Thursday, June 28, 2012

It's People! (Soylent Green)



Soylent Green: A Self-Consuming Dystopia

In accordance with my informal project of viewing those film classics from the past that I have missed, I had a chance to view the 1973 film “Soylent Green” today. It is a film that seemed to have made an impact back in the 70s, and I remember that it was billed as a sociological thriller, one which addressed important issues of that decade. The famous tag line was familiar to me even as a child, and it seemed deliciously nauseating.

In this society, set in New York in the near future (2022), we have a society that seems to have become more sordid and dysfunctional than ever. The population of the city has ballooned to forty million, and one can only imagine a similar growth in other areas. There is a general seediness, and people are crammed into buildings, forced to live in stairwells and living what would ostensibly be a routine that was governed by the pattern set in communist societies. People spend all day in lines, waiting to receive their ration of food and water. And the former (Soylent Green), consists of a bland wafer of different colors, one which promises to deliver all the nutritional value needed.

This is a world that reflects the concern that was evident at the time with the threat of ecological devastation and overpopulation. This was, after all, the period in which Paul Ehrlich’s famous book “The Population Bomb” was published, and also, a few years after Rachel Carson’s “Silent Spring”. It seemed to capture the fears that many had that our world was bearing ahead on an unsustainable trajectory. This was the era in which the ecological movement was born, when the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) was established in order to monitor the contamination that accompanied modern industrial society.


In this movie, the fears have come true, and we live in a society of notable shortages. People are treated almost like a nuisance, because of their overabundance, and we have a police state to control them. The protagonist, a detective by the name of Thorn (Heston), lives in a very cramped and dark apartment, a hovel, really, with a friend, a former detective and scholar by the name of Sol Roth (Edward G. Robinson). The elder man beguiles the younger with tales of an unspoiled past in which people had a closer connection with their world, in which nature had not been despoiled, and in which people didn’t need to put up with heatwave conditions all year long (ninety degrees at night).

This film is a murder mystery in which the demise of a rich industrialist by the name of Simmonson is being investigated in a dogged fashion by the Carlton Heston character. The industrialist lived in a completely separate world, in a luxurious apartment with beautiful furniture and running water. It seems like a vision of a magical world for the detective, and there is also a beautiful woman who seems to represent a necessary accouterment, another “piece of furniture”. She and other beautiful women are treated as chattel by the rich men of this society, but this one seems much too vulnerable and innocent, and awakens the interest of Thorn. (In an interesting sidenote, he also seems to treat her as a disposable item, except when he reveals a protective impulse that ends up seducing her.)

The murder consumes the detective, but we are able to see how the powerful agents of order work to clamp down on this investigation when he starts turning up dangerous incongruities and facts. The industrialist was a lawyer who was on the board of the “Soylent” corporation, and he seems to have had an overwhelming sense of guilt. He visited a priest a few days before his murder, and he seems to have accepted his murder.

And what ensues is a pursuit in which Thorn follows all the leads, using the brutal tactics of a police offer who doesn’t need to worry about habeus corpus and barges into buildings and apartments without a search warrant, brutalizing the inhabitants and he searches for new clues. And, of course, he is pursued himself, and he knows it. What role does the bodyguard of the late industrialist have to play?

One of the annoying elements of this film has to do with the physical aspect of these people of the future. It is unsettling and rings false to see people who would supposedly live in a state of desperation going about clean-shaven (but with a little smudging added to their faces), people who in addition seem to have perfect teeth and the “Hollywood” look of actors who don’t look like normal people but instead like beautiful people without scars, without physical imperfections, smooth-skinned, etc. The grime is not convincing, nor is the fact that the population of this future metropolis is so overwhelmingly Caucasian. There are a few African-American roles in this film, and the bodyguard has an African-American woman as a lover/companion, but it somehow doesn’t ring true unless we are lead to believe that segregation continues to play a role in the future, and that this film was set in a Caucasian neighborhood.

