Thursday 3 May 2012

Madness For Mass Consumption


Madness For Mass Consumption: Werner Herzog And The Fictional Real


Werner Herzog’s cinema is well known for blurring classifications of fiction and non-fiction, of traditional narrative cinema and documentary. As such it is often difficult to distinguish, or even trust, what one is seeing up on screen. Part of the ambiguity is rooted in our own need for dichotomies, the idea that we can categorically define fiction from non-fiction, even if it is only on a film by film basis. Dirk Eitzen argues documentary as a mode of reception[1], whereby a spectator might distinguish between the fiction and non-fiction by asking if the film might be ‘lying’; fiction is, after all, not a lie and so the question only becomes pertinent to non-fiction cinema. We do not ask if Die Hard is lying, but we might raise such concerns over the work of Michael Moore. This ‘either/or’ approach leads to our categorising films as one or the other – never both at the same time. Of course, linguistically, it does not make sense to say that something can be fiction and non-fiction simultaneously, and yet with the films of Herzog we often find these two forces at work, in a constant state of flux. While Eitzen might maintain that an individual film can shift from one to another from moment to moment, Herzog’s films shift in shades of grey, never really being either at any given time.

Vivian Sobchack argues that every so often, a certain element or idea contained within a fiction film will engage our ‘documentary consciousness’[2], that is to say, a momentary break from the traditional patterns of suspension of disbelief caused by some comment, event or image that makes us aware of the reality behind the film. She cites the particular example of the image of a rabbit being shot in the hunting sequence from The Rules Of The Game (Jean Renoir, 1939) and how the comfortable position of being a viewer of fiction is shaken by our awareness that the rabbit has really been shot, that it will not be getting up again after the director has shouted ‘cut’. Here we can see a similar, though not identical, idea to Eitzen; certain moments during a fiction film can shift to non-fiction because a different level of perception has been engaged. But rather than Eitzen’s choice to read the film as ‘either/or’, Sobchack claims that these moments bring attention to elements which are constantly at play in live-action cinema but which we often take for granted. It is not a choice for the viewer; Renoir’s rabbit shocks us into this realisation. Thus, while both acknowledge elements of fiction and non-fiction are nestled in a film text, waiting to be acknowledged or revealed at different points during a film’s runtime, Eitzen views the process as a kind of magic-eye trick, we see Wittgenstein’s rabbit or duck, not both at the same time; but Sobchack views the process as a rude awakening, a violent shake from our viewing patterns.


These elements described by Eitzen and Sobchack only begin to graze the surface of how these intersecting elements of fiction and fact are utilised by the films of Herzog, often intentionally engaging our ‘documentary consciousness’ in fictions and asking us to suspend our disbelief in apparent documentaries. It is a defining aspect of Herzog’s cinema that it has never concretely committed to either bracket of fiction or non-fiction. It is as if – understanding the central nature of the film camera (that it records objectively whatever is put in front of it) – Herzog realises that even the most meticulously rehearsed fiction is still a factual record of that performance event. But on top of this, Herzog is undeniably a fantasist, rearranging the world to suit his perception of it, recounting stories and anecdotes with such veracity that it scarcely matters that they never actually happened[3]. It is this dual nature of Herzog the visionary, who has perhaps never really seen the real world, and his understanding of the relationship between reality and its photographic record that has resulted in a career that incorporates the objective truth with the fantastic of the delusional.

His films invite us to activate our ‘documentary consciousness’, to try and piece together what we see in front of us both in terms of its fictive meaning and its factual content simultaneously. To say that Herzog’s films blur the boundaries between fact and fiction is to oversimplify and miss the complexities of overlapping layers between the apparent world of the film and the so-called real world that surrounds it. We can find this complexity in several Herzog films, not least of all Heart Of Glass (1976), a film which might be termed fiction but that undoubtedly speaks to our awareness of the circumstances existing outside of – and sometimes in – the frame.

The film employs a ‘gimmick’ that is separate from the fictional narrative but adds to the effect of the film and its theme. The story is one of mass hysteria and obsessive madness that grips a small isolated village when the secret of how to produce Ruby Glass is lost due to the death of the head glass-blower, who took the secret to his grave. This eerie sense of mass hysteria, of people no longer thinking entirely as individuals, is conveyed in the performances of the actors, most of whom performed under hypnosis. This factor is not a narrative conceit, it is not the story of characters being hypnotised. Hypnosis is employed to create the effect of a dream-like state, a distracted kind of illogical thinking that the characters are in the grip of.

