“Every romance novel I’ve ever seen could be summed up as ‘Love for woman tames dangerous man’,” writes one Reddit fanfic devotee with the weary resignation of someone who has put far too much time into confirming this point. The untamed anti-hero may be a glamorous cad, but he may equally be the Hunchback of Notre Dame. Romantic monsters, apparently, resemble the second kind. “They are just more dangerous. And often hairier.” Like men, in other words, but more so.
As readers of these pages know, steamy romance novels are the publishing phenomenon du jour. Monsters (and other “non-humans”), having emerged from the online erotica sites where they have been vigorously doing whatever they do in the shadows for years, are now at the forefront of that new wave. The bad Beast – be it a shapeshifting werewolf, a vampire or an alien – is the new Other, frightening but also exercising a terrible allure.
Shapeshifting mythical beasts are not new, of course; the Greeks, inventors of the Minotaur, were there first. Olympian gods were always turning into monsters, often for erotic purposes. The mighty Zeus would become anything that came to his celestial mind – a swan, a bull, even a shower of gold – to mate with whichever nymph he fancied without being spotted by his wife, Hera.
Spartan queen Leda’s encounter with the swan was a favourite subject for Renaissance artists, always depicted – despite the story’s suspect sexual assault vibes – as a transport of feathery bliss. Sexuality was anarchic and animal, a troubling primal urge. In these stories and the work inspired by them, that urge that could be unleashed in safety.
Similar fables are handed down in every culture; current research suggests that the bones of the story of Beauty and the Beast, written by French novelist Gabrielle-Suzanne Barbot de Villeneuve in 1740 as a salon entertainment, date back 4000 years. Dutiful Beauty goes to live with the cursed Beast as a forfeit after her father is caught stealing his roses. With her, the Beast is courtly, kind and adoring; she falls in love with him. Her love, once she acknowledges it, lifts the curse, restoring him to his real self: a handsome prince.
In the exquisite picture books popular in the 19th century, the Beast was depicted as hairy, hulking and horned, like a very large wild boar; Jean Cocteau’s version in his 1946 film was based on the actor Jean Marais’ husky dog, but with a nasty underbite; Disney’s 1991 cartoon version is a composite with a buffalo’s head surrounded by a lion’s mane. Beauty is always assumed not to find the Beast desirable, but what Beauty actually wants is never a question anyone asks. She does her duty. In this story, as in so many others, female desire must be erased, disguised or denied.
Numerous critics are adamant, however, that it doesn’t succeed; there is always an undercurrent of transgressive desire in these stories of maidens and monsters, waiting to be scooped up. The late Angela Carter, who retold a variety of traditional stories in The Bloody Chamber that teased out their darker threads, held that the allure of the monster was a universal. In her stories, the heroines’ bizarre lusts would set them free. And even in the Disney animation, there is a hint in the final scene that Belle is hoping her prince still has a bit of Beast in him.
By the time Mexican director Guillermo del Toro came to make The Shape of Water (2017), in which Sally Hawkins’ lonely lab worker falls in love with an amphibian humanoid captured by the scientists in charge, the idea of a final-act transformation was truly redundant. The monster under observation is kind, gentle, sensual: everything her bosses are not. He is also beautiful. How can she resist a scaly blue creature with gills? She escapes with him to a life underwater; the film went on to win four Oscars. It clearly struck a chord.
The monster as erotic fetish had actually reached its zenith 40 years earlier, in Walerian Borowczyk’s 1975 oddity, The Beast. Borowczyk, born in Poland in 1923, was an exceptional director who became increasingly fixated on sex, voyeurism and his own conception of female desire. In The Beast, a naive young woman stays in a French chateau, where she has vivid dreams of running through the surrounding forest and being ravished by an ursine assailant. Sumptuously pornographic and widely banned, the film is now regarded as a teratophiliac classic.
Vampires are another kind of Other; creatures of darkness whose overpowering urge to siphon blood from the young and nubile is generally read as a sexual metaphor. Countless films from the silent era onwards show the vampire’s victims experiencing a glorious release as the debonair roue’s teeth pierce her neck, although the vampire trope does allow for surprising variations: the vampire as child’s best friend (Let the Right One In); as world-weary bohemian (Only Lovers Left Alive) or as a 100-year-old virgin who finds chaste love with a schoolgirl (Twilight). One critic described Twilight as “abstinence porn” – which has its own erotic charge, of course. It certainly worked for its teen audience; author Stephanie Meyer’s books sold in the millions, while the subsequent film franchise generated over US$3billion.
This week, a new version of Nosferatu – a remake of the 1922 silent classic, which was based on Bram Stoker’s 1897 novel, Dracula – reaches our screens. Count Orlok, as Dracula was renamed by the original German producers for copyright reasons, is not the suave aristocratic kind of vampire, like Bela Lugosi or Claes Bang. Introduced as a scorching disembodied voice like a Sensurround death rattle, he eventually materialises as a great slimy man – played by an unrecognisable Bill Skarsgard – who seems to be rotting before our very eyes. As such, he proves irresistible.
Director Robert Eggers cleaves to the plot points of F.W. Murnau’s original, but turns the narrative around to be told from Ellen’s point of view. The switch of focus effects a telling change of tone. In the first film, an ailing Ellen senses the approach of “the Master” from Transylvania, as if she were a kind of wireless transmitter picking up his signal, not long before he arrives. It is only after her tragic demise that the men around her realise she lured the vampire to his death, paying the ultimate price for her sacrifice.
In Eggers’ film, Ellen catches Nosferatu’s emanations while still a small girl. Neglected, lonely and intellectually frustrated, she responds to his call with both terror and excitement. That demonic voice, coming from some distant sphere, is terrifying, of course, but is also alive with the possibilities of an exterior world. She thus grows up with dangerous yearnings that make her ill, as such feelings must make any decent Victorian wife. But when she sacrifices herself to him, it is not in a spirit of submission. Having hardened her resolve to save the world, she goes headlong into her own destruction with evident zest.
More monster love, of a kind, is coming in January. Nightbitch, Marielle Heller’s adaptation of Rachel Yoder’s novel in which a harassed mother, played by Amy Adams, finds herself growing abundant body hair. Her husband puzzles over why she comes home from a run covered in mud, but he is easily distracted by her sudden need for sex; her son is happy she now wants to play on the floor.
Neither notices she has the bony beginnings of a tail; Mother herself doesn’t care. On the contrary, she embraces her own monstrousness. In the process, her body – racked by birth, exhausted by domestic labour, while her spirits are deflated by her loss of a sense of independent selfhood – is newly eroticised as she finds pleasure in herself. Every dog has its day, and she is finally having hers.
What these films do not include is that moment of swooning abandonment, when the heroine can no longer be held responsible for what overtakes her. In Victorian novels, horror films of the ’50s and many strands of the modern romantic boom, women are leached of autonomous desire.
Even Twilight’s Bella is arguably drawn to Edward because, as a natural predator, he is gifted with a supernatural power of attraction. And, of course because he looks like Robert Pattinson: the girl can’t help it.
A new kind of Bella might be more excited by someone with horns and leathery wings. You can just imagine her saying it: yes, that’s my man.
Nosferatu opens in cinemas on January 1.
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