issue eight
INTERCUT ISSUE EIGHT
INTERCUT
Editor-in-chief: Sophia Dienstag
Art Director: Megan Perkins
Assignment Editor: Hannah Carroll
Editors:
Hannah Carroll Anne Kiely Sarah Lucente Phoebe Vlahoplus David Whitehouse
Illustrators: Jessica Luu Molly Scotti
The Horror of Ari Aster ANDRES ANGELES-PAREDES A Cinematic, Depictive Portrayal of the Real: An Analysis of Nanni Moretti’s Fictional Autobiography in Dear Diary CONCETTA FROIO It’s Been Over a Decade Since Slumdog Millionaire Swept The Oscars. What’s Changed? SARAH LUCENTE Deconstructing Tarkovsky Through Dorsky: Cinema, Vision, and Light in Andrei Rublev ANNA DZHITENOV The (Un)predictability of The Undoing PHOEBE VLAHOPLUS “The Next Right Thing:” Depictions of Mental Illness in Frozen II ELIZABETH IRVIN It’s All Fun and Games, Until...: The Struggle for Power in Big Brother and Succession NIKA LITT
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14
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CONTENTS
F R O M Dear Reader,
T H E
Well, here we are: another month into the COVID-19 pandemic, and another online-
only issue of Intercut sent out into the world. As I write this, the first vaccines are being administered to health care workers around the country and more are on the way. It seems the end of this ordeal is now, at last, in sight. But just as this virus wreaks havoc on the body in ways that last well beyond the wearing-off of symptoms, so too, I’m sure, will the greater cultural effects of this time be felt far past the exhausting, stressful year that has been 2020. As much as we want things to go back to the way they were, we won’t be able to simply forget the reality of the past nine months. Life has changed -- in some ways that are temporary, and in others that likely are not. The film and television industry has had to evolve and adapt to the many changes this year has brought along with the rest of us. Shows have been canceled, film shoots shut down or postponed, and then there’s the recent news that Warner Bros. intends to release their entire 2021 slate of films simultaneously in theaters and on HBO Max. Although these changes will probably leave a lasting impact the industry, most of them don’t necessarily affect the way the average viewer consumes media. One change, however, most certainly has, at least for me: movie theaters, which in times of stress, boredom, and loneliness have been a source of great comfort to me, have closed their doors, in some cases permanently. I know, I know: streaming is the future! Movie tickets are expensive, and many theaters aren’t even that nice. I hear you, and it’s all true. But if there was one thing in non-pandemic times that could reliably get me out of the house and interacting with other people, even strangers, it was going to see a movie. When the pandemic started, to be honest, I didn’t mind staying home all the time. I’m an introvert, and I often choose to spend time alone
E
E D I T O R anyway -- I was doing okay. But as the months stretched on, it began to dawn on me that although sitting in a dark theater may not seem like social interaction, in a way, it is. Maybe not in as direct a form as, say, a hug or a holiday party, but every time you see a movie, you share an emotional experience, a human connection, with friends, family, and whoever else happens to be there. I’ve realized, it’s not movies I miss -- those we still have -- and it’s not the enormous screens (though I miss those too), it’s the people. I don’t know what long-term effects this year will have on the industry. Maybe the pandemic will alter movie-viewing habits in a permanent way, or perhaps this year will simply be an anomaly. But what I do know is that once we’re vaccinated, safe, and finally on the other end of this thing, whether with friends, family, or even just by myself, I’m going to the movies. As tough as this year has been, and as much as we’ve missed out on, if there’s one thing we’ve gained -- those of us who aren’t doctors, nurses, or parents working from home while homeschooling their kids -- it’s time. Time to read, to watch, to listen, and in the case of our Issue 8 contributors, to write. And write they have! Over the past (and hopefully last) few months of the pandemic, some of these writers have revisited old films and shows, while others have discovered new ones. From discussions of Slumdog Millionaire, to Frozen 2, to Big Brother, they’ve written about what film and TV means to them. And if you’ll only turn the page, or click the arrow on your screen, you might find that their writing means something to you too.
All my best,
Sophia Dienstag editor-in-chief
THE HORROR OF Andres Angeles-Paredes
As the film’s credits
begin to roll, I think back on the final images and
sounds of Midsommar: a smiling young woman,
an outfit made of flowers, and a haunting score that builds to a magnificent
crescendo. I enjoyed it, but I was also unsettled in a
way I hadn’t experienced
before. The gut-wrenching content and situations
it presented were unlike other horror films I’d
watched during this year’s quarantine. I looked up the director Ari Aster and learned that he’s
directed only one other
feature film, Hereditary, and a few weeks later I checked it out. Again, I was left with the same unsettled sensation.
With only two movies,
Aster has established a
unique style that creates disturbing experiences for his audience. How
8
could he have achieved
unique mannerisms and
films vary significantly in
characters as we spend
this? While these two
both form and content, there are notable
similarities between
them. Aster develops his
films around distinct and flawed characters and
the deterioration of their
relationships with others. He creates an underlying
feeling of discomfort that becomes juxtaposed with grotesque and intense scenes of horror and realistic emotion.
We become
acquainted with the
oddities of the central
time in the worlds of the two films. In Hereditary,
we get a close look at the Graham family. Annie,
the mother, builds model houses for a living and
feels conflicted about the loss of her own mother.
She appears to hold some grudges against her, and it seems like they had a
troubled relationship. When Annie goes through some
storage boxes, we get the
sense that
she doesn’t
entirely
ARI ASTER understand her family
or its history. There may be some secrets that
have been kept from
her. Meanwhile, we also see the eccentricities of her daughter, Charlie.
She sleeps in the family treehouse against her
parents’ wishes and builds crafts from sticks and
trinkets that she finds. In
one scene, she cuts off the head of a dead bird to use
for one of said crafts. Aster gives us these unusual and disturbing traits so that
we never exactly relate to the main characters. We recognize who they are
and their personalities, but there are certain actions and sides to them that don’t sit well with us.
Midsommar shares
this setup. Instead of a
family, the film looks at a group of friends. We
follow them before their trip to Sweden, and we
note how they all interact
with Dani, the protagonist. Josh is indifferent towards
her, and Mark expresses
his dislike for her behind
her back. Pelle stands out since he is particularly
kind and polite to her. His demeanor is a welcome
departure from the apathy of the others, even though it may seem that he’s too kind sometimes. We also
see how Christian, Dani’s boyfriend, struggles to
show her affection and acts manipulative and
detached. He behaves this way towards his friends
too later on in the film; he becomes difficult to work
with and even steals Josh’s thesis idea for himself.
Aside from Dani, they are pretty difficult characters to relate to as well, but we’re stuck with them
whether we like it or not. This disconnect between the characters and the audience establishes a
discomforting tone. Even though we’re following
them throughout the film, we don’t feel entirely comfortable in their
space. We’re placed in a
helpless position to watch the events unfold, only
sympathizing with Dani.
The central
characters of both films gradually fall apart as the plots progress. In
Hereditary, the audience bears witness to the
dysfunctional nature of
the Graham family. Annie
and her son, Peter, engage in tense conversations,
which we learn is due to a traumatic incident in
their past. They have an
established mistrust that has already damaged
their relationship. Peter doesn’t have a strong
relationship with Charlie either. We don’t notice many interactions of
bonding or love between
them. Overall, they don’t act like a stable family.
After Charlie’s death, the
family becomes even more strained. In one scene,
a quiet dinner gradually turns into an explosive argument. Annie and
Peter counter each other with accusatory remarks until Annie snaps and
9
yells at her son. Having
is the main focus of the
point to the couple falling
these characters, we
worries about her family,
about Dani’s birthday, and
spent so much time with experience the tension
and resentment building between them. Their
faltering relationships
become even more harmed, furthering the unsettling tone of the film. Instead
Christian is unsure of how to console her. His friends tell him to dump her, but
it’s evident he doesn’t know what to do. Later on, Dani discovers that Christian
is going to Sweden with
apart. Christian forgets
their conversations and
expressions reveal their
developing hatred towards each other. There’s a sense of alienation between
the two that parallels the mistrust in Hereditary.
of coming together, which
his friends, which she
It feels as though no
they grow further apart.
tries to understand why
even her boyfriend. The
would satisfy our desires,
Aster does this to heighten the disconnect between us and the movie, keeping us on edge for what happens next.
