Cremaster 5
Created by: Matthew Barney
When: 5 pm Sunday, March 21, 2004
Where: Madstone Theaters
Cremaster Suite, 1994-2002
Photo by Michael James O'Brien
© Matthew Barney
When total descension is finally attained in "Cremaster 5" 5 (1997), it is
envisioned as a tragic love story set in the romantic dreamscape of late-nineteenth-Century
Budapest.
The film is cast in the shape of a lyric opera. Biological metaphors shifted form to inhabit
emotional states - longing and despair - that become musical leitmotivs in the orchestral
score.
The opera's primary characters - the Queen of Chain (played by Ursula Andress) and her Diva,
Magician, and Giant (all played by Barney) - enact collectively the final release promised
by the project as a whole.
Cremaster 5 opens with an overture that introduces the opera's characters and lays out the
map of Budapest that the narrative will traverse.
The Magician crosses the Lánchíd Bridge on horseback. The Queen ascends the staircase
of the Hungarian State Opera House with her two ushers. She settles onto her throne in the
royal booth, and the ushers arrange a fleet of Jacobin pigeons around her.
Pearls float on the surface of the pools in the Gellért Thermal Baths, partially concealing
the Füdór sprites, who inhabit their underwater realms. The curtain rises to an
empty theater, the conductor readies his orchestra, and the opera begins.
As the Queen sings, her Diva appears on the stage, delineating the proscenium arch of the stage
by laying ribbons across its floor and then scaling its contours. The Queen's mind wanders
to memories of her beloved Magician preparing for a leap into the waters of the Danube from
the Lánchíd Bridge.
Stripped naked, he positions plastic shackles over his wrists and ankles, then fits molded
gloves on his hands and places weighted balls between his toes. His actions recall the famed
bridge jumps of Harry Houdini, who was born in Budapest in 1874.
The Magician is seeking transcendence, but the Queen misunderstands his actions and thinks
he is trying to take his own life. The Queen's ushers direct her attention to orifices in
her throne through which she can see into the Gellért Baths below. Her birds plummet
through the passages in the throne, trailing long satin ribbons into the bath.
Her Giant enters the watery path between the two pools, wading through the pearls to hip level.
The sprites cluster around him with a garland of ribbons they have woven together out of those
attached to the birds.
They reach up through the water and affix the garland to the Giant's scrotum. In the warm waters
of the thermal baths, the cremaster muscle releases and the testicles descend. This climactic
moment - the emergence of a fully differentiated state - is rendered visible when the pigeons
soar upward with ribbons trailing.
The Queen then relives the Magician's leap into the river and swoons from the horror of her
recollection. At this point the narrative mirrors the path of descension just revealed: having
completed his climb, the Diva tumbles to the stage, and the Magician plunges to the bottom
of the river, landing, manacled, on a flowerbed.
Two water sprites caress his fallen body and insert a black pearl into his mouth. The Queen
performs her mournful aria, preparing to join her lover in death. A thin stream of liquid
emanates from her mouth, trickling onto her ruffle and throne, then falling into the pools
below.
On its descent, the stream divides into two droplets that strike the water simultaneously.
Two perfect circles resonate outward, filling the surface of the bath with their waves, suggesting,
in turn, eternal renewal or the echoes of a system expiring.
The Cremaster cycle defers any definitive conclusion.