In the end, Sol Roth and his group of investigators find out the truth with their own resources, and he, the faithful companion and father figure for Thorn, decides to leave this world by entering into a euthanasia center, leaving a short and unsentimental note for his friend. The building, the attire of the attendants, the ceremony, the visual aids, the music, the robes, everything in this center recalls the world of “Logan’s Run”, a science fiction thriller that would be released a few years later. It is an antiseptic vision of a future, and seems to reveal a contemporary vision of how a futuristic society would look. Nothing like the grunge of the Alien movies, the idea that grime would not magically disappear in the future.

Soylent Green is people, indeed. Cadavers are taken from centers such as this one, and probably from many other supply points, and ground and processed into a food that is fed back to the surviving population. What I have to question is the following: why is food divested of its cultural component? There is much, much more to food than merely the satisfaction of a hunger instinct. Food is a ritual, it fills a psychological need, it is colored by ceremonies that have to do with the preparation and the ritual consumption of food in a group, in cafés, chewed and savored and appreciated for its familiarity and for its sensory richness. Has all this disappeared in the future, and can people really be satisfied eating multicolored Wheat Thins? Is this a sign of the psychological barrenness of the future?

Also, the other element that disturbs me is the fact that these people of the future seem to continue breeding wildly even in the face of these demoralizing conditions, with so many out of work, dying in the streets, living a life in queues, living in frustration. Are there no contraceptives available in the future? Did the right-wingers of the Republican party triumph? Why is it that so many people continue to be born, if not for the fact that the population must forcibly live in conditions of extreme educational and cultural neglect, with no memories of the developed world of the past. It seems a dystopia about contemporary political realities as well, and in particular, it seems to underscore the ferment that accompanied the legalization of abortion in “Roe vs. Wade”, also in the early 70s. I might believe the Malthusian proposition of geometric (highly accelerated) population growth, especially as it accompanies technological growth, but we are lacking in the other factor which accompanied this demographic trend in the West, which was the insertion of this trend within an imperial matrix.

We had empires that were growing and were mobilizing new resources. We had new industrial and economic trends that were leading to growing urbanization, we had medicine and improved care, we had points of expansion and vectors of movement. Here, we have an industrial society of the future at a standstill, crammed into stairwells the way chickens are crammed into sterile cages, bred to produce more and more and doomed to a very uncertain future. Without having read the original Harry Harrison story, I am led to speculate about the operation of other social and cultural factors in play here.

This is a dystopia, however, and as always, one that seems to revolve around a murder mystery. And it climaxes in a startling revelation that will seem to make no impact in this future society. The terrible power of these dystopias seems to revolve, as always, in the points of similarity with our own society, and the projection of trends culminating in unsuspected ways, in a repressive, dreary, static society that reflects our own hidden worries. And it is precisely in this static quality, where the committed and ethical individual is unable to have an impact and instead meets a tragic fate, that we find the chilling power of these stories.

The United States of 2012, with ever-increasing wage differentials, with a form of predatory late-Capitalism in operation, with corporations buying elections and behaving with impunity, with a growing health crisis signaled by an obesity crisis and a rising crest of cancer diagnosis and an unstoppable process of global warming in play, and with growing social anomie, seem to be a dystopia in the making as well. It is just a matter of degree.
 
 

Eternal Observer -- ORomero (c) 2013
Copyrights ORomero 2013

Monday, June 11, 2012

Prometheus Review (with spoilers)



“Who doesn’t want to kill their parents?”

Prometheus, the new film by Ridley Scott, represents not so much a tangential storyline but a retelling of the central story of the Alien franchise. It revisits once again a universe set in the not-too-distant future, one that is distinctly recognizable in its framework (we have capitalism, we have soldiers, we have expanding technological innovation, and we still have terrestrial landscapes such as the northern reaches of Scotland that have been preserved in pristine condition) but in which space travel to distant planets and star systems has become possible. There are familiar human motivations, such as selfishness and a single-minded obsession with power as well as idealism, protective instincts and even self-sacrifice, and these come into play in extraordinary circumstances.

In this movie, as with the other classic by Ridley Scott, Bladerunner, we have once again an interesting theological issue: what if your maker is at best indifferent and at worst hostile to you? What do we make of a world in which artificial life is created but in which the central issue of responsibility and compassion are not addressed? In Bladerunner we had a band of replicants (androids) who had managed to free themselves from bondage as they were approaching the limit of their allotted lifespan, and who travelled back to the homeland (Earth) in an attempt to meet their designer and gain the gift of further life. Their creator was an indifferent man who was unable to appreciate the distinct human urges exhibited by his creations, and was consequently condemned and killed for it. In this case, we have the situation of a humanity confronted with evidence of their extraterrestrial origin, and this occasions the birth of a new faith, one which necessarily involves the hope for redemption.

