Wednesday, December 17, 2014

The Babadook

Film poster

The Babadook (2014) - Jennifer Kent

Both the most modern and most authentically "horror" film examined so far, Kent's The Babadook is an excellent horror film based around a woman's struggles with motherhood, love and death. Atmospheric, highly stylized and psychologically penetrating, the film is deeply unnerving and manages to be scary with minimal gore, no jump scares, and a monster brought to life using intentionally low-budget methods. Much like Eraserhead, The Babadook manages to create a world with a universal sense of strangeness that pervades the entire film universe and further emphasizes the titular monster's inescapability and power over the characters. 

The monstrous ideology


Ideology gives structure to our deepest fears, our emotional insecurities, our latent desires. It sculpts the nebulous and formless into concrete entities. Ideology personifies and projects. It not only structures our reality, but structures the way see reality itself. 

Ideology therefore functions much like a metaphorical "monster under the bed." The parent knows that there is nothing actually under the bed, yet goes along with the child and "clears the area" so the child knows they are safe. This is the primary functioning of ideology today. We know that there is no monster, but it is more distressing to have to admit there isn't anything is under the bed, because then the monster really is just inside your head. Instead of being a comfort, this is angst inducing and absolutely terrifying. 

This is a thematic element frequently experimented with by the film. The physicality of the monster is de-emphasized and minimal compared to the mental havoc wreaked by the being's presence. The Babdook's power as antagonist lies primarily in its ability to manipulate its victims into destroying themselves instead of physically harming them. This is not a wholly unique concept for a horror movie, yet The Babdook makes the story of the family and the monster be extremely personal and specifically relate to the life experiences of the protagonist. 

The monster: real or symbolic?



The proper hermeneutic approach to examining this film rests primarily on what the monster itself is supposed to be. There are two primary perspectives: the monster is something just as real as the boy and his mother, while the other perspective is that the monster is a construction, a manifestation of the mother's own feelings of loss toward her dead husband. I think the second perspective has much more resonance and impact, as the former reduces evil to being necessarily physical, while the second creates a more coherent narrative in relation to the film as a whole. 

The monster can be viewed from a psychoanalytic perspective as the mother's latent id, especially in regards to her feelings toward her son. The feelings of anger about the death of her husband and the built up resentment that resulted from raising her son as a single mother causes the mother to be trapped, static and unable to cope with the issues related to her son's delinquency. She "let's in" the Babadook, which then contorts and twists her, amplifying her anger and making her into the monster she fears. Instead of the Babadook being the greatest threat to her safety, she becomes psychotic and impulsive, wholly driven by suppressed anger boiling over and reaching the surface. This is why it is clear that the Babadook is not just some monster, but something intricately tied to the woman's own life and psyche. Maybe it can be read as a dark, shadowy id gone unchecked or maybe a latent masculinism reacting against motherhood, but regardless the connection is clearly mental in nature. 

Killing the monster and the aftermath of an event


This film culminates with a confrontation between the mother and the Babadook, showing that she is finally being introspective instead of looking at problems as intrinsically intruding into her life. She realizes that reality is a reality on conflict and contradictions, and we carry the weight of contradiction as we struggle through life. The situation with her and her child was not made unstable, but was itself unstable and this instability was only revealed by the event of the Babadook. 

The Babadook is very much an event that creates its own chain of causality. Although it initially seems as if it is a directionless entity geared toward antagonism, it soon becomes clear that its identity is a reaction to the past, but this can only be realized after it came into existence as an event in itself. The Babadook thus cannot be truly slain, but controlled. It clearly has the potential for reemergence, yet for the time being, things are "under control," but never truly perfectly normal. Things really cannot be as they were before and this becomes even more clear, but this realization is one that provides comfort and an even greater sense of normalcy. This "normality emergent from strife" is actually even more normal than life prior to the event, making the Babadook's moral implications even more ambiguous. The labels of pure evilness, destructive neutrality or even obfuscated good fall apart when dealing with something that does not clearly exist in of itself, but exists primarily in relation to others. Therefore, possibly the best approach about whether or not the woman should have "let the Babadook in" may be to deny that it could've happened in any other way: the Babadook is almost a force of nature and to oppose it would be like opposing gravity.

