 plumbing the
depths
1 i have
this dream
2 a flush of guilt
3 baptisms in blood
4 'psycho'
and deadly sin
5 freudian jokes
for the john
6 exploring interiors
7 the naked truth
8 dirty bits
and naughty bits
"It's the only room in the house that
has a lock. And a lot of tremendous things happen in there -- bathing, the sort of
baptism, all those things..."
Wes Craven |
exploring interiors
"i think that the house, after your own body, is the first structure that you project your
personality into,'' says literature professor-turned-Scream filmmaker Wes Craven
(who, by the way, was raised by Christian fundamentalists, not wolves). "There are
areas of the house that are your consciousness, there are areas of the house that are your
subconscious, there are areas of the house that are your imagination -- especially in the
old-style houses. Each room in a house is imbued with a certain personality and context
that is very, very powerful.'' In movies such as The Tenant (Roman Polanski,
1976) and Craven's own The People Under the Stairs (1991), shuddering, almost
organic plumbing gives creepy life to an inanimate building. (After a while in Polanski's
film, you begin to wonder if the tenant is inhabiting the building, or vice-versa. From
his apartment, Polanski can see the shared toilet across the way, in which some kind of
hieroglyphics have been carved that make the chamber seem all the more mysterious.)
like the polanski of
Repulsion and The Tenant (in which the plumbing of a building expresses
the disintegrating sanity of the person living in it), Craven has featured bathtub scenes
in several of his movies -- notably the religious fundamentalist/Ernie Borgnine thriller Deadly
Blessing (1981), in which a Freudian snake slips out of the plumbing and into a
girl's bathwater, and A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984), in which boiler-room
kid-killer Freddy Kreuger, monster plumber from the id, nearly drowns a teenage girl in
the tub. "When you write a scene where people sink under the surface of the
bathwater, you tap into something that goes back to your first years, when you're afraid
you're going to be drowned or something," Craven says. "Water is very evocative.
The drains go we know not where, and we have those fears of being dragged down inside.''

a warm bath can
be a comforting womb or a watery grave -- and, in movies like Wes Craven's, often changes
from one to the other in an instant. If Psycho made explicit associations between
death and the shower, other movies before and since have found death in the bathtub.
(Well, what is a rebirth, but a death followed by something else?) In The Nanny
(Seth Holt, 1965), a precursor to The Hand that Rocks the Cradle, Bette Davis is
accused of drowning her young charge in the bath. And in movies as dissimilar as Diabolique
(Henri-Georges Clouzot, 1955), Repulsion, Fatal Attraction, and Drowning
By Numbers (Peter Greenaway, 1989), former (or would-be) lovers/husbands are pushed
down into the tub -- almost as if, because they were no longer desired, they could be
simply be flushed down the drain along with the old, dirty bathwater.
or flushed down
the toilet like... well, expended food. The bathroom is a terminal destination for the
expended fuel that keeps us alive, and occasionally for living beings themselves. Death in
the sterility (or filth) of the bathroom seems particularly harsh, but also particularly
apt. It's the end of the line, a place where life itself may be flushed away. And it's not
just for rock stars: Elvis Presley on the Graceland linoleum in the semi-documentary This
is Elvis (Malcolm Leo, Andrew Solt, 1981), or Sex Pistol Sid Vicious' main squeeze
Nancy Spungen (Chloe Webb) in Sid & Nancy (Alex Cox, 1985). Most of Candyman's
victims die in the bathroom -- the killer himself comes through the medicine chest mirror.
The severed penis of one casualty is found in the toilet bowl -- a man's pride disposed of
like a turd. It's in a public restroom that Robert Carradine shoots David Carradine in Mean
Streets (Martin Scorsese, 1974), and that Lukas Haas witnesses Danny Glover
committing murder in Witness (Peter Weir, 1985). M. Emmett Walsh dies on the
bathroom floor, staring up at the exceptionally elaborate plumbing underneath the sink as
the life drains out of him in Blood Simple (Joel & Ethan Coen, 1984). (The
Coens have confessed to tarting up the plumbing a bit under there; the real stuff was just
too simple to be worth looking at.)

and when michael corleone (Al Pacino) plans to avenge his pop in The Godfather (Francis Ford
Coppola, 1972), his gun is hidden in the lavatory. General Jack D. Ripper (Sterling
Hayden) in Dr. Strangelove: Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb
(Stanley Kubrick, 1964), certain that the Communist menace is infiltrating our
"precious bodily fluids'' through the fluoridation of drinking water in our pipes,
chooses his office bathroom for his suicide. Vincent D'Onofrio meets his end (and takes
drill sargeant R. Lee Ermey with him) in the latrine -- framed in by rows of sparkling
white porcelain bowls -- in Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket (1987). And in The
Godfather, Part II (Francis Ford Coppola, 1974), gangster-turned-informant Frankie
Pentangeli (Michael Gazzo) commits suicide in the bathtub like a disgraced Roman warrior,
slitting his wrists and letting his life's blood drain into a pool on the white tile floor
(the second time Coppola would use such imagery that year). Bathtubs and bathrooms are
often the sites of suicides, onscreen and off, of people choosing to shuffle off their
designer clothes along with their mortal coils, and leave the world naked, the
same way they came into it.
naked and vulnerable in the bathroom, we confront the intertwined implications of sex and death. When
Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) and his family spend the winter as caretakers of the
Outlook Hotel in Stanley Kubrick's The Shining (1980) the camera prowls the
empty, outsized hallways, ballrooms, lobbies, kitchen, pantries, and boiler room.
But one place it -- and young psychic Danny (Danny Lloyd) -- is not supposed to go is room
237. Both Danny and his daddy are irrevocably changed by what they come face-to-face
with in that room. We go in with Jack, who discovers a voluptuous naked woman in the
shower. But when he embraces her, she turns into a rotting hag -- something, by the
way, that every voluptuous naked woman (and man) eventually turns into, more or
less. Jack -- who, unbeknownst to himself, has "always been the caretaker"
at the Outlook (this Truth being cryptically delivered in hushed tones in a blood-red
restroom) -- isn't really being tempted by "another woman"; he's being seduced
by the hotel itself, his real mistress, and the knowledge of his own (im-)mortality.
What Faustian bargain did he strike (and with whom?) to get this permanent gig?
next page
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plumbing 6


The bloodbathroom, where
life goes down the drain: The Coens got into plumbing early (in their first feature,
Blood Simple).

Delbert Grady sez: "You've always been the
caretaker..."
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