This difference – the actors are in a condition that the characters are not – heightens our awareness of the film’s relationship to the real. On one level, it is quite possible to read the film as a documentary about people under hypnosis, the narrative simply existing as a framing device. When, for instance, one character smashes a glass on the head of another character, he does not wince on the impact so deeply in trance is he. We not only take in the narrative significance of the scene – the characters being hostile toward one another – but are also impressed with the response of the human body under hypnosis. The ‘documentary consciousness’ is elicited through much of the film but within the context of fiction, not as a shock moment that shifts our perception to another level.

Thus, with Herzog’s cinema the distinctions between fiction and non-fiction break down, as quite often the imagery that we see is carefully designed to be both at the same time. It is precisely this ambiguity, this impossibility to define which image is fact or which event fiction, that has led to the most common criticism levelled against him – the ethics behind the production and presentation of his images[4]. How much of his ‘fact’ is created, how much of his ‘fiction’ a record of reality? These questions are particularly pertinent when looking at the tempestuous relationship between Herzog and his friend/opponent Klaus Kinski, who starred in five of Herzog’s feature films and was the subject of one of his documentaries. Like the native workers in Fitzcarraldo (1982), one might view Kinski as equally the subject of Herzog’s documentary gaze.

The relationship between Herzog and Kinski is well documented as being an intense and largely irrational one where the two butted heads over nearly everything – not least of all because both men were equally as single-minded, obsessive and self-absorbed – and yet apparently remained strong friends up until their final film together. Kinski was known for being impossible to work with, his bursts of rage at the slightest provocation made shooting scenes with him highly difficult. Likewise, Herzog is still associated with an Ahab-like desire to shoot a film in exactly the way he has decided, irrelevant of how uncomfortable or even dangerous this makes life for his cast and crew. Putting two such volatile figures in close proximity would inevitably lead to emotional explosions.

Made eight years after the death of Kinski, Herzog’s My Best Fiend (1999) claims to show us the nature of this relationship as objective fact, though it is very clear from the start that Herzog has a very specific agenda in mind, even if it subconscious. Opening with footage of Kinski raving at an audience during one of his ‘Jesus Tours’ (though the film never informs us of this), this image of Kinski – as a raving madman, ranting at the masses before him – is presented entirely without context. Though the footage itself is objective, it was shot by someone other than Herzog, capturing a genuine spur of the moment response from Kinski (though how genuine the response is could be debated), the presentation of the footage by Herzog demonises Kinski from the very beginning. Indeed, Herzog often portrays “Kinski as the culprit rather than the subject of the documentary”[5] through this kind of presentation, throwing a certain kind of light on Kinski that obscures some parts of his character.

This opening is then juxtaposed by the very sedate Herzog himself who politely makes his way through the flat where Herzog lived as a child, in the same building as Kinski, now owned by a well-to-do German couple. Herzog’s intention is quite clear, to accuse Kinski of irrationality and himself of level-headedness. He proceeds to tour the flat, pointing out where he and his family used to live and the various places where Kinski threw his many fits. Though he speaks to the old couple, it is clear that they are merely an excuse; Herzog is relating these facts to us.

The opening establishes the two complexities that lie in both the film text and the relationship between the two men. Firstly, Herzog is very conscious of Kinski’s mental instability. His childhood memories make it quite clear that he was well aware of what Kinski was like at home, never mind when under the pressures of trying to shoot a film in the Amazon. And yet Herzog still consciously placed Kinski in situations where he knew he would get angry. Secondly, as was touched on a moment ago, Kinski’s ravings during the Jesus Tours might not be as authentic as they first appear. As Herzog mentions later in the film, many of the audiences for the Jesus Tour simply wanted to watch him rave. We might wonder whether Kinski consciously placed himself in these situations, setting himself up to be infuriated because he knew that it would go down well.

And so we must ask, how much of the relationship between these two men was the result of their own conscious attempts to elicit particular responses from one another? And on top of this, how much of Herzog’s version of Kinski is a creation of the film, a fiction being documented? Here the ethics of presentation are highlighted. Is My Best Fiend really an accurate documentary or a fictional account of a real person, presented as fact? Here, perhaps, is where Eitzen’s ideas would appear to be most suited to Herzog’s cinema. Because of its claims to objectivity – claims rare in Herzog – we are forced to ask “might the film be lying?”.