What would our maker have to tell us if we could meet it? One would hope that they would be able to clear up all the ethical issues that plague us, and bring a clarity of intent and purpose that would signal freedom from ambiguity. One imagines one would seek an explanation for our frailties, for our imperfect world and for the suffering we see in such abundance around us. We who have been so frequently inhumane in our conduct with others would seek a sort of release from responsibility, a crushing burden that is at the heart of religions such as Catholicism. It would be comforting, although there is always the possibility of being judged and found deficient. Would the maker be able to purge us of guilt, and would we be able to stretch our hands out and join it on a higher plane?

But the other possibility is the one in which the maker proves to be callously indifferent or even hostile to his or her creation. What if this being is no more ethically advanced than we are, and instead, has a greater scope for behaving in an extraordinarily cruel and vindictive way? Do we have the right to condemn this figure, as the character of the scientist Terrell in Bladerunner or Dr. Frankenstein in Mary Shelley’s novel are condemned, and should we not thereby aspire to liberate ourselves from these creator figures? As expressed by the character of David, the android, who does not wish to kill their parents?

This situation can’t help but evoke for me elements of Gnosticism, those early and alternative Christian theologies that emerged and competed with the official line of orthodoxy that was slowly being formulated in the first century after the death of Jesus Christ (who may or may not have been a historical figure). It postulated an imperfect world ruled by an imperfect god, but what was fascinating was that there was a conception of different levels or layers of creation, and the idea that there was, ultimately, a purer being above it all, one that ruled over imperfect and faulty gods who ruled over us. In the starkest term, and I am aware that this figure is not considered a true gnostic, it was presented as a dichotomy in the conception of Marcion between a “good” god, the one of the New Testament, and an angry and vindictive god, that of the old testament. One could escape by rejecting the false god, the being that had wrought so much destruction over humanity, and instead, one could aspire by the attainment of knowledge (gnosis) to return to the true fountainhead.

Such it the return that I imagine as envisioned in this film, in which we have indeed a new faith that is espoused by the two archeologist, Elizabeth Shaw (Noomi Rapace) and Charles Holloway (Logan Marshall-Green) who have discovered cave paintings in widely-different locations that depict what seems to be the same message. There is tall and elongated figure painted in profile, one standing and pointing up to the same constellation of stars. The gesture is evocative, and is interpreted as a message, and as with all mysterious messages, we can’t help but fill in the gaps with our hopes and fears.

Of course, the whole situation recalls the “theology” (I label it as such, rather than a scientific theory) of Erich von Daniken, the Swiss writer who in the 70s asserted the view that the evidence of past human contact with aliens was present in the architectural works and achievements of ancient humanity. He thus attributed to this contact the existence of the lines on the Nazca plain, in Peru, and the depiction of Mayan figures appearing to wield what might have been spaceships, in reliefs uncovered in ancient tombs, as well as the biblical appearance of the Chariot of Ezekiel blazing across the sky in a streaking flame, among many other instances. (This can’t be a theory because it is a hypothesis with selective information pieced together to justify it.)

This was not an empowering system of belief, because it seemed to rob ancient cultures of the same power of creative endeavor and achievement that we so readily grant to ourselves. And yet, as I child, I couldn’t help but shiver when I would view the “Chariots of the Gods” movies, and hope that, deep down inside, it was true. I was willing to let myself be seduced by this vision because I wanted to believe that contact could be resumed in the not-so-distant future, and that I as an individual could be redeemed. It was, then, a type of faith, the same sort of faith that led me to buy UFO magazines that featured mysterious photos of spacecraft captured over various terrains, and associated stories of alien contact. I wanted to be contacted, too.

