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WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
Mel Gibsons Apocalypto: a painful experience
By David Walsh
14 December 2006
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Apocalypto, directed by Mel Gibson, written by Farhad
Safinia
What are we to make of Mel Gibsons extremely violent
Apocalypto? It seems less an artistic event than a social-psychological
phenomenon.
The drama unfolds in the last days of the Mayan civilization
in Central America, as imagined by Gibson and his screenwriter,
Farhad Safinia, on the eve of the arrival of the Spanish. A peaceful
village is ransacked and burned to the ground by a group of warriors,
its inhabitants killed or carried off as captives. One young man,
Jaguar Paw (Rudy Youngblood), manages to hide his pregnant wife
and child in a well before he too is captured and taken away.
After a terrifying journey, the warriors and their captives
arrive in a large Mayan city in an area suffering from drought
and plague. In the main temple the prisoners are to be sacrificed
in an effort to appease the angry gods. After a natural miracle
barely saves Jaguar Paw from this fate, he manages to flee, wounded,
into the jungle. The fearsome warriors give chase. Will he evade
them? Will he reach his wife and family in time to save them?
What does Gibson wish to tell us with his film? He explains
to interviewers, perhaps not disingenuously, that the genesis
of the film was merely the desire to create an exciting and sensational
chase scene. And that does contain visually audacious and exciting
moments. However, the events and details that have grown up, so
to speak, around this central story inevitably reveal the directors
attitude toward the world.
Two elements dominate the film: violence and the fear of violence.
We remember the slit throats, severed heads, cut-out hearts, impaled
body parts, as well as the pit of corpses, a face chewed by a
panther, a spear through the back and so on, but, equally, the
looks of terror on the faces of the various victims. In fact,
the latter are the more powerful images. The camera may occasionally
shy away from some of the goriest details, but it lingers lovingly
on the awful expressions. Often, before we witness terrible things,
we see them registered in frightened eyes and gaping mouths. Even
the arrival of the Spanish is first captured in the amazed and
fearful glances of the Mayans.
Gibson told an interviewer from Entertainment Weekly,
Were all afraid. Thats something Ive been
finding out more recentlyhow racked by fear we are as a
society. It all comes back to that. If you watch the news youre
going to be terrified, and that using fear is
what this film is about.
Apocalypto conveys a sense that to gaze at the world
honestly is to gaze at it with horror. And helplessness. Because,
for the most part, none of the foreboding or forewarning does
any of the characters any good. They stare into the face of unspeakable
savagery as it bears down on them and they can do nothing. Only
Jaguar Paw, at home in his natural habitat and determined to save
his family, is able to produce a different result. (Interestingly,
he summons up his nerve and decides to take the offensive against
his pursuers when his back is turned to the camera, when he is
not looking his tormentors in the face.) According to the
logic of the film, one would hardly blame the individual who rejected
human society and, with his wife and children, headed for the
forests deepest recesses.
There are various, mostly unpleasant, aspects to Apocalyptos
outlook as it presents itself to an audience. The film offers
up hostility to cities, to large masses of people, and advances
or implies a type of eco-survivalist misanthropy. The scenes in
the capital represent an infernal vision, not one with fire and
brimstone, but hell as a dry, dusty, chalky place, a polluted,
desiccated wastelandGehenna or something like it, populated
by soulless, demented men and women who cheer as one when human
heads come rolling down the temple steps. The city and its inhabitants
are entirely unredeemable. It would be best apparently if the
place were razed to the ground, its population exterminated and
a new beginning made.
Gibsons film begins with a citation from historian Will
Durant in a title: A great civilization is not conquered
from without until it has destroyed itself from within.
It seems clear that Gibson has the present situation in mind.
The films production notes cite his comment that one
of the things that just kept coming up as we were writing is that
many of the things that happened right before the fall of the
Mayan civilization are occurring in our society now. It was important
for me to make that parallel because you see these cycles repeating
themselves over and over again. People think that modern man is
so enlightened, but were susceptible to the same forcesand
we are also capable of the same heroism and transcendence.
