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Leaving the others behind
Antwone Fisher, directed by Denzel Washington
By David Walsh
29 January 2003
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Antwone Fisher, directed by Denzel Washington, written by
Antwone Fisher
Actor Denzel Washington has turned director and chosen for
his first effort the story of an angry young man who, with the
help of a US naval psychiatrist, uncovers the source of his rage
in early abuse at the hands of a foster family.
On the point of being tossed out of the navy for fighting with
his shipmates, petty officer Antwone Fisher (Derek Luke) is sent
to see Dr. Jerome Davenport (Washington) for lessons in anger
management. In conversations with Davenport, Fisher reveals
the truth about his origins: that he was born in prison, that
his father was shot by an ex-girlfriend before his birth, that
his foster motherthe miserly and brutal wife of a clergymanmistreated
and humiliated him for 14 years.
Through therapy Fisher begins to come to terms with his emotional
state. The finishing touch is provided by a visit to Cleveland,
his hometown, where he reunites with the surviving members of
his fathers family and pays a visit to his unfortunate,
downtrodden mother. He meanwhile overcomes his aversion to physical
intimacy through a relationship with a fellow naval officer (Joy
Bryant)
The real Antwone Fisher worked as a security guard at Sony
Pictures when his story caught the attention of producer Todd
Black. A decade later his autobiography has been made into a film,
and he has been working on at least two other film projects.
No one would begrudge Fisher his personal success, but the
script, direction, acting and final product reduce life and human
relationships to quite manageable bite-size pieces, arranged to
illustrate a series of platitudes about coming to terms
with your past, having the courage to reach out for
help, overcoming all obstacles and demonstrating
the resilience of the human spirit.
Antwone Fisher, whatever the conscious motives of the
screenwriter and director, bears the mark of a narrow and retrograde
socio-cultural moment. Instead of anger over the conditions ultimately
responsible for Fishers misfortunes, it offers racial pride,
self-help advice and facile psychology.
There are many unlikely and formulaic aspects to the film.
When he first makes an appearance, Fisher, for all the misery
he has endured, seems rather poised and well-adjusted. His only
difficulty is a tendency to fly off the handle. A few sessions
with Dr. Davenport and the latters fatherly advice and concern
suffice to turn the situation around. The film wants to have it
both ways: to underline the depth of the abuse and then to suggest
that ridding oneself of such psychological trauma is childs
play. No one who thinks about the matter seriously is likely to
be convinced. The romance between the two naval officers also
goes more smoothly, particularly when one considers the history
of sexual abuse on the one side, than humanly possible. Likewise,
the working out of the psychiatrists own personal problems
on the basis of his experience with Fisher seems too good to be
true.
This is the pragmatic road to recovery as set out
by daytime television talk-show hosts and their therapist
guests of dubious origin and outlook. Its all about taking
responsibility and refusing to be a victim and
whatever other banalities are circulating in the lucrative world
of offering cheap advice to a confused and vulnerable general
public.
The work as a whole has a simplistic, do-it-yourself approach
to profound and painful problems. Fisher has no more than to acknowledge
a difficulty, Davenport offer a few pointers and the young man
quickly resolves the issue. The aesthetics of the filmmodest,
low-key, neatfollow this general pattern. Overall this is
an effort to stuff something large, difficult and life-and-death
into a small, tidy box. The strain shows.
To its rather superficial mix, Antwone Fisher adds a
touch of black nationalism. At one point Davenport hands Antwone
a copy of John W. Blassingames The Slave Community
(1972) and argues that his foster familys sadistic behavior
is the result of having internalized abuse suffered by their slave
ancestors. Without question the centuries-long experience of slavery
must leave enduring psychological scars, but patterns of child
abuse and domestic violence are hardly restricted to one or another
ethnic group. They find their most general roots in a society
based on the exploitation, continuously enforced by violence or
the threat of violence, of one class by another, which inevitably
distorts every human relationship. Which book would Davenport
offer to a white sailor with a history of abuse?
The psychiatrist also provides Fisher with a work by Marcus
Garvey, who espoused racial separation and the return of American
blacks back to Africa. The film is not overtly racialist in its
outlook, or insofar as it is, this is merely the default setting
of many contemporary black (and female and gay) artists, who accept
uncritically the assumptions of so-called identity politics. This
passes for radicalism.
Hand in hand with this goes the films emphasis on individual
responsibility. Without perhaps intending to, Washingtons
work tends to accept the prevailing argument that the most oppressed
layers have only themselves to blame for their plight. The scene
in which Antwone confronts his birth mother (Viola Davis) is particularly
disturbing. He is taken to visit her by his late fathers
relatives, who seem to be economically stable. She, on the other
hand, lives in a dismal tenement in a rundown neighborhood.
Antwone challenges her, Why didnt you ever come
to get me?... Didnt you miss me at all?... Ive educated
myself, Ive read hundreds of books. Ive traveled around
the world. I speak two languages. Ive served in the US Navy
and been awarded medals and ribbons of honor. When his mother,
deeply shaken by his unexpected appearance, cannot find the strength
to reply, Antwone leaves her, the object of pity and a certain
degree of scorn, and returns to his more successful relatives.
He has apparently experienced closure. One is left
with the distinct impression that creatures like his mother are
weak, cowardly and perhaps immoral.
However, the circumstances that lead a woman to leave her child
permanently with others, surely a heart-wrenching human decision,
find their ultimate source in social oppression. Fishers
anger may be comprehensible on the personal psychic level, but
the filmmaker has a responsibility to provide a more general and
compassionate understanding. Otherwise the film is aligning itself,
inadvertently or not, with the privileged who sit on high and
preach morality to those in the social abyss.
The insistence that individuals ought to escape and overcome
all difficulties on their own, ignoring the fate of other, less
fortunate human beings, first of all, accepts as a given
that nothing can or perhaps needs to be done about the general
state of the world. Indeed, such an insistence must take place
at the expense of arguments in favor of the need to change
the structure of society to eliminate poverty, drugs and child
abuse.
On the other hand, the case for radical social change does
not negate the possibility of individual action and self-improvement
in any fashion and never has. On the contrary, the cause of social
liberation and the great demands it exerts have always inspired
the most extraordinary acts of individual initiative, which are
inevitably associated with raising the overall cultural and intellectual
level. Washingtons film must encourage selfishness and illusions
in the American dream.
The inspirational lessons which the filmmakers and critics
seem to be drawing from Fishers experiences turn reality
on its head. What they take to be a universal is rather
the exception that proves the social rule.
Antwone Fisher contains both healthy and unhealthy impulses.
No doubt Denzel Washington, an enormously talented and dignified
performer, would like to create some kind of alternate ethos to
the popular music-rap culture, with its glorification of backwardness
and violence, perhaps even to the worship of celebrity and wealth.
But what does the film offer as an alternative? The US Navy, militarism,
patriotism, social conformismand this on the eve of an unprovoked,
colonial-style assault on a small, defenseless country.
The two cultures are merely opposite sides of the
same coin. Neither questions the essential premises of the existing
social order. One searches in vain at present for a black American
filmmaker whose work would encourage serious political opposition,
much less social rebellion. Nearly everything is about career
and self-interest. And the results are appropriately and inevitably
weak.
A number of American films in recent years have essentially
argued not merely for an individual solution to a patently social
problem, but that one must make ones way and leave the others,
the losers, behind and the existing order unchallenged.
Each does this in its own way, films like Erin Brockovich,
Good Will Hunting, 8 Mile, crazy/beautiful
and The Yards. This is not an attractive or admirable trend.
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