In Midsommar, Dani
and Christian’s relationship
10
deterioration. When Dani
didn’t know about. She Christian didn’t tell
her this, but he doesn’t
accept responsibility. The
audience notices this and sees how unfairly she’s
being treated. As the film progresses, more signs
one is there for her, not one character we have
sympathy for isn’t getting the help or comfort she needs. We feel Dani’s
sentiments of loneliness
and separation, extending
the discomfort driving the
film. Aster detaches the
window for air. Everything
a haunting and grotesque
other characters and keeps
we can barely process
look at. We’re left disturbed
viewer even more from the us in helpless anticipation.
The tension that
persists throughout these films sets up sudden
and gruesome scenes of
horror. In Hereditary, first time viewers don’t expect
occurs so frantically that the few seconds where
Peter swerves away from a deer corpse and where Charlie sees a telephone
pole coming closer at an appalling speed towards
her head. When we hear
image that we can hardly at this sudden shift in horror.
Midsommar’s
approach is slow and
drawn out rather than
frantic, but it leaves us with a similar feeling.
Charlie’s horrific death. We
the sound of a sudden and
After getting adjusted to
at watching Charlie go
the dread that Peter feels
commune that Dani visits
go from feeling alarmed
into anaphylactic shock to experiencing the intensity
of the scene as Peter rushes her to a hospital in his
car. We’re on the edge of
our seats as we watch her stick her head out the car
forceful impact, we feel as he stops the car and
hesitates looking in the
rear view mirror. When her body is discovered
the next morning, we get a shot of her decapitated
head covered in ants. It’s
the life of the Swedish with Christian and his
friends, we learn of an
upcoming ritual known as
an ättestupa. The majority of the characters don’t
know what it is or what to expect, and thus we are
11
kept in anticipation too.
such intense imagery. It
who has just been crowned
film draws out the event,
that lingers throughout
Christian having sex
On the day it occurs, the
forcing us to take in every detail and moment. An
elderly man and woman
are introduced and made the focus of the day. The
whole community shares a meal with them and then they depart to a cliffside.
The audience watches them cut their hands willingly
and smear the blood over some runes. We begin
to infer what the event
entails, but we have to wait in suspense until we see
the woman drop from the
cliffside and hit the ground in horrifying and explicit detail. The man does the
same despite the pleas and cries from the students.
He is only incapacitated from the fall, yelling in pain from his horribly
broken legs. We have to watch some commune
members slowly approach
and smash his face in with a mallet. This shocking
incident is a drastic shift for the characters and for the audience who
may not have expected
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creates a sickly unease
the rest of the movie as
we’re uncertain of what’s to come. These scenes
amplify the discomfort
and helplessness we feel. They present unusually
terrifying situations, and
May Queen, discovers
with Maja. Having lost
everything, she crouches over and sobs profusely. She’s accompanied by
other women, and they join in her wailing and
since they’re carried out so suddenly and effectively, we believe in their
plausibility. These moments also feature extreme body horror that hasn’t been
seen throughout the films
thus far. Aster makes sure the viewer has adjusted to the storyline and
subsequently catches us
off guard with intense and frightening incidents.
As the horror escalates,
we witness the characters’
weeping, allowing her
moments of devastation.
pent up feelings. These
true emotions come out in When Annie discovers
her daughter’s beheaded
body, we hear her screams of shock and extreme
anguish. We see her on
all fours in her bedroom, yelling that she wants to die. This scene parallels
one in Midsommar. Dani,
to finally release all her scenes of distress and raw emotion are uncommon
for the horror genre. They exemplify the jarring
realism of the films while also furthering their
unsettling tones, resonating with us deeply.
These intense scenes
and moments of passionate
to the family treehouse,
unnerving smile.
lead to grotesque and
and adorned by a cult. The
of both films culminate
emotions ultimately
unsettling endings. When a supernatural being
possesses Peter at school, it slams his face into his desk several times. He’s taken
home, and Annie attempts
which has been taken over eerie music swells, and we stay focused on his face in a close up shot as a cult
member puts a crown on his head.
Midsommar’s ending
is just as bizarre. After
a drugged Christian has
sex with Maja, he realizes what he’s done and tries to escape. He enters a
barn where he sees the
body of one of his friends mangled and mutilated in a sickening fashion.
Following this scene, we
see the disfigured bodies of all the students being
carried to a wooden temple in another drawn out to get rid of the being,
but her husband is burned alive instead. A possessed
Annie then chases Peter to
the attic, hovers above him, and slices her own head
off. Peter then sees some
nude figures watching him in the corner and jumps
out the window in fright. An entity takes control
of his body, and he goes
sequence. Chosen by a
dejected Dani, a paralyzed Christian is placed in the skin of a bear and set in the temple as well. The
whole commune gathers
and watches as the temple is lit on fire and burns the
victims inside. Dani breaks down at this sight, but as we linger on a close up of her face, we see her
slowly form a satisfied yet
The discomforting tones in these intense endings
and stay with us once the
credits roll. In Hereditary, we discover the Graham family’s secret, but each family member dies a
horrible death. Dani is
finally happy and loved in Midsommar, but she
has to exchange her only friends for a murderous
cult. Aster plays with our emotions in these final
scenes. He ends his films
in horrible and disturbing ways while also including a feeling of catharsis. We
experience some sense of
inner release at watching these despairing and
beaten down characters finally become free of
torment. Such intricacy and moral ambiguity is
distinct for horror films
and is representative of
what makes Aster’s style so frightening. Through
these stylistic choices, he has made a notable and unsettling mark on the horror genre.
13
A CINEMATIC, DEPICTIVE PORTRAYAL OF THE REAL: AN ANALYSIS OF NANNI MORETTI’S FICTIONAL AUTOBIOGRAPHY IN
DEAR DIARY
written by Concetta Froio illustrated by Molly Scotti In Dear Diary
of skin cancer. However,
Nanni Moretti embraces
depiction of factual events,
(1993), director and writer a diaristic approach to
storytelling, and by doing so modifies the canonical style that characterized
his previous films, thereby
challenging and renovating his authorial voice. In
Dear Diary, the Italian
filmmaker chronicles an
event that draws from his private life: the discovery
though the film includes a
it should not be considered a documentary, because its intentional stylistic and narrative choices
emphasize the film’s status as fiction storytelling.
Prior to the
analysis of Dear Diary, it is crucial to investigate
some key formal choices
that Moretti adopts in his
previous six feature films. Moretti’s body of work is an “unpredictable mix of
the personal, political and the filmic.”1 However, a
“constant [is] the comically idiosyncratic, neurotic, by now one can say
‘Morettian’ egocentrism of the protagonist.”2 Though
Moretti’s previous features depict dissimilar plots and settings, this recurring
onscreen character that Moretti himself plays constructs a sense of
familiarity for frequent viewers. This common
thread persists until The Son’s Room (2001), the
last feature where Moretti plays a pivotal role. In Dear Diary and Aprile,
Moretti decides to abandon his previous onscreen
character, Michele Apicella, and instead chooses to
play the character “Nanni Moretti,” who is molded
after the director himself.
Though all the
characters Moretti plays in his past features are
named “Michele Apicella,”
1. Small, Pauline. “The Cinema of Nanni Moretti: Dreams and Diaries.” Film Criticism 30, no. 2 (05, 2006): 72-75,84. 2. Bonsaver, Guido. “The egocentric Cassandra of the left: Representations of politics in the films of Nanni Moretti.” The Italianist 211, no.1 (2001): 158183
14
each Michele is a well-
in individuality. By
cinematic lens. The formal
exists independently of
character, Moretti declares
character who is molded
defined character that the others. However,
each Michele is linked
by a similar neurotic and
eccentric personality, and they all represent the
“emblem and standardbearer of the post-68 generation.”3 On his
films prior to Dear Diary,
Moretti states (translated from original Italian), “I found myself depicting and making fun of a
group of people that was
similar to me from a social,
abandoning his recurring he no longer intends to
narrate and personify the struggles and anxieties
that Michele embodied,
rather, he intends to focus on an introspective style of cinema that is deeply
rooted in his own reality and truth.
