship. Before
it was something mutual. Now it's about control and J.R. feels
the need to have it. But if his girlfriend has been with another
man, she's used goods and, in turn, a broad.
Who's
That Knocking introduces
many of the themes Scorsese would later follow up on. The
scenes where J.R. is hanging with the boys look and feel a
lot like Mean Streets. However, this film is directed
more at gender roles than it is religion in Mean Streets.
The fluid style of direction with many different angles,
upbeat popular music and ear-to-the-ground dialogue are all
Scorsese trademarks.
Who's
That Knocking
is a challenging film, but only in the best possible way.
Although I may disagree with some of the film's ideology's,
Scorsese provides something to ponder. He ponders these very
same things in his later films, which leads me to believe
that he isn't convinced either. One of the things that I really
enjoy about Scorsese is that his films connect through themes
and that those themes reflect his own experiences and questions.
Who's That Knocking at My Door is a personal debut
feature that shows a director who isn't scared of dragging
his own battles in with him. Call it therapy that I like to
observe.
©Movie
Views; July 25, 2006
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|
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| Martin
Scorsese |
 |
| Betzi
Manoogian |
| Martin
Scorsese |
 |
| Zina
Bethune |
| Harvey
Keitel |
|
Anne Collette |
| Lennard
Kuras |
| Michael
Scala |
 |
| 1967 |
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| USA |
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| 90
minutes |
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