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The Christine Jorgensen
Story
(1970)
Director: Irving Rapper
Cast: John Hansen, Joan Tomkins, Quinn K. Redeker
If you've been fortunate enough to see movies
covering a wide range of topics over a wide
period of time, you will have seen a reoccurring
phenomenon. That is, the perspective of the
subject changes with the time. Take World War II
films, for example. When the war was actually
taking place, audiences were seeing war films
that were almost entirely flag-wavers. They
would show their strong-minded boys doing
extremely well against fantastic odds against an
enemy that often confirmed a stereotype going
around at the time, and killing hundreds of them
for every one of their own they happened to
lose. After the war was over, the tone of the
World War II films made during the next few
decades changed. Gone was a lot of the
flag-waving, in came more mud, casualties, and a
sense of chaos and self-doubt, as well as an
enemy that seemed closer to us in many ways than
we had previously been made to think. A revision
of this point of time slowly but gradually
morphed so that today, recent movies like
Saving Private Ryan can now show us the
full horror that conflict was filled of.
Sometimes revision has been good for a genre...
but there are other times it hasn't been. Take
the western genre. In the last few years we've
had a number of westerns that take out the grit
in order to place politically-correct
pretty-boys instead, and with MTV-inspired
directing and editing added to the mix to make
dire results. (Examples: American Outlaws
and Texas Rangers.)
Which brings us to The Christine
Jorgensen Story. If there was at least one thing
done right about its creation, it was the
decision to make it in the year it ended up
being made in.
Previously, it probably couldn't never
have been
made due to the major studios following the
censorship code. Plus, people back then were
for the most part still pretty squeamish about the idea of someone
having a sex-change operation, let alone related
topics like transvestitism and homosexuality.
(So you have to give Ed Wood some credit for
having the guts to make Glen & Glenda
in the early '50, even though it is a laughable
film and extremely tame by today's standards.) I
can also doubt it being made later, with the
then blockbuster-mentality of the major studios;
the closest it ever got was when Vanessa
Redgrave played Renee Richards in 1986's
Second Serve - which was made-for-TV,
and significantly sanitized as a result. But it
was a different situation in 1970. The studios
were more willing to experiment with
previously-taboo subject matter. Plus, the
censorship laws had been loosened - you could be
adult enough to be an "R" or even (gasp!) an
"X". No doubt, legendary producer Edward Small (It!
The Terror From Beyond Space) had the
opportunity to tell the story without worrying
about any details being censored. On the other
hand, there was still the risk that the movie
might be made with too much of a 1970s
sensibility, becoming anachronistic for what
took place in the 1950s and earlier.
As it turned out, that's not what happened.
Instead, the movie ended up being made in a way
that could be considered even more bizarre.
Except for some naughty stuff like nudity,
The Christine Jorgensen Story could
easily be mistaken for a Hollywood production
that was made two decades earlier! I mean, the
movie feels like it was made in the '50s right
down to the opening credits! As the opening
theme (strings with piano playing a la Liberace)
starts to play, the credits are displayed -
scrolling from the bottom to the top of the
screen, just like many movies from that era
opened. And just about everything else that
follows - the sets, the camera angles, even the
film stock - has that same old-fashioned feel.
You have to wonder just how on earth the movie
got made this way. One possible explanation may
be because of director Irving Rapper being
chosen to direct. Checking his credits, I
discovered that almost all his serious work on
films previously was in the 1940s and 1950s; it
seems plausible to conclude that he was long out
of practice. This may also explain why despite
what seems to have been serious intentions, the
movie turns out to be hilariously bad. Even
though Jorgensen herself is listed as an advisor
to the movie, it's laughingly obvious she had as
much impact as Buster Keaton had on The
Buster Keaton Story.
After the opening credits unfold, we then are shown
the young George
Jorgensen Jr., standing in an obviously phony
city set on some studio back lot as
potato flake
snow falls all around him. With an unbelievably
wicked grin on his face, he is seen looking in
the window of a toy store at a doll whose eyes
are repeatedly go side to side - just like his
eyes are moving at that moment. We soon see that
George is not your average boy - he smashes his
erector set in frustration when he sees his
sister Dolly across the room enjoying her doll.
George later states, "I don't like football -
it's too rough!" and prefers to play with Dolly
and her friends in the schoolyard. "George plays
real good hopscotch, Dolly!" comforts one of her
friends after George gets a black eye from the
boys who keep calling him a sissy. George's
parents seem pretty clueless as to what's going
on with their son. All George's mother can do is
try to keep telling George that his sister "...has
her toys, and you have yours," whenever she finds
George cuddling his sister's dolls. George's
father reacts to his unmasculine son by
enthusiastically photographing George with his
first black eye, and when his wife subsequently
tells him that George's teacher discovered
George was smuggling a doll to and from school
in his lunch box, he dismisses it all by saying,
"The boy will outgrow it!...Yep, everything
changes except photographs and things you
remember!"
"My father was wrong," George tells us in his
narration, adding, "For me, there were no
tomorrows that weren't filled with loneliness."