Dear Diary subverts
the aforementioned pattern of social representation, as Moretti adopts an
introspective and private
choice of interpreting a
and named after himself
obfuscates the boundaries between the tangible and the fictional worlds he is representing onscreen.
However, the stylistic and narrative choices utilized by Moretti are what
prime the viewer into an
understanding of the film as a work of fiction. The title of Dear Diary is the
first indication to viewers that the film is aimed
generational, and political standpoint.”4 In those
films, acting in the role of “Michele” allows Moretti to satirize, examine and
scrutinize his generation while embodying the characteristics he is
critiquing. Embracing a
new onscreen character
marks the transition from
representing an individual who is “burdened with rappresentatività”, a
“generational signifier”,5 to one that is steeped
3. Marcus, Millicent. “”Caro Diario” and the Cinematic Body of Nanni Moretti.” Italica 73, no. 2 (Summer, 1996): 233. 4. Ibid. 5. Ibid.
15
toward introspection. The
Moreover, the sinuous
the film is a representation
is a close up shot of a diary
of Moretti riding his Vespa
and feelings; however,
opening frame of the film
entry, read aloud through
voiceover by Moretti, that states, “Dear diary, there is one thing that I enjoy
more than anything else!” Through the title and
opening scene, Moretti establishes an intimate tone, and highlights
the direct access to the
character’s interiority as
well as the private nature
of the film. We do not see Moretti writing what it is that “he loves more than anything else,” rather,
what follows is a montage of handheld, long shots of Moretti riding his Vespa
along the deserted streets of Rome. By illustrating the diary entry in the
opening, Moretti seemingly invites the audience into an intimate portrayal of his inner monologue. By visually depicting
the rest of the sentence
that Moretti was writing in his physical diary, he suggests that the film
is a visualization of his
introspective thoughts.
16
movement of the character along the empty streets
visually mimics the gesture of writing on paper. The
deliberate formal choices adopted in the initial frames of Dear Diary
suggest to the viewer that
of the filmmakers thoughts the stylistic choices also
function to reiterate the fabricated nature of the film, and confute any
suspicion that the film
might be a documentary.
Dear Diary is
divided into three distinct
retain many of Moretti’s
In the first chapter, the
Isole and Medici, and
stylistic tropes, such as
repeatedly interrupts his
vignettes, namely In Vespa, the common thread that loosely connects these
episodes is the presence of
Moretti’s character and the persistence of his diaristic and intimate narration. The first two episodes
signature narrative and his recurring wooden
acting style and dry sense of humor. A “morettian” characteristic that is
prevalent in both In Vespa and Isole is the use of
absurd comedic moments.
character of Moretti
aimless wandering in the
deserted neighborhoods of Rome by pulling over and
starting conversations with strangers. One instance of this repeated motif occurs when he travels to the
neighborhood of Spinaceto. The voiceover states that
people always talk poorly of the neighborhood of
Spinaceto and he decides to visit the location
himself. As he rides his
Vespa in the streets of this new area, he encounters a man sitting on a ledge and slows down to say,
“not so bad, this Spinaceto, I thought it’d be way
worse.” As the strangers start responding, “you
are right, I was thinking the same…” Moretti
interrupts him and says, “ciao!” Interjecting the
man resembles a technique that Moretti employs in
all of his previous films: cutting a scene off even
though the character has not yet finished his or
her sentence. Previously,
17
he is holding are the
erroneous doctors’ notes that he collected over
the course of his medical odyssey. So far, this final installment displays an
introduction analogous to the previous two
chapters. The voiceover continues, and Moretti states, “nothing from this editing style “added
explores the filmmaker’s
behavior of the characters
illness that is at the root of
force to both the farcical
and to the jerky, intolerant personality of the
protagonist.”6 In Dear
Diary, this stylistic trait
plucked from his canonical repertoire retains its
previous function, while
simultaneously acquiring a new layer of meaning. Analogously to his past films, interrupting the
man’s sentence underlines the awkward, erratic
personality of the main
character, however, it also highlights the possibly fictitious nature of the conversation.
The final chapter of
Dear Diary, titled Medici,
this chapter is invented,”
own quest in search for the his malaise. This vignette
interweaves the narration of autobiographical
elements taken from Moretti’s private life
with deliberate and self-
conscious formal choices, such as flashbacks and
the breaking of the fourth wall. The opening shot of this final chapter frames
Moretti in an empty café, as he rummages through a pile of papers. The
voiceover starts off this
chapter by saying “dear
diary,” analogously to the past vignettes. Moretti’s
voiceover continues and reveals that the papers
and we cut to footage of
the bed-ridden director’s last chemotherapy
session. The amateurish cinematography as well as the low quality of the footage are both
features that indicate the documentary nature of
the clip. The inclusion of
6. Bonsaver, Guido. “The egocentric Cassandra of the left: Representations of politics in the films of Nanni Moretti.”
18
real documentary footage
innermost thoughts.
what occurs in the tape.
last treatment denotes a
clarifies the nature of the
shot of the film, which
that depicts Moretti’s
sharp change from the
past two chapters, where
no documentary clips are
inserted. Additionally, we witness a definite change in the function of the
character’s voiceover. In the previous chapters,
“Moretti” voices his inner
In Medici, Moretti
voiceover by unequivocally addressing the use of
documentary footage.
As the documentary clip
plays, Moretti’s voiceover states “this is my last
chemotherapy session,
and I have decided to film it.” The voiceover is no
longer the articulation of the words written in the
diary, rather, it explicitly
addresses the inclusion of the documentary footage.
Clarifying the nature of the external footage denotes
that the character is indeed addressing the viewer; if the character of Moretti were simply addressing himself, there would thoughts and anxieties,
be no need to elucidate
Additionally, the final
depicts Moretti breaking
the fourth wall and staring directly at the camera as
he drinks a cup of water, confirms once again
that he is intentionally
addressing the viewer. The use of external footage,
as well as direct address to the viewer, sets this
final chapter apart from the previous two, and
reinforces the fabricated nature of Dear Diary.
While the director
decides to narrate the true story of his journey and
discovery of Hodgkin’s in Medici, the stylistic and
narrative choices do not resemble documentary
storytelling, nor do they
yet it is unclear whether
the character is addressing the viewer with the
voiceover. Audiences are left wondering whether
they are being intentionally included in the character’s monologue, or whether they are furtively
eavesdropping on Moretti’s
19
establish a sense of realism.
while simultaneously
notes that the director
for formal techniques that
constructed nature of the
the chapter. We initially
Paradoxically, Moretti opts draw viewers’ attention to the fabricated nature of
the film in the last chapter more than in the previous two. As previously stated, this chapter begins with
the character in an empty
café, as he begins to write about his medical journey in his diary. The function
of the following clip from his last chemo session
is twofold: it seemingly
grounds the film in reality,
drawing attention to the film. As Moretti himself claims in an interview,
both Dear Diary and later Aprile “describe what
really happened to me, but they’re both still films that
reflect choices in directing, acting, writing, tone, and style.”7 Another element of Medici that, similarly
to the documentary clip, underlines the fictitious
nature of the film, is the use of the real doctors’
7. Young, Deborah. “The Son’s Room.” Film Comment 37, no. 3 (May, 2001): 14-15
sporadically includes in see the prescriptions in
the café, where Moretti
is reminiscing about his
past struggle with doctors. After the documentary
clip, the film delves into a
flashback that occupies the bulk of this chapter, and
we witness Moretti bounce from doctor to doctor in an attempt to identify
the root of his constant
itch. After every medical inspection, each doctor
Bibliog
Bonsaver, Guido. “The egocentric Cassandra of the left: Representations of
183 DOI:10.1179/
Bonsaver, Guido. “Three Colours Italian.” Sigh “Caro Diario/Dear Diary.” Sight and
“Ciclo Caro Nanni: Nanni Moretti parla di ‘Caro Diario’”
Courrier, Kevin. “TORONTO REVIEWS: APRILE 1/2.” Boxof
Small, Pauline. “The Cinema of Nanni Moretti: Dreams an
Marcus, Millicent. “”Caro Diario” and the Cinematic Body
Young, Deborah. “The Son’s Room.” Film
Young, Deborah. “Reviews: CARO DIARIO.” Variety (
20
begins to write numerous
physical notes that belong
setting them in a fictional
paper, and as the doctors’
footage taken on his final
abandons the obscure,
medications on a piece of
“voiceovers” list the various prescriptions and their function, a close-up of
physical notes occupies
the frame. As Moretti has mentioned in interviews, the inserted notes are
the real prescriptions the director collected in his
struggle with doctors and improper diagnoses,8 and they suggest a “counter-
diary.”9 By employing the
to the director, as well as day of chemotherapy,
the filmunderlines the
truthful and honest nature of the story in Medici, yet also facilitates a heavily cinematic and fictional
representation of these events.
