The penis, the power, and the predicaments: An examination of male insecurity and female dehumanization in Paul Thomas Anderson's "Boogie Nights"
Paul Thomas Anderson’s Boogie Nights adheres to many
conventions of gender in terms of the way it portrays women, but subverts its
portrayal of men by highlighting masculine insecurity and the fear of being
inadequate. The film concerns a young man named Eddie, played by Mark Wahlberg,
who has dropped out of high school and is making ends meet working as a busboy
at a nightclub and living with his parents. One day on the job, he catches the
eye of Jack Horner (Burt Reynolds), a renowned porn director during the
industry’s “Golden Age,” who admires his natural attractiveness and invites him
to come spend time with him at his enormous ranch. Numerous people live under
Jack’s roof, including a young starlet named “Rollergirl” (Heather Graham),
nicknamed because of her obsession with her rollerblades, Maggie (Julianne
Moore), an older porn actress famous for a long-running series of films, Buck
(Don Cheadle), a struggling stereo salesman, and Reed (John C. Reilly), a
squirrely man who seems to just live off of Jack’s dime. Upon running away from
home, Eddie soon becomes “Dirk Diggler,” one of the industry’s most famous and
acclaimed porn stars almost overnight; he is glitzed with awards, recognition,
and more money than he could ever spend, but slowly allows his masculinity and
fragile ego to command him as a person. Such concepts heavily adhere to
feminist film writer Laura Mulvey’s ideas of “phallocentrism” and the male
gaze. With that, Boogie Nights
handles male and female characters quite differently, giving the male
characters an inferiority complex that makes them define their worth based on
their own personal work, and the two main female characters in the film
dichotomous roles, one to showcase attractiveness and the other to showcase the
lack thereof.
The
pornographic industry has always been under fire for its treatment and
sexualized depictions of women. Paul Thomas Anderson immediately dismantles
that assertion by giving it some equality; in porn, everyone, regardless of race or gender, is a sex object, though
most pay to see said films to have their eyes locked on the females in the film.
Consider the fact that in Boogie Nights,
Rollergirl, while having a name, which you may have missed, lacks a character.
Her mysteriousness is part of her aura and that’s the attraction in porn,
Anderson subtly implies. Because we don’t know much about Rollergirl as a
character, we, the audience, can appreciate her for her flesh and ability to
have sex because we can’t look beneath the surface at her character. Her flat
characterization, while devaluing her as a person, essentially makes her
successful at what she is trying to convey; an empty vessel capable of great
sex many men of varying different ages can only dream about. Had we learned
about Rollergirl as a person – maybe she had a troubled childhood, did poorly
in school, or simply doesn’t have a strong and sustainable relationship with
her family – she would’ve become less attractive because she would’ve had more
baggage, and that’s not the kind of pleasure we pay to see or hear when we
watch pornography. Anderson showcases this by portraying Rollergirl as
unbridled sexiness as a porn starlet.
Maggie
is a different story. Despite her being an older and more popular porn star
than Rollergirl, she doesn’t seem as sexy to the audience because we see her personal
life. Only in one scene between her and Dirk Diggler do we see her as a sex
object; the rest, we see her as a character with real problems. We see her
dirty laundry, such as her inability to maintain a stable relationship and her
failure to get custody of her young child. Because of Anderson’s choice to
humanize Maggie and dehumanize Rollergirl, one of these character isn’t as
attractive as the next because we know more about her than the fact that she’s
a pretty face and a minx in bed. Anderson also makes Rollergirl much more
youthful and radiant in her appearance and energy than Maggie; we see Maggie
frequently look pretty disheveled and hasty, especially in the more climactic
scenes of the film where she is worried about getting her kids and her addiction
to cocaine worsens. Both could have equal talent, but because we know about
Maggie’s personal life, she is not portrayed as beautiful nor as radiant as
Rollergirl, who always seems to be boasting a low-cut outfit that beautifully
accentuates her features.
Ultimately,
however, Boogie Nights heavily
reflects feminist film writer Laura Mulvey’s ideas about the penis, castration,
voyeurism, and scopophilia. In many ways, this is a film about power revolving
around the penis; Laura Mulvey’s idea of “phallocentrism” – the idea that power
comes solely from the penis and the possession of the penis – is highly
prevalent here. Jack Horner is constantly seen as a powerful and dominant
figure; a filthy rich but questionably moral individual that has made countless
dollars peddling smut and never seeming to be the least bit preoccupied with
the effects his business has on his performers or his audience. He has all the
power because he is a suave talker, a ladies man, and, above all in Mulvey’s
mind, possesses the penis. Consider the aforementioned scene where Dirk Diggler
and Maggie are about to have sex; nearly everyone on the set, be it the
lighters, the camera operators, or the uninvolved bystanders, are males. Maggie
is surrounded by an onslaught of men who are observing her and encouraging her
to be a passive recipient of the penis – a direct and almost too literal
iteration of Mulvey’s conception of power. Jack, at the center of it all,
possesses the power here for more reasons than just his successful and
lucrative business ventures.
But
Jack, much like Dirk Diggler, has a serious fear of his power being corrupted
or tarnished in any way. His uncommonly large penis is the reason for his
success and he’ll be damned if anything comes to corrupt that. Though we do not
see Dirk’s penis until the very end of the film, throughout the film, it is
almost established like another character. Robert C. Sickles, who wrote a piece
on the film, makes note of Eddie’s penis being a significant presence
throughout the film by recalling the opening scene. He writes, “Shortly after
Eddie meets Horner, Jack smiles at him and purrs, "I got a feeling that
behind those jeans is something wonderful just waiting to get out," thus
establishing the presence of one of the more intriguing off-screen spaces in
recent memory” (Sickles 52). This scene belongs to the opening sequences of the
film, and establishes Eddie’s penis, though it’s unseen by Horner at this time,
as something truly wonderful and worthy of a lot of recognition and power.
Be it the fact that female porn stars are often the ones headlined with the films they make, Dirk’s fear of “losing his power” (not being able to perform) or having the power and attention stripped away from him by younger starlets relates to the idea of castration on part of Mulvey’s theory. Castration works in the sense of a woman taking power (the penis) from a man. Boogie Nights emphasizes this through Dirk’s constant struggle to remain relevant during the excess period of the 1980’s, when porn becomes more acceptable, more risks and subversive routes can be taken, and older stars are left in the dust for the next generation of gorgeous bodies. Through these tough times, which even have Horner becoming more irritable and less welcoming of criticism on his old, traditionalist ways of filming pornography, Dirk becomes almost paranoid and self-conscious about not losing his commanding screen presences and the name he’s built from himself, but having it taken from him in the blink of an eye by someone, most likely a woman.
Works Cited
Sickles, Robert C.
“1970s Disco Daze: Paul Thomas Anderson's Boogie
Nights and the Last Golden Age of Irresponsibility.” 2002. Pg. 52 – 53.
Book.
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