A Bigger Splash

As a dramatist, playwright and screenwriter, Harold Pinter believed in the power of oblique dialogue and pregnant silences to reveal as much about characters and themes as direct exposition. Some of his most famous works—stage plays like The Homecoming and Betrayal and screenplays like The Servant and Accident—thrive not only on the tense atmosphere created by his penchant for telling pauses, but on the heightened attention to detail they demand from a viewer in gleaning the unspoken implications of words that can mask emotion as much as they lay it bare.
One of the more impressive achievements of David Kajganich’s screenplay for Luca Guadagnino’s A Bigger Splash—a remake of Jacques Deray’s 1969 film La Piscine—is the way it brings a similar Pinter-esque attention to subtext in its dialogue and characterizations. The plot is simple to the point of cliché: It’s essentially a love triangle between former rock star Marianne Lane (Tilda Swinton); her former music-producer lover Harry Hawkes (Ralph Fiennes); and her current paramour, and old friend of Harry’s, photographer Paul (Matthias Schoenaerts); with Harry’s daughter Penelope (Dakota Johnson) adding a Lolita-esque dimension to this dynamic in her own attempts to seduce Paul. And yet, these characters and their predicaments become more involving the longer we observe their interactions, picking up clues to their past, scrutinizing their faces and words to get a sense of their feelings toward each other. (An accidental murder about two-thirds of the way through certainly helps shake things up.)
Swooping seemingly on a whim back into the lives of Marianne and Paul as the couple vacation in Italy’s volcano-based Pantelleria island, Harry brings with him a gust of impulsive energy, wasting no time in puncturing their heretofore pleasant idyll. His high-spirited vigor—most memorably represented by the impromptu dance he does to the Rolling Stones’ “Emotional Rescue”—is a stark contrast to the stuffier, plainer Paul, who Harry introduced to Marianne before she fell in love with him and broke it off with Harry. For Marianne—who utters few words throughout the film, trying to stay mute so as to rest her vocal chords after surgery—Harry and Paul could be said to represent two contrasting desires in herself: a yearning to recapture the passion of her youth and a willingness to settle down. Penelope compares both these characters to two sides of the same record (appropriate especially because Marianne spent six years with each). For her part, the highly sexual Penelope—who only recently discovered Harry was her father, which perhaps explains their somewhat incestuous behavior together—offers the increasingly jealous Paul temptations to stray, but she may well be the most enigmatic of the four: an embodiment of pure eroticism, evincing little human warmth.