In Dear Diary,
Moretti experiments with fiction storytelling by
seizing intimate fragments of his private life and
framework. Moretti
dreamlike and highly
intellectual filmmaking
approach of his first six
features, yet characteristics of his conventional
authorial style, such as his surreal comedic tone and
a veiled critique of Italian society, both persist and are adjusted in order to
better suit the diaristic and introspective tone of the film.
8. “ Ciclo Caro Nanni: Nanni Moretti parla di ‘Caro Diario’” (link https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fF6rJ6vh3HI) 9. Marcus, Millicent. “”Caro Diario” and the Cinematic Body of Nanni Moretti.”
graphy
politics in the films of Nanni Moretti.” The Italianist 211, no.1 (2001): 158-
/ita.2001.21.1.158
ht and Sound 12, no. 1 (01, 2002): 28-28,30,3. Sound 4, no. 12 (Dec 01, 1994): 42.
(link https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fF6rJ6vh3HI)
ffice (Archive: 1920-2000) 134, no. 11 (Nov 01, 1998): 148.
nd Diaries.” Film Criticism 30, no. 2 (05, 2006): 72-75,84.
y of Nanni Moretti.” Italica 73, no. 2 (Summer, 1996): 233.
m Comment 37, no. 3 (May, 2001): 14-15
(Archive: 1905-2000) 353, no. 5 (Dec 06, 1993): 39.
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IT’S BEEN OVER A DECADE SINCE SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE SWEPT THE OSCARS. WHAT’S CHANGED? Sarah Lucente
It is not
revolutionary to say that Slumdog Millionaire, directed by British
filmmaker Danny Boyle, is a white-washed and extremely reductive
portrayal of India, but let’s start there. The film is
structured around Jamal (Dev Patel)’s journey
through the questions of
gameshow Who Wants to
the film explicitly state its
timelines between his
a multiple choice question
Be a Millionaire, switching time on the game show,
when he was interrogated for supposedly cheating, and his traumatic
childhood. These childhood experiences arm Jamal
with the correct answers to the show’s questions.
The opening and closing of
message. In the opening,
is superimposed onto the
screen: How did Jamal win twenty million rupees?
There are four choices,
but at the end of the film, after Jamal reunites with
his lifelong love Latika, the text of the fourth choice,
“D: It is written,” appears again, confirming that it
was Jamal’s destiny to beat the game show and to end up with Latika. And yet,
what does this depiction of a clear-cut, destined
path say about India? That its people are bombarded with cruel and unusual
hardships from day one,
and that these hardships
have positive results, but
only years and years later? That there is no joy to
be found except through
working for an American company, or by winning
money through a British
Television show? Or that
one can only win said show if one is destined, rather than as a result of one’s intelligence, or even of one’s life experience?
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I am not the first
person to bring up
these questions; in fact,
many writers have already, including many writers of color, such as Wesleyan
professor Hirsh Sawney.
While researching for this
piece, I looked for opinions on Slumdog from Indian writers, and they were
hard to find. Even today, Google is awash with
for 10 Academy Awards, and swept with 8 wins,
including Best Picture. I
opinion pieces by Indian
writers do exist, however, and I encourage you to
read more for yourself; here’s one from The
Seoul Times by Gautaman
This is my main one:
the depiction of abuse of innocent people in
Slumdog, particularly
children, is extreme;
it’s not every day that
like Jamal witnessing his the hands of religious
extremists, and naturally, viewers feel empathy
with that child. Not only do I think that some
viewers want that kind of emotional
catharsis, but that
white Americans,
Bhaskaran and another
myself included, often pat
Mukul Kesavan.
empathizing with someone
from The Telegraph India by
When scrutinizing
the messaging of the film, it seems impossible to
imagine the magnitude of its US popularity at the time of its release. It made a whopping
$378.1 million at the US
to watch Slumdog for
the first time, I asked
the elite institution that
own mother’s murder at
scholarly articles, and
just a few weeks ago
developed a few theories.
so popular, and I have
reviewers, in publications New York Times. Reviews,
Before I sat down
my friends-- fellow liberal,
you think about a child
from rogerebert.com to The
still wonder why it was
mostly positive reviews
from overwhelmingly white
24
box office, was nominated
ourselves on the back for
of a different culture. We
tell ourselves that we are caring people, that we
have opened our eyes to the struggles of the less
fortunate. That was over ten years ago. What has changed?
mostly white students at is Wesleyan University--
what they thought about
the film. All of them said
something to the tune of: “I loved it when it came out, but I was [10/12/14/16], so take that love with a grain of salt.” Halfway
through the film, I paused and stopped to chat with one of those friends. She asked how I liked the
movie, and I told her how I had already written it
off as a crude rendering
of emotional truth. I cited
the scene in the film where Jamal witnesses a criminal cutting out another child’s eyes, and how you’d have to have a heart of stone not to be saddened and
disgusted by that image. She said, “Sure, but it’s a fun
movie.” I asked
right back, “is it?” and cited more disturbing
moments, like the death of
Jamal’s mother, the adult-
of praising films that depict
variation of the white
and the moment when
film in uber-simplistic
Book, Tony rescues Don
Jamal torture sequences, Jamal wades through
a sea of feces to get an
autograph, only for it to be stolen and sold away by his own brother. My
friends understood my reaction, and many
even changed their
opinions about the film.
They cited how they used to associate the film with
the beautiful faces of Dev
Patel and Frieda Pinto and
the ending credit sequence, the epic Bollywoodinspired dance to
the Academy-award
winning song, “Jai Ho.”
But has America
grown up with my
housemates, or do we still, as a culture, love Slumdog and ideologically similar
films? When one considers
the sweeping international success and Best Picture win of Parasite, the
exceptionally-made and startlingly incisive class critique written and
non-Western cultures on
ways. However, the year before Parasite, Best
Picture went to Green Book, a first-lauded and then
criticized white savior film
based on a true story, about the supposed friendship
between African-American pianist Don Shirley, and
his Italian-American driver
Tony, in the sixties. Besides its cavalier attitude
regarding racism (spoiler:
Shirley from racism and
homophobia on multiple occasions, and Slumdog contends that destiny
(and colonization, and
later, globalization) alone can save the destitute people of India.
I am not insinuating
that no progress has been made since
Slumdog Millionaire
was released. In the last
it existed in 1960, but it
three years, there has
according to the film),
and diversification of
ended with this friendship, it came under fire after
it was revealed that the
mostly white production team, including writer-
director Peter Farrelly, did
not adequately discuss the film, written literally from driver Tony’s perspective, with Shirley’s family.
