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Nina Menkes' Queen of Diamonds
Diamonds are sharp and hard, rich in myth and violence, soaked in desire, totally under the putrid spell of money. They are, in other words, a lot like Las Vegas-especially as it appears in Nina Menkes' searing 1991 film Queen of Diamonds. Across 75 taut minutes, Sin City's fabulous hedonism recedes from view, giving pride of place to the death and boredom that make up its core. A casino croupier, played by the director's sister Tinka Menkes in the fourth of their six collaborations, drifts between work and home, down empty streets, to the ruined oasis of the Salton Sea, and through the night, usually filmed at some distance in static shots that resist psychologization. She is called Firdaus, Arabic for "paradise." The name is borrowed from the title character in Nawal El Saadawi's 1975 novel Woman at Point Zero, a life story of female genital mutilation, rape, and sex work, told by a woman in prison while she awaits execution for stabbing her pimp. Paradise, meanwhile, is also the little-used name of the unincorporated town that contains the Vegas strip. If Firdaus is the monarch of this blue-lit realm, where all of life is a transaction, she reigns not in a state of sovereign glory, but in exhausted alienation. In blackjack, all face cards are equal. Menkes knows, however, that in reality, things are different: to be a queen is to be forever secondary, trumped by the power of invisible kings.
Firdaus is first seen asleep in bed, little more than a hand resting on a white pillow, adorned with a ring and acrylic nails, long and red. A tuft of dark hair escapes from beneath a blanket pulled up high, hiding the head and blocking out the day. Menkes cuts away before Firdaus wakes up, a fitting gesture given the trancelike somnolence of what follows. With flowing curls and a pale powdered face, Menkes' protagonist is a resurrection of Maya Deren as she appears in Meshes of the Afternoon (1943) and At Land (1944), remade for the '90s, alive within a filmic language that trades Deren's lyricism for the hard edge of structure. Drawing on the tradition of experimental cinema as much as independent narrative, Queen of...