And this from screenwriter Farhad Safinia: We discovered
that what archeologists and anthropologists believe is that the
daunting problems faced by the Maya are extraordinarily similar
to those faced today by our own civilization, especially when
it comes to widespread environmental degradation, excessive consumption
and political corruption.
These vague, ahistorical ruminations are not at all the same
thing as a critique of or a protest against contemporary societyalthough
it would probably be a mistake to pigeon-hole Gibson too quickly.
He has not won friends on the political right by his recent comments
critical of George W. Bush and the war in Iraq. At a screening
in Austin, Texas, in September he drew parallels between the dysfunctional
Mayan civilization and the current political situation in the
US. The precursors to a civilization thats going under
are the same, time and time again, he observed. Whats
human sacrifice if not sending guys off to Iraq for no reason?
About his own political orientation, Gibson says, Ive
always been very independent about the way I see things. Everyone
always presumes Im a Republican. Im not. I couldnt
vote for either one of those guys in the last election. I looked
at the pair of them and was like, What do you want to doget
punched or get kicked? It was a terrible choice to have
to make. So I found somebody else on the ballot who was an independent
who I liked the sound of. I cant even remember his name.
It would be interesting to know whether this forgotten individual
was a left-wing or, more likely, an extreme right-wing candidate.
If Gibson feels that Western civilization or American society
is on its last legs, how does he account for this circumstance?
Presumably apocalyptic religious conceptions (premonitions
of the end of days) combine in the filmmakers
thinking with the unscientific notion that every societys
development proceeds through some universal and pre-determined
cycle of birth, life and death.
The filmmaker does not trouble himself to attain an accurate
historical picture. Shocking images are easier to create. Gibsons
narrative makes no particular sense. How is it that one portion
of the Mayan population lives in harmony while another murders
and enslaves without batting an eyelid? Is it the very advance
of civilization into the cities that has turned people into monsters?
One should not insist on too precise an answer, it will not be
forthcoming.
The directors thoughts and feelings are very confused,
to say the least. In place of the real motives behind the actions
of the various social players in his films, Gibson provides, first,
rapid movement, and, second, brutality.
Of the speed of the action, he explains, If you notice,
the film practically doesnt stop moving, and so the entire
style in which I wanted to have it happen was completely and utterly
kinetic. I dont think we ever put a camera on a stick, so
either it was hand-held, flying along on a cable, driving along,
or somebody was holding it and running. In fact, the films
time scheme is deliberately skewed; once Jaguar Paw begins his
journey homeward, although the march to the city took more
than one day and night, he never stops moving until he reaches
the remains of his native village.
The frenzy and brutality of the action obscure the essentially
static, timeless character of Gibsons social
and historical view. If humanity has always been the same and
its social forms have always undergone the same processes, whether
one chooses the Mayan civilization or fourteenth century Scotland
as ones setting is an entirely arbitrary matter.
It is worth noting, if only in passing, that Gibsons
view of the Mayans as bloodthirsty, wanton savages is disputed
by historians and anthropologists who point to the Central American
civilizations great advances in mathematics, science, writing,
art, architecture and engineering. Moreover, while human sacrifice
was apparently practiced, the accounts left by Spanish soldiers
and priests of mass deaths have been challenged as self-serving
and grossly exaggerated.
Traci Ardren, an assistant professor of anthropology at the
University of Miami, rejects the offensive and racist notion
that Maya people were brutal to one another long before the arrival
of Europeans and thus they deserve, in fact they needed, rescue.
This same idea was used for 500 years to justify the subjugation
of Maya people ... Maya intellectuals have demonstrated convincingly
that such ideas were manipulated by the Guatemalan army to justify
the genocidal civil war of the 1970-1990s.