Though the films deal with vastly different histories of oppression with a
slew of complicating
cultural factors, I posit
directed by South Korea’s
that both films deal in
to think we’ve evolved out
cultural erasure, and a
own Bong Joon-ho, it’s easy
savior narrative. In Green
copious oversimplification,
been a rapid expansion the Academy; 2,000
members were added in
the last four years alone, which should, in theory, lead to the celebration
of a wider range of more complex films. I only
propose that such rapid “strides,” compounded
by the continued failures of the Academy’s recent history (remember #OscarsSoWhite ?), may reveal
that this cultural
moment deals more in
performative activism than
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it does in structural change.
ourselves for Parasite’s
The Slumdog phenomenon
extremely important that
on racism and structural
understand the issues
At the end of the day, it is Americans and people all over the world see
Parasite. Hopefully, with
each viewing, more people
hear of Bong Joon-ho, more people celebrate the South Korean cast and crew, and more people try to grasp
the film’s messaging about
the state of the world today. Nonetheless, we shouldn’t
be too quick to congratulate
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win. This 2020 reckoning inequality in America, in
addition to its demand of long-overdue attention
paid to the daily violence against Black Americans,
has taught us something. It has taught us that the
time for the performative activism seen in Slumdog (2008 Americans care
about economic inequality in India, right?), is over.
represents our desire to
that face people who look different than we do. But maybe, before making
another film about this desire to empathize,
we should take a step
back and listen to what
various communities have to say about their own experiences.
DECONSTRUCTING TARKOVSKY THROUGH DORSKY: CINEMA, VISION, AND LIGHT IN ANDREI RUBLEV
written by Anna Dzhitenov illustrated by Jessica Luu
Let me first begin
with a story: when I
initially saw Tarkovsky’s landmark epic Andrei
Rublev years ago, I cried.
I, an apathetically agnostic
and pretty cynical teenager, left the cinema (remember going to movie theaters, guys?) with real, actual, human tears in my eyes
from viewing this three-
hour long, black-and-white, religious biopic. Set in
the 15th century, the film
vaguely follows the life of
Andrei Rublev, who was an icon painter in medieval
Russia, over the course of
a prologue, 8 episodes,
and persecution of artists.
scenes are united only by
may make all of that
and an epilogue. These
a tangential relationship to each other, with most, but
not every section featuring the titular Rublev, the
creation of art or artistic craft of some sort, and/ or the direct discussion
of religion. Nonetheless, Rublev’s dedication to
honestly investigating and pursuing the complicated relationship between
art and religion is made
overwhelmingly clear, even as he struggles with his
belief and the censorship
As dense as my description sound, my tears were,
thankfully, not of relief
or boredom, even if the
program curator himself
had joked that he hoped
we had enough snacks to
last us the entire length of
the oh-so grueling runtime. This would be a pretty
rotten essay if that were the case. My emotional
response, however, was
still very difficult to explain at first.
Sitting there,
comfortably enveloped
27
in the darkness of the
power contained within
PowerPoint by about 20
the soft light of the screen,
transfixed, and yes, I cried.
surrounding cinema and I had gazed upwards at
the film’s closing montage. Here, after more than 3 hours of painstakingly following the events
surrounding Rublev’s
life and his complicated
dedication to his art, the film takes a small non-
narrative side step in its
epilogue. A soft choir picks
up as blocks of color unfold on the screen, replacing
the preceding black-and-
white images. They are at
first wholly indecipherable, simple washes of vibrant
red and gold, but soon the musical harmony deepens and the visuals weave together and build in
turn, revealing churches, ordinary people, holy
figures, all Rublev’s actual work from all of those
centuries ago. These are
the very frescoes that he
had dedicated his life to,
and the obvious weathering on them only underscored, for me, something ancient and - for lack of a better, less obvious word - holy
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them. I was absolutely Pretty shamelessly.
Even lavished in
this grand description, however, these closing
images are fundamentally quite simple and nearly
emotionless. They present no obvious emotional
catharsis, no development or tragedy beyond a
certain poignancy. I didn’t even have any personal
connection to the images
in question or the narrative as a whole, and in general I’m simply not the type to
cry often at the movies. In terms of technique, too,
there is no grand cinematic edit, camera direction, or compositional invention
that makes it all happen;
how could there be, after all, in shooting a pre-
determined, 2-D piece
of visual art? I’m almost tempted to say that the
only distinguishing aspect of this plain 8-minute
montage, with image after image simply layered over image after image, is that
it predates the creation of
years or so.
Naturally, I felt a
tiny bit embarrassed, and as I sat in the flickering, half-emptying subway on my way home, I
sought an explanation
ending. I could concede
that image. On a broad
impassioned, and
beauty to that dramatic
categorized by the medium
for my uncharacteristic, overwhelmingly delicate
response to what seemed, objectively speaking, to
be a pretty unremarkable
that there was a certain reveal of Rublev’s
work, especially after having spent 3 hours
examining his life and the
circumstances surrounding his art, but was it enough
to warrant such tears? Was the profound impact this ending had on me, and
still has to this day, simply attributable to a showy
reveal? Clearly, I had been
touched by something, but I couldn’t quite put the necessary words to it.
Let me now
introduce a text, which I encountered about a
year ago and now hold
in incredibly high regard: Nathaniel Dorsky’s
Devotional Cinema. In
an act of poetry, Dorsky
covers a surprisingly large amount in an even more
scale, art is defined and
it consists of, and cinema
happens to be made from captured and projected
light. What makes light as a medium obviously
unique, furthermore, is its significance to our
(seeing) lives, leading to an interesting set of relationships and conclusions:
“We view films in the context of darkness. We sit in darkness and watch an illuminated world, the world of the screen. This situation is a metaphor for the nature of our own vision. In the very process of seeing, our own skull is like a dark theater, and the world we see in front of us is in a sense a screen. We watch the world from the dark theater of our skull. The darker the room, the more luminous the
surprisingly small amount
screen.” (26)
philosophy, as implied by
of pages. The crux of his
the title, comes down to a
certain devotion; it’s a total
This culminates in: “The reality of being in
the dark theater of our skull,
dedication to cinema, the
observing incandescence.” (31)
the light that comprises
image it is made of, and
Watching films is,
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after all, the primary way
the most literal, arguably
everyone is willing to
to them, supplicating our
philosophy imaginable,
time to simply staring at
in which we pay tribute
time and attention to them in the darkness of the
theater; this relationship between light and vision is thus fundamental to our understanding of
and devotion to movies.
Dorsky’s own films, which are largely abstract, slow meditations on nature
and still environments, accordingly concern themselves directly
with shaping our vision,
manipulating the camera’s focal length and aperture. The resulting footage is uniquely mesmerizing,
characterized by slowly shifting light leaks and
still landscapes that force the audience to directly
contemplate light itself. It’s
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simplest application of his deconstructing cinema
until it purely becomes bare light projected on
a screen. Dorsky’s films, together with other
experimental works like them, become pure,
abstract demonstrations
of cinematic beauty, and though it is a type of
beauty that I happen to have a soft spot for, I’ll
still be the first to admit that it’s not the most
accessible type of cinema out there. This vein of
experimental film may be
a direct, literal application
of the beauty and devotion Dorsky describes, but it
dedicate so much of their shifting blocks of color and contemplating the nature of cinema. In fact, I’d
hedge a bet that I’m well in the minority on that one.
Truly, beauty for
beauty’s sake is not always enough, which is why
Dorsky finds space within the larger film canon for
narrative works as well, as in:
“The form must include the expression of its
own materiality, and this materiality must be in union with its subject
matter….union of material and subject” (25)
could also be far from the
out there: after all, not
“Film at its transformative best is
most effective approach
that:
While remembering
not primarily a literary medium. The screen or the field of light on the wall must be alive as sculpture, while at the same time expressing the iconography within the frame. Beyond everything else, film is a screen, film is a rectangle of light, film is light sculpture in time. How does a filmmaker sculpt light in harmony with its subject matter? How can light be deeply in union with evocation?” (48, my emphasis added)
This narrative
caveat is precisely what
pushes Andrei Rublev from simply being a beautiful wok to a transcendent
one. The relief I alluded to above, about finally seeing Rublev’s work
after spending 3 hours contemplating his life
as an artist, was a direct response to the film’s
ability to evoke its own material. Perhaps the
connection is a bit too obvious - of course a
visual biography about
an artist’s work is going
to be ‘in harmony with its subject matter’ - but the
fact of the matter stands that Andrei Rublev is
overwhelmingly successful precisely because of this
union between pure, light-
based beauty and narrative evocation.
