In film after film, including his latest,
Dark Waters, the director Todd Haynes asks viewers to contend with ambiguity, writes John Lahr in the
New Yorker: “
Dark Waters subverts by taking the legal thriller—a form that traditionally concludes with the triumph of good over evil—into areas of psychological complexity and ambiguity. All investigative stories, he told me, when we met in Los Angeles in June, have the burden of revealing a truth. ‘What I love so much about the genre,’ he explained, ‘is the cost of revealing the truth. The drama of that, and what it does to people. That is the part that kills you.’
Photo: Todd Haynes in the projection room of the Metrograph, in New York. Photograph by Pari Dukovic for the New Yorker
Meta: Type(s): Alumni | Subject(s): Bard Graduate Programs,Bardians at Work | Institutes(s): MFA |