Herzog constantly makes claims that are never corroborated. He tells a story of how one of the men working cutting down trees while filming Fitzcarraldo cut off his own leg after being bitten by a snake. Herzog says that he had to make sure that Kinski didn’t find out because he would begin raving once it became clear that he was no longer the centre of attention. At no point are we meant to question this claim or what it tells us about Kinski, even though it is entirely supposition on Herzog’s part. When interviewing Eva Mattes, he prefigures the interview – which shows Kinski in a distinctly positive light – with the statement “she was one of the few women with anything good to say about Kinski”. And yet we are never shown one of the apparent multitude of women with something bad to say about him. We are simply told to believe that this is the case; Herzog’s word is proof enough.

Another important consideration to take into account in terms of Kinski’s role in Herzog’s films is the responsibility of Herzog in eliciting so much of Kinski’s rage. One of the extras from Aguirre, Wrath Of God (1972) recounts the story of how Kinski hit him over the head with the hilt of his sword, cutting him in the process. Had he not been wearing his helmet, he tells Herzog, he would probably have died. And yet this story is presented without the slightest hint of blame towards Herzog, who had brought Kinski out to the jungle to be in the film, fully aware – as his childhood memories testify – of what he was capable of. This point, that Herzog is the one who has placed Kinski in such extreme conditions in order to get the reactions that he requires for his vision, is key to understanding both Aguirre and Fitzcarraldo. Though Kinski was undoubtedly a terror to work with, nearly all of the extreme stories of his behaviour in My Best Fiend are taken from the filming of these two works. Both of which were shot in circumstances difficult enough to push a well-balanced individual over the edge, never mind one as volatile as Klaus Kinski.

Les Blank’s Burden Of Dreams (1982), a revealing documentary on the making of Fitzcarraldo, shows Herzog as an uncompromising man obsessed with the achievement of his artistic vision – a vision which can only become realised once he and his crew have hauled a real steamer ship over a mountain. Everything is secondary to his vision; at one stage the engineer in charge of safety quits because he is convinced that the pulley system will break and kill a great many people. In a scene before he leaves, we see him and Herzog discussing the pulley system and the potential fatalities. Herzog very casually asks “If there were sixty people, how many could die?”. Unfair though it might be it is difficult not to read this moment as Herzog weighing up acceptable losses.

The fact that Herzog in no small way mirrors his lead characters in their obsessive single-mindedness is significant to understanding his approach to fiction. Often the lead characters – flawed though they certainly are – are presented as tragic antiheroes; the pursuit of the dream, even if that dream is never realised, is viewed as a noble cause, worth the sacrifices made by the characters. As such, it seems, Blank’s documentary wants to mirror the fictions of Herzog, focusing on the misery and obsession, the insane attempt to go up against the odds and nature. When Herzog finally does get the boat over the mountain, this is mentioned as an afterthought in the documentary’s last few minutes. Although in reality the feat was a success, Blank’s film is interested concerned with the more dramatic near-failure.

It is not only Herzog who mirrors the lead characters of these films; Kinski too is a persona closely bound to the fictional Aguirre and Fitzcarraldo – not least of all because we can never be entirely sure which entity – fictive character or factual Kinski – we are watching at any given time. His characters were driven to insanity and desperation through the extremity of their surroundings, just as he is driven toward a similar state through the process of filmmaking.

Both of the ‘jungle films’ can be seen in this context. Kinski’s responses to the surrounding environment were – though certainly extreme – nonetheless understandable. As My Best Fiend demonstrates, Kinski was in fact far better behaved when filming in European civilisation, the circumstances of being isolated in the Amazonian jungle might well be largely responsible for his oft cited erratic behaviour. And we might well blame Herzog for placing Kinski and his fellow cast members in these circumstances. As the narration from Burden Of Dreams informs us: “Herzog claims that the isolated location will bring out special qualities in the actors and even the film crew” – with Herzog happily admitting that the isolated filming is not a necessity for the narrative but instead designed to elicit the right effect, we can see how the production circumstances of both Fitzcarraldo and Aguirre were much the same as with Heart Of Glass.