Essentially,
Tarkovsky’s skill here
comes from his ability to unite the beauty of light with a narrative
that coaxes the audience to fully understand that beauty, both before and
during the magnanimous
final sequence. Due to the film’s segmented, vaguely non-narrative vignette
structure, the significance of the plot rests more on overarching themes and motifs than on minute, sequenced details. The main throughlines of
Andrei Rublev have to
do, accordingly, with the
endurance of art and the difficulties of creating it, from episodes depicting
Rublev’s relationship to his painting amidst increasing political turmoil to the
incredible final scene, in
which a group of men toil to cast a brass church bell with great uncertainty as to whether their efforts
will be successful, whether the bell will ultimately
hold its shape and ring
like it is supposed to. It is
31
a scene laden with great
subject matter that Dorsky
it’s about taking vision,
capturing the leap of faith
senses, and stripping it
feeling and metaphor,
and immense dedication
that is required to produce any physical item of
craftsmanship, as well as the overwhelming
satisfaction that comes
when the bell does, in fact, prove successful with a resounding ring.
Then, though the
film is far from a Dorsky-
like abstract work, it is also crafted with a care and
attention to its image that highlights the significance of light and shadow, a
quality heightened by its black-and-white nature. Planted in a narrative
context wholly concerned with the creation of
art, this artistic nature
thus pushes the film to
become, in an incredibly
self-referential manner, a beautiful meditation on beauty, an artwork that
investigates and describes its own nature. The non-
narrative elements of the film are bolstered by the
narrative ones, presenting
that very union of light and
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writes about.
After several hours
of priming the viewer and pushing them to think
about the film in this way, the break into the end
montage can finally lead
the audience to consider, most directly, this light-
based beauty of cinema.
Now that we understand,
to at least some extent, the intricacies of art and its
creation, the first jubilant tolls of the church bell
still ringing in our ears, we can fully appreciate
these closing images. We are moved into Dorsky’s state of restorative
devotion, compelled to
gaze directly at the very light that constitutes
cinema (remember that the first few shots here
are borderline abstract, simple blocks of red
and yellow that are only revealed to be actual
images later: the audience is simply perceiving light, not recognizable shapes). And this exact state is precisely what makes
cinema so captivating:
one of our most essential even further towards its essence, until it reaches
a kind of primitive state. It’s about making us not
simply look, but actively,
ardently look toward the light again in an almost
primordial way, and it is this type of looking that
is the most profound, the
most cinematic - at least, in
Dorsky’s sense of the word. That is what Tarkovsky
achieves, and that is what I couldn’t quite put my
finger on all of those years ago: the film manipulates its own medium towards
the light. And in that act,
it venerates the nature of
cinema, the nature of our vision, and the ineffable, beautiful phenomenon
that occurs in the light that bounces between the two.
THE (UN)PREDICTABILITY OF
THE UNDOING Phoebe Vlahoplus
Warning: This article
Korelitz. Kidman and Grant
show had great potential
Undoing
Fraser, a high powered
discussions surrounding
contains spoilers for The
“Are you actually
accusing our son of
committing this crIYme”, Nicole Kidman whispers
forcefully to Hugh Grant,
her voice careening away
from her character’s proper New York lilt to Kidman’s
seemingly favorite “Upper East Side of Australia”
play Grace and Jonathan and wealthy Manhattan couple, her a clinical
psychologist and him a top rated oncologist, whose lives are turned upside
down when a fellow parent at their child’s Upper East
Side private school is found dead and Jonathan is
accused of her murder.
At first an
accent. The dramatic
interesting foray into the
beginning of the much
Side elite, the show quickly
moment comes at the
anticipated series finale
of The Undoing, an HBO miniseries loosely based
upon the novel You Should
Have Known, by Jean Hanff
lives of the Upper East
diverges into what can only be described as a mediocre mashup of Gossip Girl,
Law and Order SVU and
Big Little Lies. While the
to engage with timely
race, class and our justice
system, showrunner David E. Kelley chose to barely
scratch the surface of the myriad power dynamics
at play. Instead, the show
focuses most intensely on the “did he or didn’t he” storyline, attempting to
maneuver the viewer into accusing everyone but
Jonathan of the crime, only to ultimately reveal that he, the cheating doctor
who showed no remorse
for the accidental part he
played in the death of his sister, and who literally accused his own son of
33
bludgeoning the victim
shred of evidence.
at the revelation of
her! And is also a raving
interestingly, I was
final episode, despite the
to death, in fact, did kill lunatic, go figure!
The show’s
fundamental flaw -- but
However,
seemingly in the minority of people who found it
Jonathan’s guilt in the
fact that all evidence had pointed to him and only
also seemingly the key
to its premise -- rests in its inability to give us
an alternative suspect
to Jonathan. No, Nicole
Kidman randomly walking
past the scene of the crime is not enough evidence,
no, the grandfather being mysterious is not enough evidence and no, strange and unexplained glances made by Grace’s friend
Sylvia to various characters throughout the show is
also not enough evidence. In the end, in order to
justify the idea that any
of these others characters
could possibly be counter-
suspects, the viewer is left to conjure up elaborate
plotlines practically from
thin-air, from Sylvia having an affair with Jonathan, to Grace’s father hating
to be impossible for the
him being the murderer
that he would hatch an
other than Jonathan.
disconnect between
Jonathan to such a degree elaborate murder plan
without leaving a single
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suspect to be anyone Both friends and the
Twitterverse were shocked
all along. This profound viewers of the same show, something I am guessing
Kelley did not intend to
that Jonathan just couldn’t
ubiquitous. These shows
important point regarding
would just be bad writing.
that there will always be
provoke, brings up an
the relationship between
writers and watchers - Is it
have done it because that
Viewers have
increasingly demanding
instill in viewers the idea a shocking and cunning twist in the end. Many
therefore believed that
taking viewers on a six-
episode arc only to come
back to square one would therefore just be too
tedious and unimaginative for a network which gave
us the likes of Watchmen or Westworld. However, The Undoing, by forgoing the
expected, last-minute twist, subverts this conception at the end of its six-episode arc.
Another take on
this show is that the
psychological “undoing” is not actually that of Nicole
Kidman’s character, as one might expect. Instead, it
is the attempted undoing
of the viewers themselves as they try to rationalize Jonathan’s continued
oddities as anything but the really enough for writers
expectations of shows such
will think of them as more
because complicated
simply to hope that viewers cunning than they really
are? Many people thought
as The Undoing precisely
crime shows and murder
mysteries have become so
markings of a murderer.
In many ways, the focus
of this show could be seen as society’s fixation with
wealthy, attractive white
men and our need to bend
35
over backwards to see the
even at the expense of
popped up frequently
good in these individuals,
reason and common sense. Jonathan could never
have done it because the idealization of men like
him in our society prevents the viewer from jumping to what are clearly the
most logical conclusions. But again, this argument elevates Kelley’s smarts
to possibly too high of a
place, given some of the
larger plot and character oddities throughout the show.
36
Bad writing,
directing and acting
throughout The Undoing. One of my favorite
examples is Kelley’s
decision to have Grace
take a walk near the crime scene, only to realize that the show had not in any
way set up this habit for her character in prior
episodes. Consequently,
Nicole Kidman went on a solo walk in nearly every subsequent episode, her expensive long coats
billowing in the New York
City winds. Another would be the complete disregard of three-dimensionality of characters, most
excruciatingly that of
Grace’s father. Played
impressively by Donald Sutherland, Franklin, was the only possible
character who I could have seen as a suspect other than Jonathan. As the
exorbitantly wealthy father with a distrust of, and one could almost say hatred for Jonathan, I could
hypothetically see both how and why he would want
to force Grace to sever
thoughts. And lastly, there
are looking for a show
However, Franklin’s main
of the fact that Grace’s
in and unaware of its own
ties with her husband.
character trait being merely
“mysterious billionaire with an intermediate level of
piano knowledge” made it slightly more challenging to seriously consider him the mastermind behind
the murder. Another was the seeming inability
of the writers to write legal dialogue, with
characters getting on the
stand and practically just monologuing their inner
was the complete disregard child Henry was not even
in high school, and yet was allowed to watch all news broadcasts on his fathers murder trial and even sit in on said trial, in which
gruesome and disturbing details about both his
father and the murder itself were shared.
which is both unabashed level of absurdity, The
Undoing gives you a solid
amount of content to work
with, whether you give the show’s creators too much, too little, or just enough
credit for crafting a story
so straightforward that it’s almost unpredictable.
