We point out all the hidden movie homages and references we can spot in Guillermo del Toro’s The Shape of Water, and we explain their significance. Sign up for SKILLSHARE: http://skl.sh/screenprism.
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Additional Work Cited:
* Nobil, Taryn. “Guillermo del Toro Calls ‘The Shape of Water’ a New Type of ‘Beauty and the Beast.’” Variety, 16 Nov. 2017.
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Transcript provided by Youtube:
00:01
Guillermo del Toro’s wonderfully weird The Shape of Water
00:04
is stuffed full of unexpected movie homages.
00:08
Del Toro takes joy in mixing together a mish-mash of references to everything
00:13
that’s personally moved him in relation to this story —
00:16
from monster horror to old musicals to biblical epics.
00:20
And the resulting texture feels fitting for a film that can best be described as
00:24
a Fairy Tale for Adults.
00:26
So here are some of the movie references and homages
00:29
we caught in The Shape of Water.
00:32
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00:54
Now back to The Shape of Water.
00:59
Del Toro saw Creature from the Black Lagoon when he was a kid.
01:02
And he found his young heart longing for the creature
01:04
to get a happy ending with the woman he fell for.
01:07
“It started when I was 6.
01:09
I was 6 when I was watching Creature from the Black Lagoon.”
01:11
“There’s a similarity between the creature and the –”
01:13
“Yeah, the creature swims underneath Julia Adams.
01:15
I thought, what a great love story.
01:18
I was 6, I thought, I’m sure it’s going to end well.
01:22
The creature’s gonna come out well.”
01:24
He said he felt the same way about Frankenstein’s monster and King Kong.
01:28
So The Shape of Water began out of re-imagining this monster story —
01:33
what if the beauty fell for the (so-called) beast?
01:36
Speaking of, we can’t help but draw comparisons to Beauty and the Beast,
01:40
especially Cocteau’s version from 1946 which is also a sophisticated adult fairy tale.
01:46
A beautiful woman feels somehow different from other people —
01:50
Belle is obviously beautiful to those around her, but her inner beauty makes her “weird”
01:54
to them.
01:55
Here, Elisa is the “princess without a voice.”
01:58
Del Toro told Variety that he wanted to create
02:01
”A new type of ‘Beauty and the Beast’ in which the beauty is someone you can relate
02:05
to —
02:06
not a perfect princess.”
02:07
“I also wanted the main character to be beautiful,
02:12
but in a way that was unique and powerful, not model, not Hollywood.
02:18
That you fell in love with her rather than simply admiring her.”
02:22
Meanwhile, Michael Shannon’s Colonel Strickland is the Cold War-era Gaston,
02:27
who appears picture-perfect but is a beast inside.
02:30
The creature here is the romantic heartthrob of the movie,
02:33
while the Apple Pie image of the successful All-American provider
02:36
is the true monster whom the narration alludes to at the start
02:40
as the one who almost ruins everything.
02:42
The other difference between this and Beauty and the Beast Del Toro remarked on to Variety
02:47
is that here “the beast doesn’t need to transform to find love.”
02:51
In Beauty and the Beast, the beast has to transform into a human
02:55
to get a happy romantic ending.
02:57
But here the beast doesn’t have to change.
02:59
Elisa ends up entering his underwater world.
03:02
This might remind us of Tom Hanks joining Darryl Hannah’s mermaid
03:06
in the ocean at the end of Splash,
03:07
or the princess becoming an ogre at the end of Shrek.
03:11
And it’s avery clear reversal of the ending of Creature from the Black Lagoon,
03:15
where the creature is shot repeatedly and dies,
03:17
while the human escapes.
03:19
Here instead the Creature survives multiple shots,
03:22
and he and Elisa escape into the water.
03:24
The conclusion is a perfect way to express the movie’s “the monster is us” theme.
03:29
Elisa understands that it’s many of the humans who are the truly monstrous ones,
03:33
and the creature is perfect just as he is.
03:35
“And the themes, the idea of embracing the otherness,
03:39
of understanding, not transformation, as a motor of love,
03:43
those are very new for me, and they’re very much today.”
03:47
We can make even more comparisons to other movies
03:50
about humans interacting with non-humans —
03:52
like E.T. or Black Stallion, or John Carpenter’s Starman,
03:56
which actually did embrace the romance between the alien and the human.
04:00
Ultimately Del Toro builds on his influences to creat a result that is wholly original,
04:05
and perhaps weirder and more spectacular than anything we’ve ever seen before
04:09
in the Monster-Human Romance genre.
04:12
“Oh, to be young and beautiful.”
04:16
Del Toro apparently Sally Hawkins a blu-ray set to prepare her for playing her mute character.
04:21
It features the works of great silent stars like Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton and Laurel
04:26
& Hardy.
04:27
Then, to give us the vibrant, tender world inside Elisa’s head,
04:31
Del Toro uses musicals.