But in Ridley Scott’s movie, this faith takes the form of active quest. There are the determined skeptics, people such as Meredith Vickes, the daughter of the tycoon Mr. Weyland, he being an aging tycoon who has financed an expedition costing one trillion dollars. There are the earnest believers, Elizabeth and her lover Charlie, who are the archeologists who first discovered the paintings, and who seek to find a form of closure to a story that seems incomplete. And there are also people who are indifferent, because they are grounded in daily concerns and refuse to speculate about theologies that seem abstract and distant. Perhaps it is dangerous to have too much faith.

Many of the same situations and motifs present in the earlier Alien franchise are present here. We have, once again, the scientists who are guilty of hubris, although in this case these scientists seem more like earnest accolytes. And we have the individuals who pursue their own private ends, who are motivated by the specter of the unknown and what it means for the passage of time to complete its work of destruction as well as creation. I am thinking, specifically, of Mr. Weyland, played by Guy Pearce, who has added himself to the crew without their knowledge, and who seeks contact with these makers as well, because as with the replicants in Bladerunner, he is in the process of dying and wishes to escape this fate. And we have wildly dangerous and seemingly indestructible alien creatures, the predators who snuff out all life with their insatiable appetite and who seem to be paragons of our insatiable consumer lifestyle. After all, can it not be said that we behave like these aliens? Do we not mercilessly consume the resources of the planet, and is it not true that we have appetites that can’t be satisfied? However terrifying these aliens are, we are permeated with their same drives, and if we are honest with ourselves, we also have a remarkable invasive capacity that blinds us to the needs of others and reduces everything else as a commodity to be consumed.

We have never really determined whether there is sentience in these creatures, although we’ve had tantalizing glimpses in past movies, in which the alien creatures also seem to possess their own society with their own “queens” and their own drones, a society they wish desperately to preserve. What would the alien franchise be if it were told from the point of view of the alien? Does it, also, have an undeniable right to preserve itself from extinction and to eliminate threats, those threats represented by humans, among others? Does it feel love for its own species, a love that is perhaps truer than that which is expressed by humanity?

This ponderings are not explicitly evident in the movie, but gestate in the minds of viewers such as myself. This is, after all, a thriller, a movie that is constructed so as to build and then release tension at predictable intervals. The movie pulsates in this way, but it doesn’t seem particularly novel, and this succession of tense moments has a way of exhausting the viewer.

In this installment we have as well the existence of another android, one played by Michael Fassbender, another impossibly lean and tall being who would seem to be a closer analogue to the figure portrayed in the cave drawings than any of the humans in the crew. And this android is, once again, treated with derision and dismissal, as an instrumentality to be utilized because it is alleged to have no soul and is thus, less than human. The formula is as follows then: non-human = servant. The analogy with the alien is all too obvious, because fears are also projected on the servant, in a parable of working relations and the psychological instability of capitalism. We see once again the evidence of blindness and obtuseness to moral questions on the part of the humans, who admire their creations but feel slightly threatened by them, and chose therefore to abuse/repress them, with constant verbal reminders of their inferiority. Could we as humans expect anything different from our “makers”? If so, are we not guilty of hubris?

Upon landing on the moon in this star system so distant from Earth (and one can’t help but wince at the howler of a statement uttered by the daughter of Mr. Weyland, who asserts that we are “half a billion miles” from Earth, an insignificant distance in the scale of light-years), the team readily shifts to action mode. There is little of the suggestion of meticulous preparation and caution on the part of the crew. They are always gung-ho, the way they are in male adventure epics, and what further proves destabilizing is the fact that the crew is conformed of iconoclasts and fairly unstable individuals. There seems to be little of a collective ethos, for these people have not been trained to work with each other; indeed, they seem only to make each other’s acquaintance after they wake up from suspended animation. (Thus, witness the awkward introduction between the biologist and the geologist.) Do Hollywood writers have any appreciation for the science of social cohesion, and the way in which these missions and the associated personnel must be assembled to insure the ability to cooperate? Is space travel so common that crews are randomly assembled in a way similar to a work crew at an ordinary office complex or gasoline station?