George grows into a man, shown to us by slowly
increasing the size of an image of boy George
(ha!) and subsequently quickly dissolving to the
adult George (played by Hansen.) George has
become a professional photographer at an ad
agency, and we see that his knowing of how a
queen should sit or a woman in a bathing suit
should twirl around has become a great asset in
his job. (When director Rapper isn't interesting
in focusing the camera on pigeons or seagulls,
that is.) But George is still fighting his
personal hell. After his sister Dolly gets
married, we see him lying in his bed, "Jealous I
couldn't be a woman as she was," while a
thunderstorm crashes and flashes from a nearby
window. It doesn't help when a secretly gay male
co-worker figures George is gay, and literally
tries to rip off his pants one night during an
out-of-town photo shoot. George manages to
escape, and runs down to the docks to throw up.
One of the swimsuit models sees the heaving
George on the dock; she comes down from her
hotel room, walks over to George just as he
finished barfing, and says, "George... if
you're going fishing, I can cut bait."
Still, she manages to subsequently provide enough comfort
for George to realize he has to do something. As
the fog on the dock suddenly becomes thick
enough to obscure everything, we cut to George
back in New York, doing research in a library.
He finds his salvation in a book titled Sex
&
The Glands, and goes to the trouble of
studying as a medical assistant so he can talk
to its physician author about his problem. After
some tests, the physician tells him it's his
glands alright, and tells him of a doctor named
Dahlman in George's ancestral land of Denmark.
George immediately takes the next boat to
Denmark; Denmark, incidentally, turns out to be
a land of stock footage, rear projection, and
phony city sets similar to those found in New
York. Dr. Dahlman is pleased to help George,
understanding George's frustrations in America.
"Ah, you Americans, you're advanced in so many
ways! But when it comes to sex, childish!
Operate on the brain, perform a lobotomy, fine!
But take a pair of testicles, and everybody
explodes!" Dahlman explains the details of the
never-tried-before sex change operation (which I
will mercifully spare you), and George without
hesitation agrees to go through the long process
described. The day of the operation arrives, the
details of which I will also spare you, except
that "Knife!" is yelled out loud at one point.
Oh, and George having vivid and symbolic dreams
while being operated on, consisting of things
like him running in slow motion, and footballs
twirling through the air in slow motion as well.
I will also spare you over George's
subsequent post-operative treatment, except to
warn any potential viewers that we get to see
one shot of George's hormone-enhanced breasts.
Actually, make that "Christine's", which is the
name George rechristens himself. Not long
afterwards, word leaks out about the secret
operation, and it becomes a media sensation.
Reporters camp outside the home Christine is
staying at, yelling "Hey, Yorgensen! Ve vant a
story!" Christine finally submits to being
interviewed by American reporter Tom Crawford (Redeker,
who later helped to script The Deer Hunter).
They escape to the semi-desert countryside of
Denmark so the story can be written in peace.
During this time, Christine finds herself having
feelings to Tom. And Tom seems to be developing
feelings to Christine. But Christine is
reluctant, and she not only resists her
feelings, she wants Tom to return to America
without her. Tom feels differently; he visits
her one night, and they have one of those
heart-to-heart talks where the woman cries at
one point, but it all ends happily with a deep
kiss in front of a roaring fire in the living
room. Christine returns to America, and is met
by the airport by a press that is still finding
it hard to take this whole thing differently.
What will Christine do? It's only 1953, after
all, and we still have to see what she will do
back in America in these circumstances. But the
movie thinks otherwise, skipping immediately to
the late '60s when America started to do its own
sex change operations. To make sure we know this
is a happy ending, we are treated to a shot of a
sunset just before the end credits start to
roll.
I will admit that while watching The
Christine Jorgensen Story, a question
kept going through my mind, probably the same
question a lot of you are thinking
now: Were
they serious? I mean, a movie with such a
dopey attitude towards its subject material even
in that day and age makes it hard to believe it
was formed from serious but misguided
intentions. On the other hand, there are movies
like If Footmen Tire
You, What Will Horses Do? from the
same era, and subsequent decades put out movies
like Sinbad Of The
Seven Seas or
Troll 2. Plus,
I don't think the real Christine Jorgensen would
have authorized a comic-flavored biopic of
herself, even though reports indicate she was
not without a sense of humor. So I think we have
to conclude that no matter how ludicrous the
movie gets, it was made with absolute sincerity.
But I'm not complaining, since the end results
are a lot more entertaining than had the
filmmakers' serious intentions resulted in a
movie of a more sober and accurate nature than
this one. It would be a perfect fit as the
second half of a double-feature with Glen
& Glenda, in more ways than one. If
there's to be another question that's to go
through your mind while watching the movie, it's
one that questions the unexplainable fact that
it's remained in an unknown state for so long.
Check for availability on Amazon
Check Amazon for availability of Christine
Jorgensen's autobiography
See also: Barefoot Gen,
Men Cry Bullets,
Sonny Boy
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