04:33
Elisa’s jam is watching old Hollywood musicals on her best friend Giles’ TV.
04:38
They dance along to Shirley Temple and Bojangles on the staircase in The Little Colonel.
04:42
Betty Grable performs “Pretty Baby” from Coney Island.
04:45
We see 1941’s That Night in Rio.
04:48
Elisa dancing with the broom is a nod to Fred Astaire with the hat rack in Royal Wedding.
04:53
She also plays the creature records by Glenn Miller and Benny Goodman.
04:56
Her love story takes the form of musicals to show us
04:59
how civilized, how heartfelt, how refined her inner soul is.
05:04
But lest we get the wrong idea,
05:06
Del Toro makes it clear that this isn’t a sugarplum, sexless fantasy,
05:10
and that’s the way we know right away it’s an adult fairy tale —
05:14
from the start we get her masturbating to her egg timer.
05:17
Then she’s courting the creature with eggs,
05:20
so there’s an obvious sexual connotation to that food.
05:23
When the romance progresses, Zelda makes her explain
05:26
how the sex actually works with the creature,
05:28
so the mechanics are not just glossed over.
05:31
Elisa’s name recalls the heroine of one of the most loved musicals ever,
05:35
My Fair Lady, based on Pygmalion,
05:37
“Stuffed with nails, you ought!
05:38
Here, take the whole bloomin’ basket for a sixpence!”
05:43
the story of a cockney woman who’s made over into a lady
05:46
and taught to speak properly by Henry Higgins.
05:50
We see a dark version of Higgins in Strickland.
05:53
He’s turned on by Eliza because she can’t speak,
05:56
and even covers his wife’s mouth during sex so that he can feel total domination.
06:01
He likes the idea of creating someone’s identity.
06:04
But we also see lighter versions of the Pygmalion story —
06:08
in the way that Elisa “civilizes” the creature with her music,
06:11
and ultimately in the way the creature introduces Elisa
06:15
to a more sophisticated new world.
06:17
Giles and Elisa watch Hello, Frisco, Hello and echo Alice Faye’s song “You’ll Never
06:22
Know.”
06:24
“You’ll Never Know…”
06:28
This actually won the Academy Award for Best Song in 1943.
06:32
When Elisa later sings this song to her love in her mind,
06:35
she imagines the two partaking in a pretty hilarious black and white song-and-dance number
06:40
based on Fred and Ginger in Follow the Fleet.
06:43
The moment is a beautiful expression of Elisa’s true voice,
06:46
in the language of old movies she loves,
06:49
a voice that can’t be heard in this world.
06:52
When she finally goes into the water at the end, the scars on her neck —
06:55
which are assumed to be an injury that made her mute —
06:58
become gills.
07:00
The symbolism is that she’s been a fish out of water her whole life without quite
07:03
knowing it —
07:04
that she couldn’t speak in this world of air because her voice belonged in water —
07:09
and now, perhaps, she’ll even be able to sing.
07:11
The movie’s final words explain the title, The Shape of Water —
07:15
speaking of a “you” that has no shape because you’re felt everywhere.
07:19
And you, the water that surrounds Elisa is the love and understanding
07:24
that was missing from her world.
07:26
That love and understanding to del Toro is what the creature himself represents.
07:31
“The creature here is literally the Shape of Water.”
07:37
Elisa lives above a cinema that is showing a biblical epic, The Story of Ruth.
07:42
The biblical Book of Ruth is all about loyalty to a family and faith
07:46
that is discovered rather than born into —
07:48
as Ruth converts and faithfully serves her husband’s family even after his death.
07:54
The Shape of Water is also a story of a woman who realizes her true life lies in a new world,
07:59
and her true faith is in a new God,
08:01
and she is loyal to that newly awakened faith.
08:04
And while it’s not exactly a direct reference to the movie version,
08:08
the other biblical story that heavily features in The Shape of Water
08:11
is Samson and Delilah,
08:13
Elisa’s best friend Zelda has the middle name, Delilah.
08:16
So Strickland calls her Delilah.
08:18
He uses the story of Delilah cutting Samson’s hair and taking away his strength
08:23
as an example of female cunning and betrayal.
08:26
“No man leaves Delilah.”
08:28
It’s his way of reminding this black woman that she is “the other” — an evil female.
08:35
And in Strickland’s eyes, the story is fulfilled —
08:37
the women steal the “Asset” from under his nose.
08:41
He brings up the story again to taunt Zelda,
08:44
telling her Samson still regains his strength by trusting in God, to win in the end.
08:49
Yet shortly after, Zelda manages to warn Elisa that Strickland’s after her
08:54
and puts her own useless husband in his place while she’s at it.
08:57
So we get a reversal of the Samson and Delilah story.
09:01
Maybe the story written by men telling us
09:03
Delilah was an evil seductress wasn’t the whole truth.
