Gnosticism in the Cult Film - The Homepage of Dr. David Lavery
Transcription
Gnosticism in the Cult Film - The Homepage of Dr. David Lavery
Gnosticism in the Cult Film In our new myths we begin to deny once and for all the existence of what we once believed both possible and good. We proclaim our grief‐ stricken narcissism to be a form of liberation; we define as enlightenment our broken faith with the world. . . . It is a condition one can find in many places and in many ages, but only in America, and only recently, have we begun to confuse it with a state of grace. Peter Marin, "The New Narcissism" The particular form of contemporary myth we now call the "cult film" would seem to be an especially adept medium for recording the unearthly, Gnostic condition Peter Marin describes here, as I will try to make apparent with the help of 1 a thought experiment. In an important essay on the cult film, semiotician Umberto Eco declares, in the best postmodernist prose, his semiotic faith that all "works are created by works" and "texts . . . created by texts," that "all together they speak to each other independently of the intention of their authors." The cult movie in particular he takes to be definitive "proof that, as literature comes from literature, cinema comes from cinema" (198). This probe was inspired, however, by a different faith: that in tracking down the intellectual roots of the memes inherited and displayed in the cult film we perform a worthy piece of intellectual detective‐work, one equal in value to the often ahistorical and apolitical solipsism of our contemporary obsession with signs and signifiers. This probe was inspired, however, by a different faith: that in tracking down the intellectual roots of the memes inherited and displayed in the cult film we perform a worthy piece of intellectual detective‐work, one equal in value to the often ahistorical and apolitical solipsism of our contemporary obsession with signs and signifiers. 1 I want to acknowledge my imaginative debt in the following pages to David Macaulay's Motel of the Mysteries, a book whose method I have stolen for my own thought experiment. The Collected Works of David Lavery 2 Eco speaks of a cult film like Casablanca as "a palimpsest for future students of 20th century religiosity." Picking up on Eco's hint, allow me if you will to imagine such a latter‐day student of the cult film, not, however, with the postmodernist intent, advocated by Eco, of merely conducting "semiotic research into textual strategies," but of pursuing what might be called a "memetic" investigation into the 2 possible premodern cultural origins of the contemporary cult film. Eco would have us believe that in the "cosmic result" the cult film we can sometimes miraculously overhear the "cliches" (that is, the "archetypal" signs) "talking among themselves, celebrating a reunion." We are struck by the impression that "Nature has spoken in place of men" (209). I want to argue that the voices we hear in the cult film are not the work of some cosmic ventriloquist but have identifiable human and historical origins. A Thought Experiment You are a cultural anthropologist from a future century (say, the late twenty‐second) participating in the excavation of a site believed to have been, in the late twentieth century, a public place known as a shopping mall. Inside one of the stores, a nearly destroyed building, you unearth six small, black, plastic boxes containing some kind of tightly wound plastic tape. Thanks to your knowledge of the material culture of the twentieth century, you know that these boxes are in fact videocassettes, containing films (as the labels indicate) from the late 1970s and 1980s—twenty years into that period which history has come to call "The Space Age." Excited by this unique find, you secrete them away from the dig, anxious to study them in private. Reputations, you know, are made from such discoveries, and anthropologists and historians have long sought a better understanding of the mad, paradoxical, decadent, period to which the artifacts you now hold may provide a key. The display case in which they were housed, you recall, had been marked "Cult Film," though nothing in your reference books enables you to understand precisely what such a designation might mean. Other shelves in the store likewise bore the names of the kinds of films housed there—for example "Children's," 2 Memetics, of course, is—or rather will be—the study of the genesis and propagation of memes over time and within and between cultures: the equivalent in intellectual history of genetics in biology. The Collected Works of David Lavery 3 "Science Fiction," "Horror," "Action/Adventure," "Drama"—all categories whose basic natures are clear enough, familiar as you are with the concept of "genre films" in the latter half of the twentieth century. (Genre, you recall, refers to a particular grouping of movies sharing a common set of conventions and expectations either as the result of a film's authorship or because of its audience's anticipation of certain recognizable meanings that result from its close relationship to other films of its type.) "Cult film," however, is a