Fitzcarraldo in particular is famed as an example of how the production circumstances mirrored the content of the film, how the “production difficulties somehow became the real event of which the film when it finally appeared seemed in a sense to merely record”[6]. Determined to do in reality what Fitzcarraldo does in the fiction, Herzog was not content to simply construct a series of special effects to demonstrate the fiction – he was determined to simply do it and, documentary like, record it actually happening. There are no ‘special effects’ as we watch the natives at work on the pulley system that really moves the steamer uphill (though there is some traditional smoke-and-mirrors; a bulldozer is pulling much of the weight). When it breaks in the story, it is because it actually broke in reality. In fact, so blurred is the line between fact and fiction with Herzog that a shot of a native apparently crushed to death under the boat was thought to be real, even though we can see him get up and wash the mud and blood from his clothes in Blank’s documentary.

One might easily read Fitzcarraldo as a documentary framed (and justified) by fiction. The moving of the boat over the hill, the pulley mechanism built to achieve this, the section of jungle cut away to nothing in order to build the system; all of this occurred in reality and is recorded as such, with occasional fictional inserts of Fitzcarraldo and his crew. But the only reason that Herzog wanted to move the steamer over the mountain in the first place was because it occurred in the fiction. It is a fictional presentation of a documentary record of a fictional event. Even the documentary elements are intertwined with the fictional so as to defy any sort of clear distinction.

Like the multilayered presentation of Kinski as man/monster/character/actor/objective truth/imagined fantasy, Herzog’s films are mercurial by definition. No system of classification or ontological debate can fully encapsulate the odd world-view captured and expressed in his films. His cinema is neither fact nor fiction, simply film – any attempt to try and pigeonhole them further would be an effort too much even for Herzog’s characters to attempt.


Bibilography

Bachman, G. – ‘The Man On The Volcano: A Portrait Of Werner Herzog’ in Film Quarterly (Vol. 31, No. 1, 1977)
Basoli, A. G. – ‘The Wrath Of Klaus Kinski: An Interview With Werner Herzog’ in Cineaste (Vol. 24, No. 4, 1999)
Corrigan, Timothy – ‘Producing Herzog: From A Body Of Images’ pp. 3-19 in The Films Of Werner Herzog: Between Mirage And History (Edited by Timothy Corrigan), Routledge, 1987
Eitzen, Dirk – ‘When Is A Documentary?: Documentary As A Mode Of Reception’ in Cinema Journal (Vol. 35, No. 1, 1995)
Elsaesser, Thomas – ‘An Anthropologist’s Eye: Where The Green Ants Dream’ pp. 133-156 in The Films Of Werner Herzog: Between Mirage And History (Edited by Timothy Corrigan), Routledge, 1987
Sobchack, Vivian – Carnal Thoughts: Embodiment And Moving Image Culture, University Of California Press, 2004


[1] Eitzen, 1995
[2] Sobchack, 2004
[3] Bachman, 1977, p. 3
[4] Corrigan, 1986, p. 12
[5] Basoli, 1999, p. 32
[6] Elsaesser, 1986, p. 135

- P. S.

Tuesday 31 January 2012

In Memoriam

Today, to mark what would have been Derek Jarman's 70th birthday, I would like to post an amended conference paper I recently presented at the University of Kent's 'The End Of...?' conference, titled 'Political and personal apocalypse in the films of Derek Jarman'. I'd love to have more images and clips, but Blogger is telling me the entry is too large!
Derek Jarman is a filmmaker whose work I return to again and again with enternal joy and enthusiasm. Without him, it is highly unlikely I would be carving a future in academia: my undergraduate final paper and my MA thesis were on his Caravaggio (1986), and my PhD thesis is inspired by his relationship and work with Tilda Swinton. Thank you for your inspiration, and happy birthday!

Pete Tainsh - Derek Jarman at the Edinburgh Filmhouse 18/08/91

* * * * *

To begin, there’s a quote in the prologue to Dancing Ledge, one of Derek Jarman’s later published diaries, that neatly summarises the focus of this paper:


‘On December 1986, finding I was body positive, I set myself a target: I would disclose my secret and survive Margaret Thatcher’. (Jarman, 1991: 7)


Here, Jarman alludes to the two political threads that permeate his films; his negative opinion of the Thatcher-led Conservative party, and his role within the gay-rights movement, which post-diagnosis became more dominantly AIDS activism based. These two positions go hand-in-hand, with Thatcher’s passing of the now infamous Section 28 in 1988, a bill prohibiting the ‘promotion’ of homosexuality, providing the clearest political example of the homophobia that was rife in England at that time. Jarman died in 1994, but outlived Thatcher in terms of political tenure at least: her Prime-Ministerial reign ended in 1990, but Jarman continued to act in a self-appointed position as one of the few outspoken figures of the illness, with his work, as an artist and a filmmaker, becoming an increasing convergence of political and personal concerns; HIV/AIDS awareness necessarily overlapping the two fields.

