It’s been a couple of days since I saw Opus, and my opinion of it hasn’t significantly changed — I still thought it was fine, and I seem to have liked it a good bit more than the consensus on Rotten Tomatoes.
But there’s just enough weight to it that it’s been bouncing around in the back of my mind. I still don’t believe that the finale hits as hard as it could have. Partly because it’s presented as if it were a haunting, final twist, even though it doesn’t give enough weight to the most interesting questions.
The movie acts as if the most compelling question is “what really happened?” and then gives a lengthy answer to that. The question of “where are all the bodies?” is raised but not given enough time for us to really think about it, and then we see the answer played out in montage, as if that were the key question. And the most important question: “why did you do it?” is answered in a fairly lengthy conversation about evolution through strength vs intellect vs creativity, that doesn’t really answer anything we care about in that moment. The ideas behind the cult should’ve been made explicit earlier in the movie; the thing I cared most about at the end of the movie were the ideas behind the plan.
Another scene that I thought was a missed opportunity was Ariel’s conversation with her friend/crush-haver, the thrust of which was that she’s too mid to be interesting. In retrospect, I feel like this scene was working too hard to establish Ariel’s inherent likability, instead of planting the seed of an idea that would make the finale hit home harder. Ariel’s motivations seemed perfectly reasonable, so her friend’s comments just came across as cruel instead of helpful “real talk.” We all want our work to be noticed and valued, no matter whether we “deserve” it or not.
I think what’s most interesting about the movie ends up being lost, because it lets Ariel’s most significant character flaw get muddled: she was trying to ride the coattails of more famous and accomplished people, instead of trusting in her own voice from the start. But the friend just essentially says, “there’s nothing interesting about your own voice,” which just reinforces what everyone else is saying throughout the movie. I can understand having a character who’s giving bad advice to the protagonist, and I can understand a character being a manifestation of Ariel’s self-doubt, but I think even a less-corny version of “I’ll show him!” would’ve been stronger. Or better yet, some actual self-reflection on Ariel’s part.1I admit I should allow for the possibility that this was the movie explicitly telling us that Ariel’s not as brilliant a writer as she thinks she is, and that the reason she’s writing about famous people is because she actually doesn’t have anything interesting to say. But I say that if “Ariel’s not that great a writer, actually” was the point all along, and Opus is on some level a horror movie about self-delusion, then it’s a mistake to cast someone who just seems to be good at everything, like Ayo Edebiri.
As it was, there was nothing in the screenplay giving voice to the idea that Ariel was essentially the same as all the other influencers, paparazzi, celebrity interviewers, and writers who’ve become famous for writing about the accomplishments of other, more famous people. And there’s a lot giving voice to the idea that she stands out from the rest because she’s got genuine talent that’s being unfairly overlooked.
Even in the finale, when the specific question of “why was I chosen?” comes up, the answer presented is that Ariel had written something that stood out to Moretti as a memorable turn of phrase. Not that it was her drive, or her ambition, or her willingness to write about other people before she was ready to write for herself. It’s frustrating, since this seems like it would’ve been the perfect opportunity to set up the reveal that was to follow. But the movie was unwilling to let a murderer implicate Ariel for her part in the plan; it had to insist that anyone with any taste at all could recognize Ariel’s unique talent.2Second-guessing again: I don’t remember the phrase itself, but I do remember thinking that it was nonsensical, like a teacher had an “unassuming chin” or something. At the time I just took it as a good-faith effort to write something that would sound like the kind of description a young, somewhat pretentious writer might choose. But if the movie is actually playing 4th-dimensional chess and I’m losing, then I suppose it could be an example of how Ariel was chosen not because her writing was good, but because it was memorable.
So the last shot has Ariel, on camera, looking haunted as she finally realizes what’s happened. But the movie makes it seem like her haunting realization is that the cult of “Levelists” is still out there, all around us! There’s one in the studio with me, right now! And she’s pointedly calling my non-fiction book a “novel” to discredit it! That makes it seem like she’s Cassandra, telling everyone the truth, but cursed by external forces so that no one will believe her.
But the most interesting idea of Opus, I think, is in how much Ariel had been complicit. It’s the idea that the media cannot comment on itself. Fame isn’t actually about being appreciated or even understood; it’s about being seen.
It’s an idea that’s especially relevant when authors are timing their shocking exposés not for when the truth matters the most, but when book sales would be the highest. Bob Woodward has gotten the most attention (and vitriol) from people looking to him for his President-destroying abilities, seemingly oblivious to the fact that we’re living in a “post-truth society.” And even oblivious to the fact that All the President’s Men has arguably become at least as notable for its place in popular culture as its place in journalism or American politics.
There are two scenes in Opus that communicate this idea really well: first is when Moretti is peeking at Ariel’s notebook, and he only comments on her spelling of “sycaphants.” (i.e. He doesn’t actually care whether she’s writing anything defamatory, just as long as she’s writing about him). Second is when she finally gets her one-on-one time with Moretti, with explicit permission to ask him freely about anything at all, and she chooses to ask whether he really bought Freddie Mercury’s teeth. It was a wild piece of random gossip from earlier in the movie, it’s possibly the least relevant piece of information to everything she’s seen in the compound so far, and yet it’s the one thing that’s stuck in her mind. Because as much as she thinks of herself as a journalist, she’s still captivated by what’s evocative more than what’s necessarily true.
That’s the interesting realization that gets lost at the end of the movie: that her motivation hadn’t been to spread the truth, but to use the truth as the hook to make herself be seen and heard.
Oh, and also one other thing I liked about Opus was the title card. It finally gets sprung on us after several minutes of introduction and setup, and I thought it was excellently timed.