classification unknown to you. A computer bibliographical search discloses that several books and articles were in fact published on cult films in the 1980s and 1990s, but none, it seems, still exists. In the absence of more precise knowledge, you therefore conclude (1) that "cult film" is also the name of some genre or recognizable (in its day) type of film; (2) that this genre, whatever its form and content, must have been an ephemeral one and did not endure long enough to "go down in history"; (3) that such films may have been intended for special audiences, made to appeal to one or more of the many cults— religious, psychological, and scientific/technological—known to have proliferated in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, a period famous for its efforts at producing a counterculture. Fortunately, you know where to find an ancient but still operative video cassette recorder on which to play back the videotapes. With utter fascination, you watch the six "videos," studying them carefully with an anthropologist's eye, hoping to learn about the culture of the period. (Next to garbage dumps, the received wisdom of your discipline teaches, films, even inferior films—often revealingly called "trash" in the twentieth century—are thought to be excellent mirrors of popular attitudes and "life‐ styles" of the time and place of their making. A popular art like the movies, you understand, can in fact be a fascinating revelation of the often unconscious controlling metaphors of a culture, of its mythological self‐ understanding.) As you watch, enthralled, you take special note of the following: In the first film: A man appears mysteriously in the American Southwest. In one early scene, he slides down a long hill, battling the scree unsuccessfully as if being pulled toward the valley below. You learn that this stranger, Thomas Newton, is actually an alien who has journeyed to Earth from a drought‐ridden planet in search of water. Using his own The Collected Works of David Lavery 4 advanced technology, he succeeds in making hundreds of millions of dollars in worldly business ventures, money he hopes to use to finance a rescue mission for his native planet. His attempts to do so are constantly frustrated, however, by human avarice, government interference, personal betrayal, and his own loss of motivation. In flashbacks, Newton dimly recalls his apparently happy life with his family on his desert‐covered home world. At one point, Newton decides to reveal his true form to his girlfriend, Mary Lou. Removing his disguise—contact lenses, fake nails, artificial nipples, a wig—he finally stands before her as he truly is, naked, no longer masquerading as an Earthling. She is horrified. Though fabulously wealthy, Newton more and more becomes an eccentric recluse. Seduced by the world, he turns to alcohol, sex, and television to numb his guilt over his failed mission. In the second film: A mad scientist, a colleague of the man who developed a weapon called a "neutron bomb" and himself the victim of a frontal lobotomy (an operation he recommends to others), drives all over the American Southwest in an automobile called a "Chevy Malibu" with a kidnapped dead alien in its trunk. His motives are obscure, but he seems intent on making public the extraterrestrial's existence against the wishes of the government. When the car's trunk is opened, the radiation emanating from the alien causes anyone looking on to disintegrate immediately. The story's main character, a young man named Otto, takes a new job stealing cars professionally for the "Helping Hand Acceptance Corporation," a company that engages in an inexplicable activity (from which the film gets its name) known as "automobile repossession." Before joining this new group, and occasionally thereafter, Otto "hangs out" with a crowd whom, thanks to your knowledge of the period, you readily identify (by their purposely repugnant dress and violent behavior) as belonging to a cult known as "punk rockers." A veteran car thief (Bud) takes Otto under his wing and teaches him the ethics and mores of his new profession. He also initiates him into some of the secret knowledge of the group: for example, when to take drugs known as amphetamines (all the time) and the meaninglessness of day and night. The following dialogue between Bud and Otto occurs: The Collected Works of David Lavery 5 BUD There's going to be some bad shit coming down one of these days. OTTO Yeah, and where are you going to be? On the moon? BUD No, I'm going to be right here, doing 110 flat out. Bud and Otto, along with many other repo men, frantically search for the above‐mentioned Malibu, on which a $20,000 reward (roughly equivalent at the time to a year's living wage) has been offered. Their search—and the equally energetic efforts of an unnamed government agency likewise secure the vehicle—constitute the basic "plot" of the video. Throughout, you take note that labels on goods sold in stores and consumed in people's homes are singularly nondescript (for example: "Food," "Good," and "Drink"), while—oddly enough—many of the characters themselves have taken on the names of what you know to be actual commercial