So then, what about the apocalypse in Jarman’s films? Robin Wood suggests that the metaphysical visualisation of the apocalypse seen as, for example, the end of the world, can often be interpreted within social and political terms. Here, in his brief assessment of the ‘apocalyptic’ in American horror films, these terms are ‘the end of the highly specific world of patriarchal capitalism’ (1984: 192). In Peter Hutchings’ recent exploration of the broad notion of the apocalypse in British cinema of the 70s, it is seen as a cultural and commercial remark of the ‘shared conviction that the current social order is fragile and susceptible to collapse’ (2010: 116). In Jarman’s films, as I shall discuss, the suggested social/political position is clear: the visual imaginings of destitute, apocalyptic England are an unambiguous critique of the Thatcher years, voicing a dominant political statement that runs through much of his work. I’m interested in the apocalyptic images and tone of Jarman’s films, specifically Jubilee (1977) and The Last of England (1987), their expression of political, and then progressively dominant personal concerns, and the culmination of this in the non-representational image and aural narrative of his final film, Blue (1993).

This notion of the ‘apocalypse’ presents itself in various forms in the films. Jubilee imagines its end of the world in a prediction: Elizabeth I calls for the angels to entertain her, and is presented with the social devastation of an anarchic post-monarchic future, coloured by the Punk movement of the 70s. There is little sense of an authoritarian power; the Queen is dead, and even the police seem driven by personal impulse rather than constitutional obligation. The characters go around torturing, maiming, and killing. The state, or what is left of it, is effectively owned by one man: Borgia Ginz, a Rupert Murdoch/Richard Branson media-mogul type figure, who turns Buckingham Palace into a recording studio, and exclaims, through maniacal laughter: “As long as the music’s loud enough we won’t hear the world falling apart”.

The Last of England, in its episodic use of mixed footage, similarly presents the deterioration of the country, in part, through the lack of traditional authority figures. The loosely-structured narrative establishes the Docklands area we are introduced to as controlled by a group of balaclava-wearing men, with additional characters seemingly enslaved by social deprivation and insurgent rule. The images of environmental neglect seen in Jubilee reappear, with desolate, damaged surroundings and derelict buildings, fires, and general urban decay.

Just as Jubilee compares the imperial sovereignty of Elizabeth I to the social decline of the Second’s reign, The Last of England presents the terrorist state in contrast with the footage of the pleasant wartime childhood of Jarman. In both films, the idyll of the garden past is juxtaposed with the derelict urban wasteland of the present – that is the 80s present of the film - recalling Andrew Higson’s view of the Edwardian manor-house and gardens in the Merchant-Ivory type ‘heritage’ films of the 1980s as mournful pastoralism.

Jarman openly criticised the nostalgic cinema that ruled the British film industry during this period as a Thatcherist parable representing middle-class entitlement, and avoids the trap of the heritage film, as Higson suggests, of the ‘visually spectacular pastiche [which invites] a nostalgic gaze that resists the ironies and social critiques so often suggested narratively’ (2006 [1993]: 91) of these films, by questioning this sense of the historical, striving for a more imaginative treatment of history, and commenting on the role of the past in the construction of the present. So, Jubilee may present an image of the Elizabethan past as a refined haven critical of the anarchic present – a point, perhaps in part, related to the character of the Queen’s alchemist John Dee, a historical figure much admired by Jarman - but the film concludes in the present world with Bod’s gang residing, along with Hitler, in a country manor, that visual staple of ‘heritage’ excess, owned by Borgia Ginz: a figure of the corporate greed encouraged by Thatcher’s government and despised by Jarman.

