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Christians, Cannibals and Spite: Notes on Films
by Bob Young
I try to take time off and avoid treating everything as grist for
psychoanalytic rumination, but some leisure activities are so apt that it would be
churlish not to think about them analytically. At the top of my list is 'Babette's Feast'
a film set in an utterly bleak Danish village, among the members of an ageing Christian
sect which thrived under the leadership of a charismatic patriarch. He had two lovely
daughters, and each had a dashing suitor - one an army officer, the other an opera singer.
The stern father saw off both of them, and the daughters remained spinsters, devoted to
the service of their pastor and his flock. We see them age, the father dies, the sect goes
into decline.
Aside from this, all that ruffles the surface of their lives is the
arrival of a refugee from the Paris Commune, a destitute woman, sent by the opera singer,
asking for a post as housekeeper and accepting an unpaid position when it emerged that the
sisters were too poor to pay her. She is frugal, uncomplaining and life goes on until one
day she wins the lottery. It appears that she will leave, but she asks to be allowed to
serve a meal to the remnant of the congregation. By now they have become utterly crabby,
backbiting, desiccated, a caricature of the stern superego of fundamentalist moralism. No
joy at all; the Good News of the Gospel forgotten; hymns sung drearily between bickers.
The rest of the film is visually delectable. We see the ingredients of
the feast arrive; the preparations are shown in exquisite detail. The parishioners become
increasingly alarmed that this is the Devil's work, and vow on no account to enjoy the
meal, which they are too polite to cancel. Among the guests is the army officer, now a
general, who keeps up a running commentary on the courses and dishes, which are filmed in
an utterly mouth-watering way. It emerges from his increasingly incredulous appreciative
comments that there is only one chef in the world who could have prepared this meal and
that she ran the most admired restaurant in Paris, before having to flee for her life from
the mob.
As the meal progresses, the grumpy old parishioners are reached, in
spite of themselves, by the sheer goodness, beauty and delicacy of the meal, along with
the wines. They are moved (literally) viscerally, in spite of what they think and believe
and try to prevent from affecting them. The feast reaches them at a level where their
weary defences are not on guard. Their grumpiness gives way, little by little, to
appreciation, old scores are settled or forgiven, good memories recovered, punitive
impulses turn into jokes, and they end up dancing in the moonlight. There is a touching
atmosphere of reparation and transformation of disappointments into acceptable forms of
nostalgia.
Babette, the servant, reveals in a pleasant way that she has spent the
entire windfall on the feast and will rest content with her lot, having demonstrated for
herself the power of her art to give pleasure and to reach the parts punitive superegos
cannot sclerose. I went to the film with a childhood sweetheart with whom I had been out
of contact for many years, and we could not have been more affected by its gentleness and
sense of the reparative power of shared, non-verbal delights and the healing function of
conviviality.
'Jean de Florette' and 'Manon de Source' have a related theme the
fruits of envy and spite. Another patriarch, played by an elderly Yves Montand, is
obsessed with money, property and progeny. His own love affair of a lifetime went wrong
decades earlier, and his hopes get pinned on a young cousin, a mean simpleton, returned
from the army, eager to make his fortune by growing flowers. Together they plot to get a
piece of land which has been inherited by a sweet, loving hunchback (Gerard Depardieu) who
moves in with his wife and child. The meanness of small village values and of a gnawing
avarice is pursued throughout the two films. In the first, the greedy men dam up the
spring ('source') and, while appearing to help the idealistic young husband, grind him
down and down until he dies in a desperate effort to drill for water. His daughter sees
the villains undamming the spring at the end of the film.
We find her, now a young lady, at the beginning of the second one,
wreaking a just revenge on the old man and his henchman-cousin, who falls hopelessly in
love with her. She finds the source of the spring and dams it, holding the village to
ransom until justice is done. The intricacies of the plot and relationships provide the
fascination of the film, and the outcome shows the bitter fruits of envy, spite and
avarice: the greedy ones turn out to have lost or destroyed all that they love that is
human while pursuing ersatz substitutes. The story is exquisitely told, and the hearts of
men and women are painfully laid bare.
Having greatly appreciated the films in the cinema, I was delighted to
be asked to see them again with Joe Berke, who regards them as the perfect exemplification
of the points he was making in his book, The Tyranny of Malice. He invited some
friends along to his home, but none of us reckoned on the lack of constraint against
talking in a domestic setting, as compared with a cinema. We were all so distressed that
the pained comments (and Joe's malicious chortles) threatened to undermine the cultural
experience - so powerful and distressing were the lessons of the films.