This is done, of course, for dramatic effect. Colorful characters and the admixture of what seem to be wildly incompatible people would seem to constitute a microcosm of our own unstable societies, especially of those agglomerations forced to coexist in closed circumstances. For some reason it makes me think of high school, with the presence of different social types, all subject to a natural hierarchy that seems all too recognizable. We have, after all, the jocks (those earthy people who joke with each other and play instruments, who swagger, who are always out for sexual conquest, and who are defined by their own espirit de corps), and the lonely and vulnerable types (the geologist, the biologist, Weyland’s daughter, the archeologists) who have their own private sub-realms. And, of course, we have the dominant and driven types who control means unavailable to others, who are defined by their aura of command, the ones who, in my analogy, drove to school in monstrous luxury cars, who were unassailable in their certainties and privelidges, and who able to assert was in effect their class dominance by virtue of their charm and their display. I’m thinking of Meredith, the heir-in-waiting to Weyland’s kingdom, played by the actress Charlize Theron, who delivers an icy performance, all ambition and frustration and outbursts of petulance.

Could it be that this collection of types is a conscious Hollywood formula meant to broaden the commercial appeal of these films? Does everything need to echo this formative experience of high school, at least when it comes to summer blockbusters? After all, these action movies rarely present complex and subtle emotional concerns, and we rarely have an erudite and witty exchange of dialogue. We have, instead, ideas that are traded in bubblegum formulas, situations that seem too simplistic and pat, too transparent, too easy to anticipate and, ultimately, too disappointing. How many times do we have to wish that the protagonists were more careful and systematic in their explorations? How many times do we have to urge them to be more patient and logical, to think before they act, to remember that they are no longer adolescents who obey the slightest whim and suffer as a consequence? I wish we had more complex and genuine dialogue and plotting, but we don’t, because these movies are not predicated on dialogue and complex human situations, they are predicated on action and the systematic milking of tension, with an overall note of dread that never seems to dissipate. These films are not poems, they are slogans, easy to absorb, easy ultimately to dismiss.

It is inevitable that the crew will be disappointed. The surprises don’t seem so shocking to us, for we have grown used to this disillusionment, and the dark atmosphere of dread and impending crisis pervading the move. Little hope for the elusive and beautiful ending of Stanley Kubrick’s classic “2001 A Space Odyssey”, one that was all the more powerful because it wasn’t telegraphed. We have instead the discovery that the survivor of the maker species, this species being humanoid in form although gigantic in size, with a jade-like quality in their coloring, is found by the android and awoken. A small group of crew members are there to greet it, since by then, the majority have been killed in various mishaps and encounters with aliens, they having been invaded and sucked by the energies of this menacing place. The encounter presents no joyful moment of reconciliation and acknowledged paternity, though.

The awoken maker isn’t the beneficent or nurturing god that had been constructed in the mind of the faithful such as Peter Weyland or Elizabeth Shaw. It turns out to be all-too-recognizable, capable of vicious brutality and callousness. It is the likeness of the parent as monster or the ancient Greek god Saturn, one who ate his progeny in order to eliminate any challenges to his rule. It quickly proceeds to decapitate the android and to kill the small group of survivors, all but Elizabeth, who runs out of the chamber disillusioned and supremely frightened.

Are we destined to always to be disappointed by our parents? Will we never be able to claim our inheritance and build upon successive generations of struggle? As expressed by the character of Meredith, the daughter of the tycoon Peter Weyland, there is a time for kings to rule and one for them to step aside. But the parent wields considerable power, and is loath to surrender his or her place. One wonders at the magnitude of the possible threat perceived by the awoken makers.

 How is it that a generation of advanced beings who must have a more ancient history than ours, and who with this advantage of additional thousands or even millions of years of existence, seems to be ethically at our same level? It is one of the eternal verities of existence that we fear our shadows? It is a truism that two cultures at different levels of technological and social development have difficulty communicating, and what we have seen, in the course of human existence and as described in a particularly enlightening way in Jarod Diamond’s recent “Guns, Germs and Steel”, is that selected cultures will dominate and inevitable displace and enslave others as a slightly different level of development (with the use of the “Guns” and “Steel” and other instrumentalities of technological development). How could we possibly bridge a gap of thousands or millions of years? And why is it that ethical development does not seem to accompany technological development in our imagination? Does anyone truly think that the conflictive and combative social and economic and political institutions that we have are a recipe for long-term survival? Does power transcend ethical concerns?