Atrocity and brutality become ends in themselves, critic Georg
Lukács noted years ago, when the artist can only give a
weak presentation of what is the chief issuethe social
development of man. Lukács noted that inhumanity
and cruelty become substitutes for the lost greatness of
real history. Moreover, these qualities, as well as the
choice of an exotic locale, stem from the morbid longing of modern
men and women to escape from the suffocating narrowness
of everyday life.
This latter point seems entirely à propos. Gibson
responds with paranoia, disgust and boredom to both the political
elite and the Hollywood establishment, but his sentiments find
a fairly noxious and fantasized outlet.
There is also the matter of personal psychological difficulty.
His films and behavior, including his recent anti-Semitic rant,
indicate an unstable personality. Burdened with a dreadful father,
a Holocaust denier and member of a traditionalist Catholic splinter
group who described the reformist Second Vatican Council (1962-65)
as a Masonic plot backed by the Jews, Gibson obviously
battles his own devils. The image of a nearly naked man scourged,
beaten almost to death and tortured while restrained or crucified
(in Apocalypto, Jaguar Paw and his fellow captives are
attached Christlike to heavy poles they carry through the jungle
and over mountain passes) recurs in the directors films.
He seems to be infatuated with the need to receive pain as a means,
presumably, of morally cleansing oneself. This is by no means
healthy.
Gibson has talents, even as a director, although too many of
the performances in Apocalypto are caricatures of hulking,
leering, monstrous evil. He is obviously endowed with demonic
energy. The construction of a miniature Mayan city, carried out
with great attention to physical detail, involved a vast labor.
Money does not seem to be his primary interest.
One goes to one of Gibsons films with a certain dread.
It is not, however, that feeling aroused by a monumental work
of art, works that radiate with depth and demand an almost unbearable
amount from the reader or viewer, Dreisers An American
Tragedy, Döblins Berlin Alexanderplatz or
King Lear, for example, but the sheer animal dread associated
with watching a gruesome horror film. In fact, there is an overlap
here, which does not speak well of Gibson.
At the same time, however, there is a good deal of cant, and
superficiality, in the more self-righteous attacks on Apocalypto.
Individual critics certainly have the right to deplore the bloody
pornography of Gibsons film, its sensationalism,
its gratuitous and relentless violencethere is much to condemn
and, anyway, the director has made many enemies. However, one
needs to ask: how many of these same critics heaped praise, for
example, on Quentin Tarantinos Kill Bill or Martin
Scorseses The Departed?
People fool themselves in various ways. Tarantino is absolved
because his fashionably cynical films are considered cartoonish
forays into black comedy and Scorseses violence
is forgiven on account of its supposed textured and poetic quality.
In reality, the films by Tarantino, Scorsese and Gibson are points
on the same disoriented and debased continuum. Interestingly,
in one of his interviews, Gibson mentions that Martin Scorsese
sent me the script from the last film he did, The Departed
[in a vain effort to obtain Gibsons services as an actor].
I thought it was fantastic. In turn, one reviewer noted
that Scorseses latest work contained scenes of cruelty
and violence that Tarantino himself would be proud to rip off.
The difference is that Gibson goes overboard. Out of control,
something of a loose and quasi-independent cannon (he has self-financed
the last two films), Gibson is less able and has less need to
restrain himself. He is like the professional football player,
for example, who crosses over the fine line between the systematic,
controlled thuggishness encouraged by the sports authorities
and media and the extracurricular, even criminal activity
that brings moralizing and punishment down upon his head.
Gibson makes people nervous in part because he takes the obscene
fascination with violence, which pervades the film and entertainment
industry, to such absurd heights that the entire phenomenon threatens
to become visible and called into question. That, however, is
not convoluted reason enough to praise his new film, which is
largely a painful experience.
See Also:
Pianist Jay McShann, last of Kansas Citys
jazz giants, dies at 90
[12 December 2006]
Footy Legends: Australian suburban
comedy recycles old myths
[9 December 2006]
Casino Royale: the new James Bond
film
[8 December 2006]
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