The night I went to 'The Silence of Lambs' it was announced that it had
broken all box office records at The Odeon, Leicester Square. At the cinema where I saw
it, the manager appeared and said that this was his largest audience ever. The subject of
the film is a mad psychiatrist who eats people. Elaborate precautions are taken to protect
people from his teeth - a glass partition in his cell, a steel body-jacket with a wire
face mask when he leaves it, a mask covering his whole face when he travels. We are never
allowed to forget how menacing he is. (Anthony Hopkins got a well-deserved Academy Award
for his subdued performance.) Violent action on his part is restricted to gnawing one
guard's face, through at the end he does tell us that he's 'having an old friend for
dinner...' We see him wandering off behind the psychiatrist who had tormented him in
prison. You'd think this choice of theme would relegate the film to the venues where B
pictures are shown (and indeed, the King of B, Roger Corman, has a bit part).
It puzzled me that the film is so popular.
The heroine is Jodie Foster, whose career has included a number of
parts as a delinquent or abused child. She was delinquent girl in 'Alice Doesn't Live Here
Anymore', a teenage prostitute in 'Taxi Driver', gang raped in 'The Accused'. Off screen,
while a student at Yale, she was the object of the amorous obsessions of the man who shot
President Reagan. In 'The Silence of Lambs' she is an FBI trainee and plays the part as an
innocent, devoid of base motives, sent on an assignment, playing it straight. Her father
had been a law enforcement officer and was killed in the line of duty. She was sent to a
ranch where she heard lambs being slaughtered and vowed to try to save one...
I saw an interview with the set designer. An earlier film about the
same cannibalistic serial killer was set in an utterly white, clinical space. 'Lambs'
portrays his prison as a dungeon/back passage/cloaca, with depraved inmates (one of whom
flings semen on Jodie Foster). The main character is called Hannibal Lector, dubbed
'Hannibal the Cannibal' by the press. He is being asked to help out in finding another
serial killer, 'Buffalo Bill' ('humps them before he skins them...'). His price for
co-operating is that Foster should let him into her mind, and this process constitutes the
utterly absorbing centrepiece of the film.
To be sure, there is a nasty action sequence when she catches up with
Buffalo Bill. It's gripping: by using infrared goggles, the killer can see her and stalks
her while she believes she is cautiously pursuing him. But it's nothing compared to
Lector's loving and tender explorations of her inner world - her childlike need for the
lambs to stop crying out. By the time we get to the lair of Buffalo Bill, Lector is
essentially out of the film, and it reverts to a standard scarem thriller. There is,
however, one feature of the killer's home which is of analytic interest. His
polymorphously perverse sexuality is mirrored by the sheer messiness and sexually confused
clutter of the house. The victim is held in a cellar, in a large hole in the ground which
is unmistakably a rectum, in which she is kept filthy. She is continually denigrated and
starved, in preparation for being skinned.
My explanation of the compelling experience of the film and my hunch
about its appeal came to me when I was preparing a seminar on projective identification
and came across the following passage in Klein's 'Notes on Some Schizoid Mechanisms': 'The
destructive impulse projected outward is first experience as oral aggression. I believe
that oral-sadistic impulses towards the mother's breast are active from the beginning of
life, though with the onset of teething the cannibalistic impulses increase in strength -
a factor stressed by Abraham. In states of frustration and anxiety the oral-sadistic and
cannibalistic desires are reinforced...'
I quote this passage to support the suggestion that it helps to explain
why a film about cannibalism is a tract for the times and why it is reassuring for this
much-abused actress to elicit benign caring from a depraved psychiatrist. It's a comfort
to see Red Riding Hood spared by the fanged wolf, while acknowledging how bad things are
in these rapacious times, in a world where the most primitive impulses are rampant and
acted out in domestic, social and geopolitical settings. We identify with her and are led
to believe that while everyone else may be at risk, we will be spared, because we have
suffered enough and are essentially innocent, just doing our job. Though Freud said that
'Man is a wolf to other men', we can, in cinematic fantasy, believe that the veneer of
civilization will support our weight, though perhaps not the others'.
This review appeared in the Lincoln Newsletter
robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk
Copyright: The Author
Address for Correspondence: 26 Freegrove Road, London N7 9RQ
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