For all that is said about the android David (Michael Fassbender) not having a soul and not being able to understand human motive, this creature seems to be programed in such a way that he does almost appear to reveal human emotions. He would seem to be dismissive of human faith, and in one instance, where the crew manages to rescue an alien “maker” head and expose it to stimuli, provoking a small explosion, it seems almost dismissive in the way it states “mortal after all”. The android is aware of his/its difference, and also, of the impression it makes on others by the actions that it takes. It has no choice, it has been programmed to obey the commands of Mr. Weyland, even if it means experimenting on the human crew members. Will it, also, achieve a form of ethical enlightenment? In other ways it is, after all, stronger and more durable than humans. Perhaps, once again, too much power translates into ethical blindness. As portrayed by Michael Fassbender, he/it becomes a locus for both fear and hope, in a similar way as the maker species.

Now, how to explain the alien creatures, those reptilian, repulsive and slithering entities that seem extracted from our worst nightmares and that invade our bodies and gestate in rapid fashion, proceeding afterwards to burst out of our thoraxes in gruesome fashion? What evolutionary process could have led to the development of this extraordinary species, one that would seem capable of wiping away entire civilizations, capable of feeding according to a timespan of millions of years before contact with other species? It is a holocaust-producing species, but we are finally provided with an answer in this film. It harks back to contemporary concerns and our own imperial hubris. Perhaps the genesis of these creatures is also artificial, and they were created as we were, designed for a purpose. And what was this purpose? The ship’s pilot has a theory, and he labels them “weapons of mass destruction”. They were to be the impetus for a planetocide, and because they were too dangerous to handle on the home planet of their designers, they were instead fabricated in the equivalent of White Sands, New Mexico. They are the much more effective and monstrous equivalent of the atom bomb. And what we have is a saga for survival.

What I would have to criticize in the movie, apart from the relentless buildup and release of tension, the banal dialogue and the simplistic plotting (the cinematography and the visual design, inspired once again by H.R. Giger, are outstanding), is the acting. This seems unable to overcome the limitations of the summer blockbuster formula, and we have relationships that are conveyed in an unconvincing fashion. I question the bond between the archeologists, Elizabeth and Charlie, or the brittle steeliness of Meredith, Weyland’s daughter, or the single-minded obsessiveness of Mr. Weyland. The only enigmatic figure seems to be David, the android, but then again, this actor has won recent acclaim for many roles. (As I watched, I couldn’t decide precisely as to whether I was witnessing the birth of emotional depth and that ability to feel compassion for his maker in this character. Maybe that is what our gods need. Maybe they need to experience the compassion of their creations.) And in the end, we have another sequence in which the unlikely heroine survives against all odds, exhibiting “remarkable survival skills”. What is her power? Why is the figure of Sigourney Weaver (as Ripley, “believe it or not”) as reproduced in Elizabeth Shaw so compelling?

Maybe this woman symbolizes strength that is embodied, as ever, in the motherhood instinct. The woman, and not the old and bearded patriarch, is the symbol of worship in many matriarchal societies, and maybe womanhood is invested with an unquestioning maternal instinct that seeks not to suppress but to edify and nurture. What made the previous Alien films so compelling was this battle between the two queens to defend their respective species, and the male figures seem all too allusive to the failures of what are deemed “male” prerogatives, such as warfare. (Although I would point out that women also are capable of pursuing warfare and denying the humanity of their opponents, so my comment is not meant to elevate and enshrine the idea of a single-minded, nurturing female perspective.) Perhaps this search for the maker is, indeed, a return to the womb.

The movie ends with a cliffhanger that inevitably sets the stage for sequels. There seems to be only one female survivor, Elizabeth, although it might be a possibility that Meredith avoided being crushed by the falling maker spaceship. Elizabeth will be accompanied by the android David who has been liberated by the death of Mr. Weyland, and they will leave in one of the progenitors’ spaceships to seek the maker planet of origin and gain answers. What makes her so sure she will survive the encounter, when her survival up to this point has been so unlikely? And, what will happen to the new creature that has been left behind, the alien predator who, as in Alien IV, is also a fusion of human and alien DNA, and who might conceivably be an intelligent creature? Will it be able to learn how to fly one of the many maker spaceships left behind on that moon and follow? Will it now be involved in its own quest?

