Everyone is
capable of enjoying cruelty, and none more dangerously so than moralists, idealists,
and ideologues who deny they do, for they are the ones who – indulging in a
particularly poisonous variety of sadism – will mask their cruelty as justice
and fool themselves with their own mask. (Out-and-out criminals do more harm than
moralists one-on-one, but moralists outnumber them and do vastly more harm en
masse.) That is not to say we need yield to the impulse, but it is well to
remember that cruelty is as much a part of human nature as kindness; it is all
the easier thereby to turn the impulse in a more constructive direction –
sublimation, to use an old-fashioned but still useful Freudian expression.
Nietzsche argued that humor was sublimated cruelty, and few of us would want to
go through life without humor. A harmless way to nourish our dark side is with
such entertainments as murder mysteries and horror movies. Dramas with
anti-hero protagonists or villains whom we on some level secretly admire remain
enduringly popular, e.g. Dexter of the Jeff Lindsay novels or the Joker in The Dark Knight. A less lethal but still
malefic pair are Kathryn Merteuil and Sebastian Valmont of the 1999 movie Cruel Intentions.
Based on the
1782 novel Les Liaisons Dangereuses
by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos but set in 1999 Upper East Side Manhattan, Cruel Intentions is part cult classic
and part guilty pleasure. Mainstream critics for the most part were unkind to
it at the time of its release, but it clicked with its target audience and
critics have warmed to it in the years since. Premise: Wealthy
private-schooled teen step-siblings Kathryn and Sebastian (Sarah Michelle
Gellar and Ryan Phillipe) embrace decadent upper class hedonism and play cruel
games. Sebastian plans to seduce the new headmaster’s famously virginal
daughter Annette (Reese Witherspoon) before school starts but Kathryn bets him
that he can’t do it: the stakes of the bet are Sebastian’s classic Jaguar and
Kathryn herself. Meantime Kathryn plans to corrupt innocent young Cecile as a
pawn in a revenge scheme of her own. Everything proceeds more or less according
to plan until Sebastian falls for Annette and develops a conscience, the one
thing he cannot afford.
The Kathryn character
is arguably diagnosable as having ASPD (anti-social personality disorder),
commonly called sociopathy. She nonetheless is impressive. Sebastian has less
of an excuse: he is capable of empathy, but chooses prankish malevolence anyway.
Both are wickedly enjoyable to watch, both when they succeed and when they meet
their comeuppances. Also, the 90s soundtrack is marvelous.
A musical
adaptation of Cruel Intentions is
currently playing off-Broadway at Le Poisson Rouge, a dinner club in
Greenwich Village. I couldn’t pass that up, so a friend and I drove into NYC
last Saturday. It is a campy production in a fairly intimate setting, and is
definitely worth a look, though seeing the movie first is, if not a must, at
least strongly advised. Nostalgia is much of the point. There are a few of the
iconic numbers from the movie soundtrack (Bittersweet
Symphony, Colorblind, Every Me and Every You), but most songs are not from
the movie. All are hits from the ‘90s, however, and unless you never turned on
a radio in that decade you’ll know them. The audience was a mix of all ages but
was extra-heavy on younger GenXers and older Millennials.
Cruel Intentions the Musical runs only until March, but I suspect it will turn up again in other
venues. I recommend revisiting the Valmont/Merteuil residence if you get a
chance, whether for this production or another one. It’s a fun way to tickle
your dark side. Call it catharsis.