The liberation of the psyche thus is not accidental nor is it subject to willpower, but is a honing, refining process. Like the forging of a sword, the Babadook torments and punishes until the authentic self is shaped out of the rough-hewn steel of trauma. 

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Eraserhead

Film poster

Eraserhead (1977) - David Lynch

Returning to surrealist cinema, Eraserhead was the debut film of acclaimed director David Lynch. Depicting a world of desolate industrial landscapes, strange people and a constant motif of foreboding doom, the film manages to tell a much more personal and emotional story than surrealist films like Un Chien Andalou or Begotten. The basic plot is as follows: a man named Henry finds out that his girlfriend, Mary, has become pregnant and given birth to a monstrous, alien-like child that the two of them must care for. The film deals with the personal struggles of parenthood and isolation in a cold, uncaring world.

Dreams and reality


The world created in Eraserhead is unabashedly nightmarish, but very subtly created. Visually bleak and desolate because it was filmed in black-and-white, the film is set in decaying buildings and sparsely decorated apartment buildings that represent the alienation experienced by both the characters in the movie and the audience itself. Commenting on various social issues, the film manages to depict the terse, cold and uncaring experience of poverty while simultaneously utilizing bizarre and alien imagery. 


Like a dream, the protagonist seems to have little awareness or interest in the world around him, drifting through everything with little agency or control over what happens. Essentially, the film aims to tell a personal story of someone struggling with the affects of a premature birth, but also the angst and uncertainty the human condition. There is no positivity, but an overwhelmingly oppressive atmosphere of powerlessness, as the events of the film are implied to have been controlled by an outside, godlike force. An existentialist reading of the film may extoll Henry's use of his radical freedom when he kills his monstrous child, yet I believe this misreads the inherent nature of Henry's condition. If this is the case, then his freedom can only be exerted in reaction to events instead of creating events. Henry is still thus condemned to a state of powerlessness, as he cannot create the causalities of his own events, instead struggling against a much more immaterial and simultaneously insurmountable force.

So where's the ideology?


Henry and Mary's "child"
The focus of the project is to examine ideology in cinema, so to create a thematic bridge between Eraserhead and the other films, I think an analysis of the film's cinematography and its relation to the plot may uncover an authentically ideological component. The more personal slant to the plot makes the ideological role more subdued and an examination of the surrealist elements would result in the repetition of the post about Un Chien Andalou, so the uniquely ideological element to Eraserhead can be found in the nature of action and consequence within the film. 

Ideology may not necessarily render someone powerlessness (see Battleship Potemkin or possibly Dogtooth as examples of the power of ideology to inspire action), but the overriding mentality of the film points toward the need for something to be in control. Whether or not this controlling entity is something benevolent or malevolent, the film never positions Henry's condition as something arbitrary or meaningless, but instead contrives a deeply personal connection between Henry and the universe. Desperate for connections in an otherwise meaningless world, the ideological structures manifest as an invisible hand looming over the entirety of the plot. Thus, ideology is the shaper and maker of all aspects of the world, but primarily serves a punitive, disciplinary function. As pointed out by Zygmunt Bauman, "the source of contemporary fear is that no one is in control." 


Thus a dilemma presents itself: is the ideology of the film constructed by its characters, an imposition of the director or a broader reflection and commentary of social conditions? Regardless of the reason, the end result is the same, as the very relationships between the characters and images within the film resonate with this ideological need for some greater control or purpose. There essentially is no escape from this need, as the framing itself of the events makes it so control can only be reacted against, not proactively eliminated by any conscious (or even unconscious) force. 