products of the period (all of them types of an alcoholic beverage known as "beer"): "Bud," "Miller," "Oly," and "Lite." A janitor named Miller—rumored to have taken too many hallucinogenic drugs back in the 1960s and convinced that "everybody's into weirdness"—explains his faith in the "lattice of coincidence" that unites all events. He proselytizes to Otto on behalf of his theory that all missing persons have been abducted and carried away to the future by flying saucers, which (he believes) are in reality time machines. The same philosopher insists (presciently) that he refuses to learn to drive a car because "the more you drive the less intelligent you are" (a hypothesis that, of course, you now know to be absolutely true). When the Malibu, having turned white‐hot and nearly translucent from radiation, becomes unapproachable by interested scientists, this same philosopher is, for some reason, the only one able to enter it. ("Just going for a little spin," he explains.) The Malibu—now containing Otto as well, who boards it on Miller's invitation—ascends into the heavens, levitating straight upward, cruises over the Los Angeles skyline ("This is intense!" Otto observes, as he looks down upon the city of confusion below), and then attains warp speed and disappears from the screen in a flash of light in the film's last image. In the third film: A tiny flying saucer, less than two feet in diameter, lands on a ledge overlooking the New York City apartment of a fashion model (Margaret). (In The Collected Works of David Lavery 6 one frame—a kind of "still life"—we see the saucer settled unobtrusively beside a plastic crate and empty, discarded bottles of something called "Perrier.") The saucer contains a tiny alien (looking something like an eyeball) who has journeyed to Earth hoping to fuel a heroin habit. A German scientist, who has come to the United States to study UFOs, explains to a friend that aliens have been discovered in specific subcultures—among punk rockers, for example. The fashion model and her lesbian roommate (a musician and drug dealer) you tentatively identify (by their shockingly unorthodox clothes, apartment decor, music, drugs, and hairstyles) as belonging to yet another cult of the period known as "New Wave"—a sect about whose actual beliefs almost nothing is known. The alien soon discovers that its heroin need can be satisfied through acquisition of an endorphin produced in the human brain at the moment of sexual climax. (At the time the film was made, the existence of endorphins had only recently been discovered.) In securing its fix, however, the alien kills the individual involved. Unaware of what is actually going on, the fashion model kills several lovers, at first believing the cause to be her own sexual power. "I can't have all these bodies," she complains, "Please, no more bodies." From then on her victims (six all told)—including her former college professor and a man who had previously raped her—instantaneously and conveniently disappear. Since each dies with a tiny arrow in the back of the head, Margaret calls her invisible, admired collaborator "Indian" and comes to think of him as living on the Empire State Building (visible outside the window of her apartment). When Margaret finally discovers the alien on her roof, she pleads, "You can't leave without me!" and injects herself with heroin as a gift. Transformed into a beam of light, she, too, disappears, united in a moment of mystical transcendence with her alien savior/lover. In the fourth film (a Spanish language film with subtitles): A strange man named Rantes appears at a hospital for the insane. Though he seems to have no identifiable past, the man claims to be an emissary from another world, one of many sent to Earth and placed in mental hospitals in order to study humankind. The Collected Works of David Lavery 7 The stranger spends many hours standing, facing southeast, in an almost catatonic trance. To his fellow patients, he becomes a saintly, ascetic figure, capable of a terrible empathy for the human condition. A sympathetic but personally troubled psychiatrist (Dr. Denis) engages the stranger in a movie‐long dialogue about his past, the doctor's own life, and humanity's Finally, Denis's inability to either believe Rantes's story or cure him of his delusion causes him to resort to psychopharmacological treatment. The drugs that he forces on Rantes destroy his spirit, and he dies a broken man. Whether Rantes was, in fact, an alien or a schizophrenic remains a mystery. In the fifth film, a movie apparently made in Australia (and set in Melbourne in 1978, as an opening title indicates): A group of strange young people, both men and women, live together as "hippies" (a little known tribe, first identified in the 1960s) in a filthy, trash‐strewn old house in a poor area of town, their only apparent connection to one another being their interest in a punk rock group called "Dogs in Space." The center of the "household" appears to be a young man named Sammy and his girlfriend (yet another fashion model). Both are heroin addicts who frequently "shoot up" during the course of the film. By its end both are dead from a bad