If you watch the
show, don’t do it for the
scintillating drama or top notch accents. But if you
37
“THE NEXT RI DEPICTIONS OF M IN FROZ
When I say
I’m interested in
representations of mental health and illness in film and television, people always ask me what I
think of Oscar contenders like Good Will Hunting or A Beautiful Mind. While
there is undeniable value
in the way these films and others like them feature
and portray mental illness, I take a particular interest in movies and shows
that aren’t necessarily
about mental illness, but rather weave anxiety
or depression into the
development of one or
more characters and their plots or subplots. Even
more specifically, movies and shows that aren’t
necessarily considered
sophisticated or serious that feature characters
38
written by Elizabeth Irvin |
with mental illness really
note here that I am not a
the general public, as
anything close—I form my
appeal to me—and to
evidenced by box office
receipts. Some examples
include portrayals of social anxiety in Bo Burnham’s
Eighth Grade, the depiction of therapy in the recent
Netflix show Never Have I Ever, and Tony Stark’s post-traumatic stress in
Iron Man 3. I could write pages on each of these
mental health expert or
opinions about depictions of mental health in the
media primarily in relation to what I’ve learned about psychology in classes, my years in therapy, and my own experiences living
with Generalized Anxiety
Disorder, Depression, and ADHD.
For those of you
examples and many others
who aren’t plugged into the
review of the way OCD is
Frozen II, which came out
(I’ll spare you my scathing portrayed in Glee), but I
want to focus here on what I consider to be the best
example I’ve ever seen of a movie or TV show that
subtly integrates messages
of mental health and illness into its story and character development: Frozen II.
It’s important to
8-and-under movie scene,
last year, is the blockbuster sequel to the story of royal sisters Anna and Elsa. At the time of its release,
Frozen II broke box office records and became the
highest grossing animated
film of all time (it has since been surpassed only by
the 2019 remake of The
GHT THING:” MENTAL ILLNESS
ZEN II
| illustrated by Jessica Luu Lion King). With lifetime
character profoundly grow
issues of her anxiety and
billion, Frozen II is the 10th
remains her awkward self
which seem to deepen as
ticket sales of over $1.4
highest grossing film of all
time. Given that enormous audience, the themes and characters in this movie have the potential to
have a significant impact on audiences of all ages,
and are therefore worth a deeper dive.
The original Frozen
sets up Anna as the
and change. While Anna from the first film (we
see a recall of her “wait, what?” catchphrase),
we now see how those
traits fit into the larger
overprotectiveness, both of she grows from the young girl and teenager of the
first movie into a young adult in the second.
The opening song of
the second film—“Some Things Never Change,” which focuses on the
comforting consistency of family, friends, the
“adorkable” and naïve younger sister, and
while her character certainly evolves,
mostly in regard to
her taste in men, her
older sister Elsa is the one who undergoes the film’s central
personal journey and character growth. It
isn’t until the sequel that we see Anna’s
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seasons, etc.—ends with
mysterious voices calling
her family (her sister Elsa,
stability and her family are
Anna hanging back behind her boyfriend Kristoff, his reindeer sidekick
her, both Anna’s sense of threatened, and
Sven, and crowd-
highlighted when Elsa
dives into a forest fire to
learn more about
the spirit calling her, and Anna
follows to try
favorite Olaf the
to save her. Once they
both emerge
snowman)
alive (Anna
and singing
is rescued
“I’m holdin’
by Kristoff
on tight to
and Elsa
you.” This
uses her
song,
and its
final line
in particular,
sets up the central
powers), Elsa says
features of Anna’s
to her sister, “What were
stability, cares deeply
been killed. You can’t just
character: she craves
about her family, and
wants things to stay the
throughout the
way they are; she fears
story, we see her constantly
assume that this craving
There is a clear clash
change. It seems fair to for stability stems from
her abandonment issues;
she was forced apart from her sister for her entire childhood and lost her
parents at a young age, in true Disney fashion.
Once the plot picks up
and Elsa starts hearing
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you doing? You could have
working to protect both. between Elsa’s need to
follow the voices in order
to find the truth about her past, no matter the cost, and Anna’s compulsive
desire for her loved ones— primarily Elsa—to stay
safe and alongside her.
This central clash is best
follow me into fire,” to
which Anna replies, “You don’t want me following you into fire, then don’t run into fire.”
This scene, along with
many others in the film,
effectively illustrates what
anxiety feels like and looks like, and how it can cause conflicts with others. This
is an incredibly important representation for young children who may never
have seen this side of
to shape our society’s
half of Frozen II, which
screen before. Anna shows
understanding of mental
In the Disney+ original
themselves reflected onanxiety-ridden and riskaverse kids who sit out
adventurous activities that they’re not alone. I was
conversations about and
illness, and it can hopefully contribute to decreasing
the stigma surrounding it. Another aspect
that kid—too anxious to
of Anna’s positive and
go rock climbing, full of
of mental illness is the
swim in the ocean or to
extreme worry when my
family and friends would do these kinds of things. Without any positive
representations of anxiety in the shows and movies I watched as a child, I was
convinced that something
was wrong with me. Now, Anna shows audiences— including countless
millions of anxious kids— that anxiety is normal
and is something many
people experience, even
princesses. Furthermore, our anxieties don’t have to stand in the way of
our success; we can all
(metaphorically) save the
kingdom not in spite of our worries, but because they
drive us towards our goals, protect us, and make us
who we are. This message has incredible potential
effective representation palpable earnestness
and authenticity in her
character, which I believe stem from the personal understanding of these
topics behind-the-scenes. In many scenes, the tone
of voice, expressions, and emotions that convey Anna’s anxiety were
initiated—and of course,
brought to life—by Kristen Bell, the actress who
voices Anna. For many years, Bell has spoken
publicly about her own
anxiety and depression,
and how she brought those aspects of herself to her
portrayal of Anna. A little research reveals that the co-director of the movie also has had personal experiences that add
resonance and authenticity to the emotional second
deals explicitly with loss. series Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II, co-
director Chris Buck opens up about the recent loss
of his teenage son in a car accident, and how that
tragedy heavily influenced Anna’s story line. Late in the film (spoiler alert!),
Anna is led to believe that two of her closest loved
ones are dead, and as she considers how to go on, she sings the song “The
Next Right Thing.” This
song chronicles grief and
deep depression in a truly beautiful way. The title
and recurring mantra of
the song refer to a point earlier in the film when
the kingdom first seemed
at risk; the wise old Pabbie Troll tells Anna, “when one can see no future,
all one can do is the next
right thing.” Upon Anna’s immense loss, she recalls
this advice, and uses it to
pull herself up and out of devastation, to act. The lyrics follow:
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This grief has a gravity, it
impact on my own life.
experience mental illness
But a tiny voice whispers in
bout of depression, and the
in a time fraught with
pulls me down my mind
You are lost, hope is gone But you must go on
And do the next right thing Within this poignant song
lies an important message:
when we feel overwhelmed
by sadness, fear, and worry, and it seems like nothing
can be done, all we can do is the one next right thing, even if that’s just standing up.
This song has had
an incredibly positive
Last year, I experienced a thought of getting better
felt like an overwhelming concept that I couldn’t grasp. The words and
melody of “just do the
next right thing” suddenly
popped into my head, after having seen Frozen II a few weeks before. Thinking
about recovery as a series
of decisions to do the next
right thing, no matter how small, then the next, then
or not, we are all living
tragedy and loss, as well
as uncertainty, confusion,
and fear about the future. While it may seem trivial or silly, I encourage
you to take those often-
overwhelming feelings and listen to Anna’s words:
“Break it down to this next breath, this next step, this next choice” and “do the next right thing.”
the next, played a huge
role in my healing process. Whether you personally
References
Buck, Chris and Jennifer Lee, directors. Frozen II. 22 Nov. 2019.
