Showing posts with label 12 Years a Slave. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 12 Years a Slave. Show all posts

Tuesday, 28 January 2014

Violence and exploitation


   Violence in films is something I come back to. I like it; I like the cartoon violence of Die Hard and Kill Bill; I like the shock of hard-to-describe violence in surreal or hallucinatory films like Badlands (good article here) and, bar the ‘torture porn’ of films like Saw I’ve never really had a problem with horror violence (as long as someone holds my hand). Though I’ve never watched enough of these films to start analysing whether ‘torture porn’ is even a useful term or whether it’s particularly unwholesome.
 
   I’m intrigued though with how media violence works – when is it exploitative or how can it be used to help us question; the horror of war say, or the banality of evil, and I still enjoy the old question of how on-screen violence might affect our thoughts or behaviour. Studies show that gun violence has increased three fold in films aged at teenagers (PG13 in the USA) since 1985. We also know that the so called “weapons effect” is questionable and that no obvious causal relationship exists between on-screen violence and crime statistics (see, for instance, a recent exchange in Pediatrics journal here and here).  Indeed numerous studies have been done but it’s mostly unfulfilling and lacking in theoretical rigour. Perhaps we need a Cordelia Fine to make sense of it all – what a great book The Delusions of Gender is!

   I also don’t really understand why I like it. I remember very clearly seeing a string of violent westerns when I was eleven or twelve; everything from The Wild Bunch (1969) to Once Upon a Time in the West (1968) and from Django (1966) to The Cowboys (1972) and kind of understanding how they wanted to do different things and achieve different effects. I already appreciated some of the politics and the varied aesthetics but most of all I loved the excitement and thrill of the violence. Yet stick me in any vaguely threatening real-world situation and my adrenaline levels soar to other-worldly levels and I become completely useless.  You can invoke words like fantasy, catharsis, release but I’m not sure I really buy that pseudo psychoanalytic stuff.

  On-screen violence also elicits varying responses from lefties and liberals too. Look at this exchange about Tarantino’s Inglorious Basterds (2009). Joe Allen makes some good points in his review and he’s right to remind us how many films Hollywood has been made about WW2 and why; he’s probably right to suggest there is something “juvenile” about Tarantino’s film but when one of the responses contrasts the ‘fun’ violence of Basterds with the horrific violence depicted in Come and See (1985) I get a little depressed. Klimov’s film is one of the greatest films ever made but why can’t I have both. Inglorious Basterds AND Come and See; Django Unchained AND 12 Years A Slave. You can see where I’m going with this. I don’t really see the triumph of critical rigour or clarity in these debates. And, in the words of Brian May, I Want It All.

   A good starting point might be to compare media violence with pornography or sexist representations of women. Some argue the comparison is a category error: women’s oppression is a different kind of phenomenon from violence in society – anything that reinforces and naturalises oppression must be fought and resisted. Yet does a causal relationship exist between media representations of women and women’s oppression? You might argue that this is the wrong question and that sexist media representations are a structural part of women’s oppression.

   Fair enough, but films and TV justify and naturalise violence too - they make it normal, funny, exciting, reasonable, necessary, righteous and so on. Nor would it do to underestimate the power of the moving image to beguile and enchant us – huge corporations don’t spend billions on advertising every year just for the hell of it and I’m sure I’m not the only one who comes out of a film high as a kite or full of desire – for new clothes; a slug of whiskey; a smoke; a kiss.

   The obvious answer is that with anything else you talk about context; but then you’d have to conclude Die Hard really does glamorise violence and makes it thrilling and imperative. Die Hard = bad! But that answer that is boring is as hell as I’ve already pointed out. If I can’t have Die Hard, The Long Kiss Goodnight, the Bourne films and Tarantino then life really isn’t worth living, is it? No more shouting at the screen “Come on Bruce - kill that fucker” and so on - Dullsville; Drab City; Dreary Town.  I know the defence really – we’re all able to differentiate between entertainment and ‘real’ life and it’s the inequality, inequity and violence inherent in capitalist society that generates violence. It’s just isn’t that too convenient a way of separating ‘entertainment’ from ‘capitalist society’.  