Beyond images of the garden, the representation of the past in The Last of England, as seen in the Super 8 home-videos by Jarman’s father, is problematic. In one notable montage is it difficult to discern between footage shot by Jarman, footage shot by his father, and archive documentary footage. Thus, the images of burning buildings align the damage caused during the wartime Blitz with the social riots of the 80s, in places such as Brixton, alongside the fictional destruction presented in the terrorist ‘narrative’. Likewise, it is unclear if the gunmen in this sequence are the actors seen earlier in the film, or authentic IRA gunmen from documentary footage.

The wartime footage from Pakistan from this sequence, shot by Jarman’s father, recalls another fitting observation from Andrew Higson: that heritage films set in colonial countries, like David Lean’s Passage to India (1984), document ‘the process of decay, the fall from [an] utopian national ideal: in most cases they chronicle the corrupt and decadent last days of imperialist power’ (2006 [1993]: 104). This sequence, which builds to an editorial frenzy with the musical climax of Elgar’s Land of Hope & Glory, explicitly expresses this, juxtaposing the sense of national pride, associated with the past – demonstrated by the use of the deeply patriotic theme, images of colourful military marches, and national statues – with images of contemporary conflict and degeneration: again, burning buildings, and threatening gunmen. There is often a slow cross-fade between two images, one of the past and one of present, which unambiguously encourages us to consider our own relationship with, or perception of the historical. This culminates with the musical composition drowned out by war sirens, and the frenetic images of empty, abandoned warehouses edited alongside a shot of a floating poppy wreath. This ironic arrangement establishes a clear anti-Thatcher sentiment, connoting the active Falklands conflict, Jarman’s disapproval of the war, and commenting on the perversion of our country’s wartime patriotism and pride in the face of death and destruction.

To return, briefly, to the consideration of the garden in these films, it is worth briefly noting Jarman’s former home in Dungeness in Kent. Prospect Cottage sits on the shingle beach headland, in this strange, desolate environment. Jarman used local plants and gathered flints, shells, and driftwood for sculptures to decorate his garden. There is something apocalyptic about the area and the looming presence of the nuclear power station that dominates the skyline. Jarman became as famous for this garden as he did for his films, with it becoming a distinguished part of his artistic career, and providing the location for his 1990 film The Garden. Significantly, he kept a diary documenting the progress of the garden, which was later published as Modern Nature.

Jarman kept diaries for the production of all of his works, providing, as Jim Ellis summarises, a ‘generically impure blend of personal, familiar, and social history, along with aesthetic and political observations’ (2009: xii-xiv). Elements of this can, of course, be seen in the quote I began this talk with, but this is further exemplified by his autobiographical approach to filmmaking, offering his life and opinions for observation. This sense of the personal is marked explicitly with Jarman’s presence in his films. He has a tiny cameo in Jubilee at The Kid’s – a young Adam Ant - performance for Borgia Ginz. In The Last of England this presence is more instructively manifest from the opening sequence, with Jarman writing at a desk surrounded by books and writing implements, inscribing his thoughts on the pages of his diaries. He reappears at later intervals as, for example, a shadow in the frame, and a young boy in his father’s films. This is further extended in Blue when Jarman’s familiar voice emerges unannounced, from a musical chanting interlude ("I am a Not Gay"), to read a small part of the narration.

Blue provides an excellent example of Ellis’ observation, and my own interests: the combination of aesthetic awareness and the manifestation of political and personal concerns. Jarman’s final feature film before his death is a deeply personal document of his own experience with AIDS, and an acknowledgement of the presence, the shadow, of death fixed on those with, and around, the AIDS illness. In contrast to the conventional images of destruction seen in Jubilee and The Last of England – abandoned houses, fires, rubble, burnt-out cars – Blue presents its apocalyptical vision with the lack of image, or at least of figurative representation: an unchanging blue screen for the duration of the film echoes the illness-related blindness of the director - a visual void that acts as a politicised response to previous unsatisfactory representations of AIDS.

This short section of Jarman’s speech is significant because up until this point the audience may have presumed that Nigel Terry, the main narrator, was ‘performing’ as Jarman: reading his personal memoirs aloud. Instead, there is no stable ‘image’ of the speaker, transforming these personal experiential recollections to others: to the political collective voice of the illness, but simultaneously maintaining Jarman’s presence as an active spokesperson for the illness and the community. As Jarman comments, Blue became ‘a good reason to fill in the blanks and to start putting in the ‘I’ rather than the ‘they’ (2010 [1993]: 30).