09:07
Maybe she had a good reason to take the man’s strength away.
09:11
Strickland all this time has been so sure that he is the man made in God’s image.
09:15
“You may think that thing looks human.
09:19
But we’re created in the Lord’s image.
09:21
You don’t think that’s what the Lord looks like, do you?”
09:24
But just before his death, he realizes he’s made a huge mistake.
09:28
He’s been attacking a god.
09:30
Revisiting the Delilah story is representative of what the movie’s doing overall —
09:34
looking back at stories we think we know,
09:37
so that we can hear them from the perspective of the Other —
09:40
a black woman, a closeted gay man, a woman who literally can’t speak,
09:45
and a monster who’s really a god.
09:47
“It’s a movie about love and loving the other, and not being afraid of the other.”
09:54
Elisa’s cathedral window is an homage
09:57
to the window in Powell and Pressburger’s The Red Shoes.
10:01
And Powell and Pressburger are a big visual influence on del Toro generally.
10:05
“Yes, you’re quite right.”
10:07
The director was was also inspired by melodramas, like the work of Douglas Sirk.
10:11
“But the look, yes, Douglas Sirk, Powell and Pressburger,
10:15
particularly The Red Shoes, Black Narcissus, Tales of Hoffmanm,
10:22
Vincente Minelli, musicals with Gene Kelly, Charade,
10:28
Stanley Donen’s camera work, William Wyler, his work with actor and camera…”
10:35
The long list of various movies that touched or influenced Del Toro’s style in some way
10:39
here
10:40
is a hint that he’s expressing a tender love for the medium of cinema itself.
10:44
“I wanted to make a movie both with love and in love with cinema, both —
10:51
and for me they’re indistinguishable.”
10:53
Del Toro said he uses the color Red only to signify cinema or love —
10:58
so he used red for the door to the movie theater,
11:01
and he also used red in relation to Elisa and her love.
11:07
We do catch a bit of TV in the movie, too.
11:10
Giles watches Mister Ed, the show starring a horse,
11:13
another nod to the intelligence and majesty of non-human characters.
11:16
“I just don’t understand it.”
11:18
“Don’t try to.
11:20
It’s bigger than both of us.”
11:22
Strickland’s family watches The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis at home.
11:26
At a superficial glance, we might think this is just a standard wholesome sitcom
11:30
to match their cookie-cutter life,
11:32
but it was actually a subtly revolutionary show,
11:35
It’s said to be the first that made teenagers the main characters,
11:39
unlike the family-centered Leave It to Beaver or Father Knows Best.
11:43
So on Strickland’s own TV we get another a quiet sign of a country
11:47
that’s moving away from him under his nose.
11:50
We hear Strickland’s wife declare Bonanza to be “too violent” for the kids to watch.
11:54
He also visits a Cadillac dealership where he’s sold on the pitch
11:58
that four out of five successful men in America drive a caddy.
12:02
So these images in his mind of success and domination
12:05
trap him into a mindset of never being able to fail —
12:09
as if live were only about winning and losing.
12:12
“You deliver, that’s what you do.
12:15
You deliver, right?
12:17
Right?”
12:18
And there are even more influences and references we can spot here and there.
12:21
In addition to Ruth, the cinema is playing 1958’s Mardi Gras.
12:24
And it’s hard not to at least mention del Toro’s own earlier work,
12:28
especially Pan’s Labyrinth, which also combines magical realism with real-world wars and horrors.
12:34
In the end, one thing that’s refreshing and very different about
12:38
all of the influences or echoes we can find in The Shape of Water,
12:41
is that the movie isn’t being intellectual and self-reflexively clever here.
12:45
You don’t need to know what movieis playing on Giles’ TV to appreciate the story.
12:50
You just have to feel the emotion that all of these textures add up to.
12:54
“And the thing that is important for me is to be shameless and earnest, and not postmodern.
12:58
Not reflective, you know?
12:59
Because we live in a time when we are so cynical.
13:03
It’s super easy to sound smart.
13:08
When you talk about emotions and love you sound corny.
13:14
And we’re almost afraid of that.
13:18
I wanted to make a proper melodrama.”
13:20
Overall, del Toro’s wide assortment of loving influences and shout-outs reminds us
13:24
that we’re watching a movie that doesn’t want to fit into a neat, obvious genre,
13:29
because it really can’t be reduced to a neat label.
13:32
It’s a stunning fable full sweet fanciful surreality that doesn’t gloss over the sex,
13:38
blood and cruelty.
13:39
The final result is a story that’s very new and strikingly relevant to our times.
13:43
“We live in a time of fear and hatred and rage.
13:47
Everyday on the news, everyday on social media, everyday in our lives
13:53
we’re told to fear something, fear the other,
13:56
fear the other religion, the other immigrant, the other gender…
14:01
and it’s a time to embrace the fact that there’s no us and them,
14:07
but only us, and that’s what we have.”
14:10
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