dose. All of the film's characters engage in anarchic and wild behavior, all seemingly obeying the maxim scrawled on the wall of the house: "Boredom is counter‐ revolutionary." They "party," smoke marijuana, engage in anonymous sex with perfect strangers, set fire to television sets, and the like. Interspersed throughout the film, scenes from documentaries about space exploration counterpoint the bizare behavior of the characters. We see the dog Laika which the Russians sent into orbit in Sputnik 2; we watch as an astronaut demonstrates the joys of zero‐gravity, effortless movement; we listen to a history of Spacelab, an American satellite that plummeted to Earth in 1978 (on the radio the hippies listen with interest to a radio station's announcement of a $1000 award to anyone who finds a piece of it—"I wonder how much heroin that would buy?" asks one of the characters). And in the sixth (and by far the strangest) film: A bizarre young man named Henry, living in a twentieth century industrial wasteland, fathers a hideously deformed, The Collected Works of David Lavery 8 seemingly inhuman baby, which by the end of the film dies a horrible death after his father unraps the bandages which cover its entire body. All the film's characters are grotesque and abnormal. Many (in addition to the baby) are physically or psychologically deformed. A strange girl with swollen cheeks lives in Henry's radiator and apparently redeems him after the death of the monster baby. The behavior of Henry, his betrothed, and her parents all seem neurotic if not psychotic. In the film's opening sequence, we see a deeply cratered planet; floating around it, in orbit, is a horizontal image of Henry. We then see shots of a brooding, physically scarred being, staring from on high out a window. Gradually we realize that he is observing Henry, and when he sees a worm‐like creature emerge from Henry's gaping mouth, he pulls mightily on a lever at his side. As the result of his action, the worm falls toward a pool of water and, after it breaks the surface, plummets deeper and deeper until it passes through an opening filled with light, an entrance, evidently, to our world, revealing in the process the first shot of the earthly, paranoid Henry, nervously looking about him. You look again at the titles of the six films: The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976), Repo Man (1984), Liquid Sky (1983), Man Facing Southeast (1987), Dogs in Space (1987), and Eraserhead (1978). The first four, you recognize, could be classified as The Collected Works of David Lavery 9 science fiction films, concerned as they are with alien beings visiting our world—a staple of the genre. Yet all were categorized in the video stores as "cult" films. Why? Working on the assumption that even such bizarre cultural phenomena as these films—each, it would seem, completely eccentric—must nevertheless have identifiable historical sources and be part of the intellectual tradition of the civilization that produced them, you make use of your knowledge of the sister discipline of memetics in order to trace their genealogy. A special data base in your computer enables you to identify a given cluster of memes exhibited by a religion, a philosophy, a social trend, or, for that matter, a movie, and then to ask that such a configuration's likely historical genesis be identified as specifically as possible. Since they are "cult films," you naturally seek, as one of your parameters, to identify their cultic origin. You attempt to track down the memes—extreme self‐indulgence, world‐weariness, alienation—all of which you know to be symptomatic of a troubled period in human history, espoused in their secret, vatic, almost idiolectic language. Familiar with A. O. Lovejoy's characterization (in The Great Chain of Being of "otherworldiness"—the "belief that both the genuinely 'real' and the truly good are radically antithetic in their essential characteristics to anything to be found in man's natural life, in the ordinary course of human experience, however normal, however intelligent, and however fortunate" (25)—you immediately classify the films in question as otherworldly in tone and content. Familiar too with the hypothesis of Elias Canetti, in Crowds and Power, that any "sudden suppression" of a cult results invariably in the "revenge" of secularization, and conversant with the work of Max Weber, you begin to wonder what hidden cultural streams, what dormant memes, might have given rise to the strange belief systems—radical alienation, the reenactment of an age‐old longing for escape from Earth and eternal union with the heavenly powers, the "otherworldly hedonism," the psychically numb, "far‐out," unearthly narcissism—portrayed in such cult films. Along with general observations on the governing ideas that appear to inform both films and the essential historical facts of their making, you input basic descriptions of the key incidents of each, asking the computer to search its meme index for the particular configuration present in the three specimens. And the computer's response is unequivocal. Probable Origin: Early Christian Gnosticism. Subsequent research into the heresy