   Much of it is down to ideology – how it interpolates us, how we resist it, how we hold contradictory ideas in our head – all that malarkey; and we know what an inexact science it is. It’s a while since I’ve looked at the academic literature so please direct me to fruitful avenues of juicy, ripe scholarly goodness if you know of any.
the act of killing
 

   Different but related questions are raised by Jonathan Rosenbaum. The Act of Killing, for instance, is “a film that fits all too snugly within the category of valorizing and bringing spiritual dimensions to callous mass murderers and serial killers that has already reaped multiple benefits for The Silence of the Lambs and No Country for Old Men, among countless others), whilst 12 Years a Slave is “an arthouse exploitation gift to masochistic guilty liberals hungry for history lessons”. He also writes this:

 “. . . having suffered through the 169-minute “director’s cut” of The Act of Killing twice, I find it hard to avoid the conclusion that the media’s validation of mass murderers and relative lack of interest in their victims is by now too well ingrained in our cultural reflexes to be irrelevant to the appeal of Joshua Oppenheimer’s film. Maybe there’s some other use value for his showcase for the feelings of mass murderers that I haven’t yet been able to tease out of this material.”

And finally this:

What 12 Years a Slave, The Act of Killing, Bastards, and A Touch of Sin (the latter, for me, the best of a dubious lot) all seem to be proposing, in different ways, is that the shocks and jolts of exploitation filmmaking are the most expressive tools we have in order to arrive at the truth about the world we live in. But what is this truth, finally, but that venerable chestnut, “It’s only a movie”?”


   These are questions worth answering. First, should we worry about “valorizing and bringing spiritual dimensions to callous mass murderers and serial killers”? Applying this question to anti-heroes like Hannibal Lector or Anton Chigurh in popular thrillers IS fascinating but I’m not sure how we separate that from our interest in murderers, criminals and psychopaths. Lurid fascination is only a short step away from a genuine desire to understand after all. Is it also because we identify with such characters? Do they tap into desires for power and freedom or into our fears and unease?  For a fully-fledged defence of The Act of Killing however I would urge people to read this essay by Carrie McAlinden: actually I do want people to bring a spiritual dimension to mass murderers because I want to see their humanity, understand why they did the things they did and see if they are capable of change or regret. That doesn’t validate them or ignore or show a lack of interest in their victims.

   I don’t buy the idea that 12 Years a Slave is for “masochistic guilty liberals hungry for history lessons” or that it has “been custom-built to curry self-congratulatory favour with contemporary viewers” (Cinema Scope review by Julian Carrington). It feels snide, pompous and linked to that kind of assumption that says we’re all somehow a bit racist or a bit sexist.  I happily concede that lots of people luxuriate or find solace in thinking themselves superior – because they understand complicated art or because of the job they do, the school they went to or a hundred other stupid reasons. I’d go further and say that most of us do it at some point or another because there are times when we need to feel good about ourselves. Most of us will hopefully go on to reflect that it’s a distorted and sad way of doing it. So, yes, I suppose a few individuals may be wandering the streets happy that they sat through a two hour film about slavery; but stretching that out to suggest there are loads of guilty liberals out there who have somehow assuaged their guilt by watching McQueen’s film is DUMB, patronising and empty of any analytic content.

    Though of course an art film or a serious film can be just as dumb, manipulative or superficial as a blockbuster but McQueen’s film is none of those things.