The movie seems vaguely unsatisfying although it does serve to purge much of the tension it creates. It is not so much a prequel as a continuation, for the formulas are very recognizable and repetitive. But then, if this were a truly bewildering and novel narrative, would it be satisfying? If the ending had been enigmatic, with a progenitor awaking and not attacking the aliens but not collaborating either, and instead engaging in inscrutable actions, practicing yoga or retreating or performing some other inexplicable act, would we have felt as if it truly was an encounter?

It is just as well that the alien didn’t speak, for if it had, uttering a series of banalities or homilies, then it would have deprived the movie franchise of its mystique, the way the writer Damon Lindelof did with the TV series “Lost”. I was looking for something more novel from Ridley Scott, but didn’t quite obtain it from this film. And, except for the wondrous opening scene, little of the wonder was left in this precursor to the franchise.



Eternal Observer -- ORomero (c) 2013
Copyrights ORomero 2013

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Aura by Carlos Fuentes

Aura
by Carlos Fuentes

This is a famous novelette published in 1962, one that furthermore has been widely admired. It is set in an urban environment, in which the protagonist, a cultured and effete intellectual by the name of Felipe Montero, enters into a strange household that is dominated by a decrepit old woman (la señora Consuelo) and a young family member (referred to as her “sobrina”) by the name of Aura. The atmosphere is gothic, in which secrets seem to palpate in the corridors and rooms of a decrepit building, one in which darkness and mood predominates, along with mysterious images. It is an evocation of memory and the spell cast by nostalgia and the idea of obsession.

As mentioned previously, Felipe Montero, the protagonist, seems to suffer from the fate of other highly educated professionals who are widely traveled (most of the time this refers to France for Fuentes, at least in this case), and who are unable to earn a living. There is thus a common literary motif, the intellectual as exile, one who returns to the new world and finds himself at odds, yearning always for the spirit of novelty, culture and order that predominates in the old world.

He answers a mysterious ad in a newspaper for a historian with precisely his characteristics. He is drawn to this position, initially, by the generous wage, but then he falls somehow under the spell of decrepitude that prevails in this house. It seems to be characterized as an interior space, one in which darkness predominates. “Buscas en vano una luz que te guíe. Buscas la caja de fósforos en la bolsa de tu saco pero esa voz aguda y cascade te advierte desde lejos: --No,…no es necesario.” (p. 14)

He is guided by directions in the dark, and he becomes more and more disoriented. The thin stream of words serves almost like the thread in the labyrinth of the Minotaur, to recall classic mythology, and he comes to view his prize, whose green eyes seduce him: “Abre los ojos poco a poco, como si temiera los fulgores de la recámara. Al fin, podrás ver esos ojos de mar que fluyen, se hacen espuma, vuelven a la calma verde, vuelven a inflamarse como una ola: tú los ves y te repites que no es cierto, que so unos hermosos ojos verdes idénticos a todos los hermosos ojos verdes que has conocido o podrás conocer.” (p. 20)

It is noteworthy that the comparison is to liquids and to things that move and take different shapes. They are not earthy or stable or grounded, like the rabbit that the old woman harbors, but instead eyes that seduce him like an illusion, one in which he will be a willing participant. The rabbit, incidentally, also represents a vital force. The old woman will affirm that its name is “Saga”, and that it is “Sabia. Sigue sus instintos. Es natural y libre.” (p. 39)

The narration proceeds in the third person, using the future tense, as if this was an oracle that had been delivered, and the actions seemingly confirm what has been predicted. This form of narration also suggests strongly the sapping of the will of the protagonist, who is rendered as a somewhat passive figure, unable to resist the spell of memory that is being woven. He appears to tolerate everything, the solitude, the poor food (kidney, wine) and the lack of cleanliness (there are rats nests in the old lady’s room), all because he has become enchanted by Aura, a young woman about who he weaves theories such as the possibility that she is an innocent victim, imprisoned against her will by the old and moribund woman who is referred to as“la anciana”.

There are appointments made to go either to the room of the old woman or to Aura’s room. This seems rather too formal, but also, constitutes an act of seduction, and it occurs to me that the inseparable rabbit that accompanies the old woman is a symbol of sexuality, redolent of productive power and a necessary accessory for a woman who has not been able to produce children, and furthermore, cannot attract a man.

