“Network. Dr. Strangelove. Do the Right Thing. Thelma and Louise. Taxi Driver. Birth of a Nation (2016). Roger and Me. Umberto D. Apocalypse Now. Writers, beware of Facebook becoming self-medication for outrage. Channel it.”
I posted the above quotation on my personal
Facebook page about a week before the election. I listed films which
were inspiring in how they were able to express a sense of outrage within a mostly
conventional approach. It didn’t surprise me that the above meme popped up after
the election that paid homage to a film on the list, Dr. Strangelove. Here is
an expansion on my thoughts on how to deal with the current times in your art.
***
If you are a storyteller, you have a moral
obligation to strip away falsity in your stories to create something authentic
and true. Cinema is such a powerful medium that audience need to see
themselves, parts of themselves—their truths—in the world and characters
reflecting back to them from the screen.
Audiences are actively seeking some authenticity on
the screen. Even when it’s
there in the most surprising or implicit way, it can transform them in a
magical way. It’s
a powerful experience that can teach people how to be, remind them of who they
are, and make them feel connected—not so alone in the world. Those
bigger-than-life images affirm their lives, give credence to their existence.
Back in the day, the filmmakers of the Italian
Neorealism movement reacted to their collective trauma, loss, and disillusionment
during and after World War II. They couldn’t bear the artifice and
superficiality of Hollywood movies, their own white telephone films (the symbol
of the complacent status quo bourgeoisie) and contrived melodramas. They lost
their patience and turned the cameras to the suffering right in front of them. They
wanted to capture something closer to the unglamorous, unvarnished reality, as
a way to connect directly to common people and their suffering.
However, if you look closely at the films of that
time of De Sica, Rossellini, Visconti, their styles differed vastly. We can all
learn something about that. Ultimately, one of the most passionate film movements,
Neorealism, wasn’t about style or form. It was about humanity.
In the early 1960s, Federico Fellini put the moment
in film history in a larger context:
“Neorealism is not about what you show, but how you show it. It’s simply a way of looking at the world without preconceptions or prejudices. Some people are still convinced that neorealism should only be used to show a particular type of reality – social reality to be exact. But then it becomes propaganda.”
Creating
an objective slice-of-life reality that mimics the minutiae of our day-to-day grin
is not the only path to capture some truthful essence of our lives. It’s about
honesty. It’s about your reality. It’s about authenticity.
Your personal voice might reveal itself
in ways that these films do…
- As outrage – See above.
- How we dream – Wild Strawberries, Fantasia, Spellbound
- How we nightmare – Night of the Hunter, Rosemary’s Baby, Blue Velvet
- As magical fountains of hope and optimism – Amelie, Wizard of Oz, Singing in the Rain
- As adult fairytales that allow us the only chance to work out elements of our irrational side – After Hours, Birdman, Edward Scissorhands, Pan’s Labyrinth
- As reminders that we are capable of uniting the most disparate, contradictory and illogical ideas, feelings and impulses – Persona, Mulholland Drive, Adaptation, The Orphanage, The Arrival
You can’t address
every flaw in narrative cinema and society. However, the ones that prevent you
from telling your story, you can attack on the page.
Here is an eclectic group of films that benefited from defying a status quo assumption or two: Mi Vida Loca, Carol, Dog Day Afternoon, Secretary, Hedwig's Angry Inch, Fruitvale Station.
This
is not an intellectual process. Maybe not even political. But it’s definitely
personal. To write in your voice, eradicate the assumptions and
expectations that oversimplify, misdirect or obfuscate your ability to reveal
yourself and your world in all of its nuanced complexity and humanity.
Allow people to see themselves on the screen. It
could be a look into the struggles of a marginalized group. It could be a reminder that it's okay not
to be perfect: an ambiguous ending, a chubby protagonist, a
character’s embarrassing flaw.
Ironically, your perfect script will honor the imperfect at the
core of being human.
Writing in
your personal voice isn’t egotistical or solipsistic. It’s
not selfish to tell personal and idiosyncratic stories. In fact, writing in
your personal voice is perhaps
the most selfless duty you should perform as an artist.
The best way to show viewer their truth is to reveal some of yours.
The most personal story you tell will also be the most universal.
The best way to show viewer their truth is to reveal some of yours.
The most personal story you tell will also be the most universal.