    Rosenbaum’s most interesting charge is that “the shocks and jolts of exploitation filmmaking are the most expressive tools we have in order to arrive at the truth about the world we live in”, added to this:

“One of the most debilitating facets of contemporary media discourse, at least in the U.S., is the unspoken assumption that serious discussion about such topics as torture, mass murder, and slavery can only enter the mainstream public sphere once it becomes tied to the sale of a current movie, regardless of how inane or superficial or inadequate its treatment of that subject might be.
 I could point to many films from the last year or so that don’t use these tools [of exploitation] – as could he – but as to whether this is a developing trend I’m happy to give it some more thought. Yet I suspect I’ll come back to where I started. First someone needs to give me a good definition of ‘exploitation filmmaking’ at which point I’ll be able to tell them it’s been around for a long time and can do a marvellous job of complicating, problematizing and investigating our world.

Thursday, 23 January 2014

Questions

   I've been reading more of the criticisms of 12 Years a Slave including Armond White's article Can’t Trust It. I don't mind being proved wrong (really) but I just don't recognise the feelings and thoughts that he connects to the film. I am going to see it again though.

   Jonathan Rosenbaum also has a number of interesting points to make about this year's critically acclaimed films - and some of my favourites - in posts here and here. He asks some questions that I'm not sure I have good answers to so I'd advise everyone to have a look and don their thinking caps.

   His top ten lists for 2013 for Indiewire are well worth checking out too.
 

Tuesday, 21 January 2014

12 Years a Slave

    Critical reaction to 12 Years a Slave is, to say the least, very interesting. Sometimes it’s really good - one of the first pieces I read was Carole Boyce Davis’ short article here. It gives you a brilliant sense of the limits of McQueen’s film and it’s worth reading before you see it. It raises all sorts of questions about what is, and probably isn’t, possible in Hollywood today.

5 Reasons ’12 Years a Slave’ Is No Oscar Lock: Backlash, the Unseen and McQueen

     This article by Osterweil in Aljazeera America isn’t so good. It’s a very broad piece that makes a couple of good points but is obviously wrong on some issues and just plain obvious on others. Anyone remotely interested in film will know the damning statistics about the representation of non-whites and women in Hollywood – in all aspects of the industry. Nor will they be under any illusion that the Oscars or any other awards celebrate the best films or the most innovative films. They are a celebration of glitz and glamour and if they manage to get a few decisions right then all our smiles are a little wider for a night or two – that’s all. Not that we can’t be reminded of this but I think Osterweil joins this up with some inaccurate criticisms of McQueen’s film.

     Some of Osterweil’s criticisms of the film are a little bizarre. He writes that “the film portrays the North in 1841 as a racism-free place where black and white live in harmony” yet two of those white people arrange for Northup to be sold into slavery and McQueen is careful to include the scene where a fearful black man, obviously desperate for a better life, follows Northup and his family into the shop only to be hauled back by his ‘master’. Or “white characters get much more dialogue and characterization than black ones” and the slaves are “mostly-silent extras whose graphically suffering bodies make us feel bad about slavery” – urgh! Chiwetel Ejiofor is in almost every frame and dominates the film whilst McQueen tries to allow us to imagine how difficult it would have been for the slaves to speak out or help each other. His rhetorical question about the use of famous white actors is interesting but he doesn’t answer it! I can answer his question though. First the film is for anyone that loves and appreciates film; secondly he wants to begin two sets of dialogues. One with tens of millions of Americans who are unaware of their own history – do I really need to produce one of those sets of statistics that shows how clueless they are? The second with the American film industry that has historically failed to address the horrors of slavery. Go on, think of all those brilliant, nuanced films about slavery. You’re spoilt for choice aren’t you? Glory has lots of good points but Amistad is dull with extra added dull. Give me Django Unchained any day.

    After careful consideration (lol), I also reject this paragraph:

In the predictable ending, the good white people outmaneuver the evil white people and return Northup to safety. The obvious defense of this dramatic device — “but that’s what really happened!” — shows exactly how “based on a true story” shuts down critical thought. The point is not to question its factual accuracy: The film by all accounts keeps quite close to Northup’s memoir (although some scholars debate the memoir’s veracity). But that objection ignores the fact that the filmmakers chose to tell this particular story and to tell it in this particular way.