For obvious reasons, speech plays a dominant role in Blue, providing the narrative to the film, and presenting the sense of the apocalypse, or end of the world, that is, of Jarman’s world and the world of his friends, through the account of impending death. The other films discussed demonstrate the contribution of words to the envisioning of the political end of the world. In Jubilee, the walls of buildings, the gang’s flat, especially, are adorned with slogans in graffiti. There’s a sense of broad angered politics to some of the graffiti, but much of it is indecipherable. Graffiti also appears in The Last of England, on abandoned buildings and under bridges, but the political use of words exists in the poetry of the voiceover: acting as a precursor to the aural dominance of Blue. Significantly, it is Nigel Terry who is the narrator of The Last of England too, and his voiceover begins to equate the thematic concerns of Thatcherism and AIDS in anticipation of the move towards the explicitly personal in Blue. Politics still play an important role in Blue – there is talk of the Bosnian war, and criticisms of charitable organisations, but the dominant concern is the personal experience of a life with AIDS.

There is one noteworthy sequence in Blue, with a particularly threatening soundscape suited to the subject matter, that presents an example of the poetic/personal content of the film, or as William Pencak posits, ‘the poetic synthesis of […] two juxtapositions […]: first, the (distantly perceived) public and historical versus the (intensely experienced) private and personal worlds; and second, the fantasies we employ versus the reality of death and impending annihilation’ (2002: 165).


The first part of the narration is read by John Quentin, presenting a section of the poetic material imagining the river journey to the afterlife:


“How did my friends cross the cobalt river, with what did they pay the ferryman? As they set out for the indigo shore under this jet-black sky - some died on their feet with a backward glance. Did they see Death with the hell hounds pulling a dark chariot, bruised blue-black growing dark in the absence of light, did they hear the blast of trumpets?”


Here, the sounds of seagulls and the distant bells on the soundtrack connote the funeral toll, creating this incredibly atmospheric mental image of, amongst other things, the gentle rocking of the boat, and the mist on the water. The second section is read by Nigel Terry, focusing on the experiential material of Jarman’s friends’ deaths, describing their decline to the illness, with the tolled bells continuing under this slow rhythmic industrial lull, adding a real sense of the ominous to the already melancholic speech.

This section, incidentally, is one of the few examples of an overtly hostile soundscape in the film. With this in mind, perhaps Blue is more of a transcendent haven, than apocalyptic, or driven by death, in tone. The transition from the overt concern of politics of Jubilee and The Last of England moves towards the personal, and is no less apparent, certainly, but perhaps Blue, and its solitary blue image is the final, ultimate garden; a timeless space of transcendence and possibility, defined by the move from legislation and protest towards social, and indeed personal, acceptance, and a positive – not victimised - representation. As Tim Lawrence posits, perhaps the end is not nigh: ‘Blue […] maintains hope, the possibility that the story is not yet over and that a different, more optimistic end will be available in the future’ (1997: 260).


Bibilography -

Ellis, Jim. (2009). Derek Jarman’s Angelic Conversations. London: Univ. of Minnesota Press.

Higson, Andrew. (2006 [1993]). ‘Re-presenting the National Past: Nostalgia and Pastiche in the Heritage Film’. In Friedman, Lester (ed.), Fires Were Started: British Cinema and Thatcherism. 2nd Edition. London: Wallflower. 91-109.

Hutchings, Peter. (2010). ‘The Power to Create Catastrophe: The Idea of Apocalypse in 1970s British Cinema’. In Newland, Paul (ed.), Don’t Look Now: British Cinema in the 1970s. Bristol: Intellect. 107-117.

Jarman, Derek. (1991). Dancing Ledge. London: Quartet.

Jarman, Derek. (1992). Modern Nature. London: Vintage.

Jarman, Derek. (2010 [1993]). At Your Own Risk: A Saint’s Testament. Minneapolis: Univ. of Minnesota Press.

Lawrence, Tim. (1997). ‘AIDS, the Problem of Representation, and Plurality in Derek Jarman’s Blue’. Social Text. 52/53, Autumn/Winter. 241-264.

Pencak, William. (2002). The Films of Derek Jarman. London: McFarland & Company.

Wood, Robin. (1984). ‘Introduction to the American Horror Film’. In Grant, Barry K. (ed.), Planks of Reason: Essays on the Horror Film. Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press. 164-200.

- K.S.