known as Gnosticism supports the validity of the computer's hypothesis. Though seemingly strange bedfellows, their T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 10 memetic similarities are unmistakable. The cult films in question, you conclude, can unequivocally be described as Gnostic. For reasons unclear to you, the dormant memes of Gnosticism experienced a resurgence in the later twentieth century. (According to Oswald Spengler's morphology of historical eras in The Decline of the West), the early Christian era and the twentieth century were, after all, contemporaneous.) And, truly, many of its scholars appear to have felt a strong resonance with the movement. "The concerns of gnostic Christians," Elaine Pagels had concluded, "survived only as a suppressed current, like a river driven underground" (179). Similarly, Hans Jonas observed that Gnosticism, considered in historical perspective, must be judged "a profoundly new attitude whose heirs at a far remove we [twentieth‐century humankind] are still today" (264‐65). Revealingly, all the significant extant scholarship on the sect dates from that time. Judging from your data, Gnosticism must have manifested itself as well in the forms of expression of the period. The enigmatic nature of these films must certainly have been decipherable only by those who possessed the necessary gnosis to read their hidden messages. Only twentieth century followers of the cult could have understood The Man Who Fell to Earth, Man Facing Southeast, Dogs in Space, and Eraserhead as Gnostic allegories of the entrapment of an "autochthon of another world" by the snares of Earth and the body; only a fellow Gnostic would have recognized the tragic poignancy of the plight of each film's "planetary detainees." And only those in the know could have grasped that Repo Man, Liquid Sky, and Eraserhead are in reality stories of the liberating grace of alienation, of the realization of the "divine spark" within, and the heeding of "the call" to surmount the "stupendous mistake" of this world. Only they would recognize the man‐on‐high who damns Henry's to incarnation as the evil demiurge who rules the world. Only fellow Gnostics would have understood the omnipresence of the ersatz— in food, dress, religion—in the six films as a symbolic description of the world's immersion in illusion, or would have accepted the libertine immersion in drugs and sex of Newton, Otto, Margaret, and Sammy as legitimate responses (though unsuccessful in the cases of Newton and Sammy) to the falsity of the world. Only the insight granted by membership would have made it possible to see that Otto's and Margaret's pursuit of absolute experience has prepared them to detach themselves from "the real." The contempt of the original Gnostics for earthly T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 11 existence did not, after all, inevitably lead to asceticism. Some Gnostics, it is true, preached and practiced the avoidance of "further contamination by the world." But others believed that libertinism was the proper response: that the "privilege of absolute freedom" could lead to transcendence. For these "the first task was therefore to use up the substance of evil by combating it with its own weapons, by practicing what might be called a homeopathic asceticism. Since we are surrounded and pulverized by evil [these Gnostics would say], let us exhaust it by committing it; let us stoke up the forbidden fires in order to burn them out and reduce them to ashes; let us consummate by consuming (and there is only one step, or three letters, between 'consuming' and 'consummating') the inherent corruption of the material world" (Lacarriere 76). For a time the two seemingly incompatible strains of Gnosticism—the ascetic and the hedonistic—existed side by side. Evidently, you conclude, they still did at the time the films were made—in the Space Age. And only a Gnostic would have recognized that the dissonant, absurd, illogical, spacy form of the films is in fact intended as a faithful, indeed realistic record of the world's "noise." What forces brought the memes of Gnosticism back to cultural life in the 1970s and 1980s, you cannot say with any real certainty; the era is too, too obscure, too much a historical conundrum. The only hint you can discern is in the inexplicable juxtaposition of images of debauchery in Dogs in Space with snippets of the history of space exploration. Judging by a quite inadequate knowledge of early cinematic language, such contiguous editing might have beeen intended to imply some sort of causal relationship. Those of us who have actually lived during the years that witnessed the creation of the cult films so puzzling to my imaginary anthropologist recognize than the mystery of their origin is not so esoteric as he might think. For we know what he does not: that these cult films are more mimetic and less symbolic that he could imagine. We know that they are films worthy of being put in a time capsule as record of the contemporary psyche. We know that if they are Gnostic it is because we have become, in our spaciness, in "our broken faith with the world," increasingly New Gnostics ourselves.