   Really!? My overriding feeling as Northup left Epps’ plantation, leaving many others to an uncertain, probably horrific, fate wasn’t anything to do with good or evil white folks and nor is this the film’s secret message, its lasting message, its implicit message or its ideological conclusion. He got lucky, though lucky doesn’t really sum up his experiences does it? Nor does saying it is “based on a true story” shut down critical thought – what condescending bollocks! “Twelve Years a Slave, one of the longest and most detailed slave narratives, was a bestseller when it appeared in 1853” (Sarah Churchill - 12 Years a Slave: the book behind the film. Guardian. 10/1/14) seems, for McQueen’s purposes, a perfectly good choice. Don’t get me wrong I can’t wait for his film of the Haitian revolution, his biopics of Toussaint Louverture and Frederick Douglass or his epic about the impact and bravery of slave revolts but forgive me if I don’t get my hopes up to see those films any time soon. Maybe I’m wrong – maybe Hollywood producers are sitting down with Robin Blackburn and a new generation of black filmmakers as I write now.

   Hands up – my sarcasm has got the better of me. Danny Glover is STILL trying to get his film about the Haitian Revolution off the ground.

   What’s just as interesting this year is that whilst 12 Years a Slave has had nominations in all the various awards so far, it isn’t winning many. That despite the fact that it really is the best movie produced in Hollywood this year. Yes film fans it really is! Bradshaw’s review in the Guardian gets to grips with why most cinephiles of any political stripe are excited. The film represents an evolution of McQueen’s technique and the film skilfully, beautifully and innovatively marries structure and content – basic stuff really. Does that mean it was the best film made in 2013 or even the most interesting film made in the USA? Probably not, but so what? Furthermore, whilst its critical reception has been unanimously positive – 97% on Rotton Tomatoes - you don’t have to look too far for all sorts of snide tomfoolery on various film blogs and websites – some would have you believe it’s nothing more than a horror film.

   Other factors: is McQueen’s film typical Hollywood fare? It was made for $22 using a tight filming schedule. Filming in Louisiana helped reduce costs because of state rebates. Nonetheless $22 million was relatively cheap and compares well only with Philomena($15 million) and Nebraska ($12 million) amongst other award season contenders: American Hustle ($40 million), Captain Phillips ($55 million) and Gravity($100 million). It looks like Fox fronted all the money so it is a Hollywood production though its director is an auteur who has thus far only made two low-budget films about respectively, Bobby Sands and a sex addict.

   So why isn’t the film winning more awards? Could it be that McQueen and his producers knew what they were up against – conservatism at all levels of the film industry and American society? Churchwell is bang on when she writes 12 Years A Slave “was produced as a corrective to a century of Hollywood sentimentalising and glorifying slavery”, and that leaving out details of Northup’s life – he might have been a bit of a rogue! – “is neither surprising nor objectionable”.

    She is also right to conclude:

But slaves don't have to be saints or their masters monsters in order for slavery to be an atrocity: our stories will remain trapped in simplistic pieties until we can admit that a man could be a rogue and still have been martyred by a barbaric system in a land that has yet to accept the terms of William Grimes's offer, and admit how bound its constitution is by the flayed skin of its victims.

    I’m not convinced there are that many simplistic pieties in McQueen’s film though clearly I’d love to see a film that pays greater attention to resistance and revolt. Still, I hope lots of people see it and I hope it wins a few gongs come Oscar night.

    For me McQueen has made a film without easy answers, a film that dramatizes a real, impossible situation, whilst providing lots of historical and social detail. It gives us a real sense of how the system brutalised people and placed fetters on their actions and their imagination. You could say it does so by reducing the narrative to one individual’s journey and the interiority of that experience; that implicitly it becomes imperative that you ask yourself how you might have behaved in the same situation. Perhaps you could easily see that as a limit on its credentials – too liberal and bourgeois. There are undoubtedly truths in such criticisms but they are also part of the film’s great emotional and interrogative achievements.
    Go see it and join the debate.