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Battleship Potemkin

Battleship Potemkin


Film Poster

Battleship Potemkin (1925) - Sergei Eisenstein

So far, the discussion of ideology has been primarily focused on ideology in general instead specific ideologies. What better film to introduce a more direct approach than the 1925 classic, Battleship Potemkin. A classic film that emerged in the early Soviet Union, it pioneered a variety of film techniques, most notably the montage. It is widely considered one of the best films of all time and is often described as a masterwork of Bolshevik propaganda.

Positive ideology


Unlike the other films examined so far, ideology serves a much different function in Battleship Potemkin. Instead of existing as a tool of dominance and control, ideology possesses a much more neutral nature. For the rebellious soldiers, ideology channels their dissidence into a meaningful movement instead of impotent rage. On the other hand, those opposed to the revolution seem blinded by their own ideological constraints, unable to see the authentic nature of the struggle (this is most clearly seen with the anti-Semitic citizen and the Cossacks on the Odessa steps). 

In a sense, this positions Battleship Potemkin as being deeply idealist in its political position, but I believe that to be a misreading of the nature of the rebellion in the film. For the sailors, ideology shapes their response, but does not create it. There is no concrete, singular catalyst for revolutionary action, but an organic outgrowth that emerges from the material conditions that are present in society. This reaction is essentially inevitable and possibly non-threatening without ideology, but it is clear that ideology is rooted within material conditions instead of transcending them. Ideology, therefore, is much less all-encompassing and totalizing, instead being a more secondary phenomenon.  

Tension and class struggle


One interesting aspect of the film is that the antagonisms and conflicts are not based around people as singular, autonomous entities, but instead parts of larger social groups that act against ambiguous, faceless opponents. Instead of the stoic, empowered individual breaking down the ideological structures that dominate society, ideology shifts and changes as various classes vie for power. 

This can be most clearly seen in the famous Odessa steps sequence, which is one of the most enduring images from the film. It depicts a massacre of innocents by czarist troops, with additional focus placed on the baby carriage rolling around corpses as it careens down the steps. While this may seem like an easy tool for emotional manipulation (showing a baby surrounded by death and destruction), it has a deeper meaning in regards to the ideological significance of the scene. The Cossacks demonstrate how ideology operates in the modern world; ideology does not discriminate, it targets men, women and children as it attempts to discipline and control all dissident thought. The willingness to kill innocents is a sign of the cold, impersonal nature of ideology, showing how it exists not in service of humanity, but to control it. 

Odessa steps
Additionally, class struggle plays a central role in the film (for reasons that should be obvious when considering the sociopolitical landscape of the Soviet Union less than a decade after the October Revolution). The czarist troops are unequivocally opposed to protesters of all sorts, violent and peaceful. The sides are clearly organized along class lines: the officers versus the ordinary sailors, the Cossacks versus the civilian population. This positions ideology as being essentially dialectical in nature and emerging succinctly along class lines. Each class is governed by its own ideological structure and thus conflict inevitable. 

Revolutionary spontaneity


In Battleship Potemkin, the unifying geist of the revolution is that of an unrestrained optimism filtered through the lens of ideology. Despite harsh opposition, the forward-looking attitude perseveres and signifies an underlying idealization of the proletarian condition. The revolutionary spirit flows throughout the characters and pervades their entire being. Instead of resulting in a sort of leveling or homogenizing of the characters, this actually serves to accentuate the spontaneous, organic nature of the rebellion. Rebellions and change occur with the only warning being visible in hindsight; therefore, the catalyst is less meaningful, as the event itself creates its own precursors. 

Conclusion


Is this the state of ideology today? Certainly not in regards to the spirit of optimism, which, as the death of the Soviet Union still looms strongly overhead, cannot exist in the same orgiastic manner as it did in the film. The need for optimism, despite the gloom and pessimism of the current conditions following the housing crisis, presents us with an interesting dilemma that is not so easily resolved. The solution ultimately lies in a dialectical synthesis: preserving the entirety of the proletarian condition in the spirit of popular upheaval while still looking unflinchingly toward the future.