©Courtesy of Roadside Attractions
Aging for a woman is tough. If she works in show business even more. Gia Coppola’s latest film — The Last Showgirl — shows this condition through an outstanding performance by Pamela Anderson.
Shelley (Pamela Anderson), is a seasoned showgirl who has been working at Le Razzle Dazzle, in Las Vegas, for all her life. She loves the choreographies, the costumes and her younger colleagues Mary-Anne (Brenda Song) and Jodie (Kiernan Shipka). But after 38 years, the producer of the revue, Eddie (Dave Bautista), informs her that the show will close down forever. Shelley starts discussing this with her friend Annette (Jamie Lee Curtis as Annette), a waitress and former showgirl and ponders upon the way she favoured this career path on top of her private sphere. In fact, Shelly’s daughter Hannah (Billie Lourd), visits her mother and watches one of her shows and questions how she could choose a spectacle with dancing nudes, over raising her when she was just a child.
All the complexities of life’s choices emerge, and Shelley reminds her daughter and all of us that “mothers are not saints or saviours, they’re just regular people doing the best they can with the tools they have.” We see throughout the film, how Shelley cares for Hannah and encourages her to pursue her dreams as a photographer, even if being an artist is challenging, because doing a job you don’t like is harder. Shelley’s character epitomises the way life is full of contradictions: you can profoundly love your offspring and yet choose a career over it.
©Courtesy of Roadside Attractions
Life catches up with us and takes a toll, which is what happens with Shelley, who as a middle-aged woman is uncertain of what she will end up doing for a living. She even tries to audition for new opportunities, but is rejected unabashedly by a director (Jason Schwartzman).
The film has moments of lyricism as it shows the decadence of a profession connected to the ephemeral. One of the most aesthetically beguiling scenes is when Pamela Anderson is watching on a screen some black and white footage of a ballerina, and she mimics her choreography. Meanwhile the montage alternates this instant of sophisticated ballet with a raunchy dance of a topless woman, who is performing on a stage of a sleazy nightclub. The art of dancing is shown in its multifaceted declinations, also with references to unsuccessful past auditions for Radio City Music Hall’s Rockettes and Broadway shows, as well as Jamie Lee Curtis flaunting sexy moves that no longer seem to fit her current age. Melancholy and resilience are articulated with authenticity, through a form of creative expression that touches the existences of different generations.
©Courtesy of Roadside Attractions
The Last Showgirl had its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival and stylistically displays the characteristics that director Gia Coppola had shown in her previous film Palo Alto. The grainy cinematography by Autumn Durald Arkapaw and gritty performances unveil a world of hopeless realism, which in this case is caged in sparkly bustiers. The music Total Eclipse of the Heart by Bonnie Tyler heightens the feeling of dismal transience.
Just like Gloria Swanson’s Norma Desmond had to confront the end of her silent movie career with the advent of talkies and age advancing, Shelley’s life — spent performing in rhinestones and feathers — also comes to an end. Thus, The Last Showgirl, comes across as a modern Sunset Boulevard, with Pamela Anderson displaying a prismatic spectrum of emotions that range from sorrow to fury, from naive hope to mortified disillusion. The former Baywatch bombshell proves to be a versatile actor that will move spectators for the humanity she channels in Shelley’s character.
Final Grade: B+
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Here’s the trailer of the film.