Desta, Yohana. “The Lion King Is Now Disney’s Highest-Grossing Animated Movie Ever.” Vanity Fair, 12 Aug. 2019, www. vanityfair.com/hollywood/2019/08/the-lion-king-box-office-animation-record. Harding, Megan, director. Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II, 26 June 2020.
“Top Lifetime Grosses.” Box Office Mojo, 19 Dec. 2020, www.boxofficemojo.com/chart/top_lifetime_gross/?area=XWW.
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IT’S ALL FUN AND GAMES, UNTIL...: THE STRUGGLE FOR POWER IN BIG BROTHER AND
SUCCESSION
On August 5th,
2020, CBS’ Big Brother premiered their 22nd
season, Big Brother All
Stars. After a dearth of
new television content, due to the ubiquitous
film constraints put upon by COVID, I was highly anticipating this new
season of Big Brother. The show has faced many criticisms,
Nika Litt
there were several
the All Stars season. For
the 21st season, with
significantly older than
incidents of bullying in houseguests in a majorityalliance excluding those not in this alliance and
making racist comments towards houseguests of
color. Fears that a repeat
of this would happen were
naively assuaged when the casting was announced for
the most part, the cast was the average houseguest in a non-All Star season and most everyone was in a
relationship or married,
preventing showmances from forming and
allowing players to be
self-interested. The “All-
Star” moniker should have
largely due to their casting
having a lack
of diversity and
focusing more on recruiting social
media influencers, who are more interested in
using the show for exposure
than actually
playing the game of Big Brother. Furthermore,
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meant that they were all
a season with immense
almost 10 years and
Big Brother.
deemed one of the most
which naturally became
ready to play the game of
What ultimately
happened, however,
was that a seven-person
majority-alliance (mostly composed of people
who had pre-gamed and had well-established
relationships) was formed at the onset, dominated
the entire front portion of
the game, and managed to plow their way to the Top
Seven. Along the way, they consistently took out every single person I (and the
majority of America) were rooting for, including fan
favorites Janelle Pierzina and Kaysar Ridha, who
had last played together over fifteen years ago.
While not to the degree of the previous season,
microaggressive behaviors led to minorities in the house being relegated to minority alliances,
with little to no hope of infiltrating the power structure. With the
majority of the alliance
being unlikable, to boot, what initially started as
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potential was quickly
boring and unpleasant
seasons the show has ever produced.
And yet, I spent
a large amount of my
summer foolishly watching over 400 episodes of Big
Brother in preparation for the All-Stars season. A
feature of this show is that
it happens live, as opposed to other reality shows
where seasons are pre-
recorded. If you subscribe
to CBS All Access, you can see live feeds and pretty much watch the game
unfold 24/7 on your own time. So once the season
premiered, I invested more
hours in a day than I would like to admit watching live feeds and episodes as they
aired. Why did I put myself through this?
Well, to preface
this, I am a voracious
fan of Survivor, another
one of CBS’ reality game shows that is even more
venerated than Big Brother. I have been watching
Survivor religiously for
have seen every season,
a gateway to Big Brother. Big Brother and Survivor are reality game shows
wherein several people
enter a house (in the case
of Big Brother) or an island (in the case of Survivor)
and their primary goal is to survive. In Survivor, castaways go to Tribal
Council every so often
and must vote out one
member of their tribe until there is a final group of
3.Then a jury of previously voted-out castaways vote to crown the winner of Survivor and a million
dollar prize. In the case of Big Brother, every week there is a competition
that determines the Head of Household, who is
responsible for nominating two other houseguests
vulnerable for elimination. At the end of the week,
the house votes out one of the two houseguests.
Similar to Survivor, a jury
is formed midway through the game and determines
who wins at the end. Both
are games of strategy,
to walk the fine line
same city, the chances of
competition prowess.
connections and also
majority alliance is pretty
social proficiency, and
Big Brother and
Survivor came out in 2000
and augured a notable shift
in reality television towards reality based strategy games and cemented
reality TV as a viable genre (Kavka). Apart from the strategy-based elements
of the games, what drew me to these shows is the
way in which contestants
from all different walks of life have to find ways of coexisting and, in some
cases, depend upon each other for survival, and
yet, the ultimate goal is
to eliminate every single person that surrounds you. Contestants have
between making genuine knowing they may have to cut them at any moment. In their purest form, Big
Brother and Survivor show us how normal people can maneuver extraordinary social circumstances.
Ultimately though, they
are social games that reify many of the problematic
social constructs on which our society is based, and when you change the
formula ever so slightly,
you have the potential to give great advantages to certain groups of people over others. When you
consistently cast 80-90% white people, or even
people who come from the
an all-white, dominating high.
At the same time as
my Big Brother binge this
summer I began to watch HBO’s Succession, and
noticed parallels between the two shows that do
not seem evident on the
surface. Succession centers on Logan Roy, the owner
of an international media conglomerate Waystar
Royco, and his children, as they vie for a seat at
the head of the company
once Logan retires. A satire on the way media moguls and the rich elite play
by their own rulebook, Succession brilliantly
toes the line between
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admonishing these figures
possess a game-like quality.
At the start, Shiv is not
true pathos. Both shows
Big Brother as it is quite
Waystar Royco company.
and imbuing them with problematize the way
power is disseminated and maintained by
clearly setting the stakes at the very beginning: in Succession it’s the
top position at Waystar
Royco, and in Big Brother it is the $500,000 prize. These monetary end
goals incentivize doing “whatever it takes’’
to either infiltrate an
existing power structure or to remain in power.
Ultimately both shows
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While this is apparent in
literally a game, this is a bit more subtle in Succession. Emily Nussbaum of the
New Yorker agrees that “[Succession’s] most
striking motif is games.
For the Roys, business is a game. So is therapy, so is sex.”
One of the Roy
children, Shiv, reminds me of many archetypes on Big Brother and Survivor of
someone who is extremely smart and eager, but
plays too hard too fast.
yet integrated into the
She works as a political consultant, and has put on a public persona of
being much more liberal
than her family. In doing so, she is able to secure a position as Chief of
Staff for the presidential campaign of a man who
stands against everything
her father does. However,
when she is presented with the opportunity to jump
ship and join the Waystar Royco family, she is then
in the precarious position
of potentially having
are the points at which
voyeurism is a constitutive
too often, we see this trope
fraught, the social order
radical frameworks. In
overplayed her hand. All
in Big Brother or Survivor, where players get caught with their fingers in too many pies. If executed
well, it could lead to the
check at the end, but if not,
it could lead to an untimely elimination.
But like with every
good game, whether a
game of chess or football,
constant power shifts and
unpredictability make them interesting. The moments
in Succession that are most engaging are when the
audience has no clue who
will gain power. Likewise,
in Big Brother and Survivor, I love when the power
shifts or when someone
who is not expected to go
home is blindsided. These moments of uncertainty
relationships are the most is compromised, and
anything can happen.
But unlike in a
typical game of chess, there are real-world
consequences on Big
Brother and Succession.
People’s livelihoods are
at stake and at risk based on the decisions made
by the players involved in each show. While
Succession is fictional,
within the diegesis of the show, any one action can result in the demise of
a character. Similarly, in
Big Brother, every action taken can result in that
player being eliminated. As the audience, we
watch lives hanging by a thread, and yet we
cannot look away. This
element of these shows’ Succession, because we get such intimate and
human portrayals of its
characters, we see fallible
human beings fall victim to the toxic power structure of American corporate
culture -- and it’s a scary
sight to behold! With Big Brother and Survivor, we
watch actual people under a microscope having to
react to myriad situations. While the scenarios are
fabricated, viewing these shows through a game-
like lens paints a clearer
picture on American power dynamics and gives us
valuable information about how human beings use
(or abuse) power for their
personal gain, for better or worse.
Works cited
https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/tv/story/2019-09-24/cbs-big-brother-racism-controversy-context https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/09/03/successions-satisfyingly-nasty-family-ties
“Second-Generation Reality TV (1999–2000): Surveillance and Competition in Big Brother and Survivor.” Reality TV,
by Misha Kavka, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, 2012, pp. 75–109. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/10.3366/j. ctt1g0b5zz.7. Accessed 30 Oct. 2020.
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