Her husband was a Francophile Mexican general by the name of Llorente, one who spent many years of his life in France and who left various notebooks that are distributed to Felipe little by little. But what consumes the protagonist is not the life of this deceased figure, but the story in which he finds parallels, little by little, with his own experiences. Felipe, after all, is another Francophile, although one who is more adept in the language. The play of light and shadow becomes more evident, for the old woman seems to live in a world of darkness, and her house is deprived of natural light because of the buildings that surround it (“Es que nos amurallaron, señor Montero. Han construido alrededor de nosotras, nos han quitado la luz” p. 29). It creates a suffocating sensation in the reader, and recalls another tales by Edgar Allen Poe (The Cask of Amontillado).

The dreams become more and more unsettling, and they involve incongruous images, and the projection of a type of need. In one instance, he has a vision of gats fighting each other, meowling grotesquely, and he has difficulty reconciling this with the adamant refusal to provide a space for cats by the old woman. (The general’s memoir affirms a curious and disturbing custom of the old woman when she was young, which was that of torturing cats, as if it was a way of offering a sacrifice “parce que tu m’avais dit que torturer les chats était ta manière a toi de render notre amour favorable, par un sacrifice symbolique…”, p. 41. There are other images of sacrifice, curiously enough, such as the one where Aura is killing a male goat, all the while with a curiously vacuous gaze, and when Felipe goes to observe the old woman, she is making motions as if she were the one who were butchering an animal, but in thin air.)

Is it that he is living in a zone of variable time, in which the house recalls different periods, one in which it wasn’t surrounded by modern buildings that deprived it of light, one in which there was a stable and energetic marriage, that of the general and the señora? Felipe has perceived the existence of a garden, but the old lady insists there is none. Gardens, battling cats, light, all this is suggestive of a past whose existence coincides and pervades the house, like the juxtaposition of light and darkness.

There is a growing sensation that Aura is not completely real, that she is a creation of the old woman. Aura is a spell that is woven, and the imagines in which Felipe perceives the two of them together, with identical expressions, performing identical hand movements, are unnerving. Is she, indeed, a spectre? It is an obsession for him:

“Y si Aura quiere que la ayudes, ella vendrá a tu cuarto. Permances allí, olvidado de los papeles amarillos, de tus propias cuartillas anotadas, pensando sólo en la belleza inasible de tu Aura—mientras más piensas en ella, más tuya la harás, no sólo porque piensas en su belleza y la deseas, sino porque ahora la deseas para liberarla” (p. 37)

The narration proceeds in a languid manner, one that can be frustrating for the reader, and recalls the indolent pacing of a Henry James novel of the late 19th century. In the end, there will be an apparent sexual encounter with Aura, and Felipe will find the last notebook of memoirs written by the old general, along with a parcel of photographs. He will find that the old woman, when young, looked exactly like Aura, and her husband, at that same moment, almost a lifetime ago, looked exactly like him. The narrative converges, and we see the confluence and the way in which the old woman has seduced Felipe with her spell of memory and eternal love. Aura is, indeed, a creation of memory, a spectre of desire and vital forces, one that somehow manages to overcome the grotesque quality

“No volverás a mirar tu reloj, ese objeto inservible que mide falsamente un tiempo acordado a la vanidad humana, esas manecillas que marcan tediosamente las laras horas inventadas para engañar el verdadero tiempo, el tiemp que corre con la velocidad insultante, mortal, que ningún reloj puede medir. Una vida, un siglo, cincuenta años: ya no te será posible imaginar esas medidas mentirosas, ya no te será posible tomar entre las manos ese polvo sin cuerpo.” (p. 59)

Is it an affirmative view of a love that is triumphant? It seems unsettling, precisely because of the obsessive quality, but it points as well to a pervasive theme in Fuentes, the preocupation with time and the ghosts of history, both personal as well as national, and a famous remark by a writer widely admired by the Boom Generation of Latin America, William Faulkner, that the “past is not even past”.



Eternal Observer -- ORomero (c) 2013
Copyrights ORomero 2013