Lars von Trier’s new film brilliantly teases out the link between the rot of the bourgeois mind and the rise of apocalyptic fantasies.
By Brendan O’Neill
It is an unwritten law of modern
moviemaking that the more realistic-looking the apocalypse becomes, the less
believable it is. Films like The Day After Tomorrow and 2012 may have bombarded
our eyes with a CGI-fuelled glimpse into the end of days, but they were far too
daft to make an impact on our hearts and minds. Never had watching the
obliteration of mankind felt so tepidly unmoving.
Melancholia, directed by Dogme
badboy turned darling of the European arthouse, Lars von Trier, is different.
It eschews the big-bucks bulldozing of major cities in favour of showing the
apocalypse play out amongst a dysfunctional upper middle-class family in a
remote mansion in some unnamed country. And, as bizarre as it may sound, the
end result is a properly gripping drama, which tells us a hundred times more
about contemporary apocalypitis, about our End Times obsession, than any
Hollywood film has managed.
The genius of Melancholia is that it
draws a direct link between the soullessness of the modern bourgeois existence
and the flourishing of fantasies about the end of the world. Indeed, the
apocalypse in the movie is inseparable from the existential disarray of its
assorted vulgar characters. It seems almost to be a physical manifestation of
the intellectual and bodily lethargy of the lead character in particular -
Justine (Kirsten Dunst), a pretty, well-off, cushily employed woman who has
just got hitched to a man who looks like one of the hunks from True Blood
(Alexander Skarsgård), yet who is inexplicably unhappy. As everyone keeps
saying to her, with increasing levels of bemusement, ‘You should be happy’.
In Part 1 of the film, titled
‘Justine’, we watch as Justine survives being the bride in the bourgeois
wedding from hell. Skating perilously close to parody, von Trier gives us a mad
collection of posh creeps and sexual weirdos. Justine’s dad, for example,
played by John Hurt, is obsessed with buxom women called Betty. It’s hard to
work out who’s the most obnoxious character: Justine; her mother, played by
Charlotte Rampling, who is so wantonly icy she makes the Ice Queen of Narnia
look like St Bernadette; or Justine’s brother-in-law (Kiefer Sutherland), who I
think is meant to symbolise Capitalism, because all he talks about his how much
filthy lucre he has.
It is during Justine’s loveless
wedding that we first see Melancholia, a planet that has been hidden behind the
sun for eons but which is now on the move. At first, the characters mistake the
faint red entity in the nighttime sky for a star, but as the film progresses we
discover that it is in fact a planet, vastly bigger than Earth, and heading our
way. It’s no coincidence that this celestial object makes itself visible on the
evening of Justine’s nuptials - because its progress, even the name that
mankind will shortly give it, mirrors her own state of mind. Just as Justine’s
loss of joie de vivre is puzzling, so is the sudden appearance of this
long-lost gigantic orb.
Part 2 of the film, titled ‘Claire’,
focuses on Justine’s sister (Charlotte Gainsbourg). A smart and optimistic
sort, and the mother of a young son, Claire wants to live, and thus sees the
potential collision between Melancholia and Earth as something terrible.
Justine, by contrast, welcomes it, even discovering a new lease of life, one
perversely based on her fervent hope that all life might soon be extinguished.
‘Life on Earth is evil’, she tells Claire, as casually as… well, as casually as
your average environmentalist will these days denounce the hubris of humankind.
Melancholia seems to grow or shrink, move closer to or farther from Earth,
depending on whose mood is stronger: hopeful Claire’s or bitter Justine’s.
In intimately tying up End Times
with the moodiness of a spoilt rich girl who is massively down in the dumps and
seems to be developing ME (that’s what her lethargy mostly brings to mind), von
Trier taps into a profound truth about modern-day apocalyptic miserabilism: its
origins lie less in real likely events than in the rot of the bourgeois mind
and body politic.
All of today’s frequent fretting
about the demise of days - or ‘global warming’, ‘peak oil’, ‘the tipping
point’, to give it some of its deceptively secularist monikers - likewise
springs from the existential crises of influential sections of society. It is
decadent, self-pitying bourgeois thinkers and activists, middle-class
miserabilists, real-life Justines, who have fashioned the idea that we are
heading towards certain doom, and in every single instance it is their own
inner turmoil that has led them to embrace such fiery fantasies. Just as
Melancholia seems to bulge and hum in tune with Justine’s moral
self-immolation, so today’s warnings about climatic catastrophe always reveal
tonnes more about campaigners’ narcissistic angst than they do about what will
happen to Earth and us in 2020 or 2050 or whenever.
Sometimes, the sons and daughters of
the well-off and well-connected will unwittingly let slip that their
apocalypitis is All About Them. So the unfathomably wealthy green David de
Rothschild says he first got serious about climate-change campaigning during a
jolly to the North Pole, when ‘I felt like nothing more than a speck of dust on
the endless horizon’. Franny Armstrong, director of the green ‘documentary’ The
Age of Stupid, admits that for someone like her, ‘a member of the MTV
generation’, it’s almost a relief that climate change has helped to make life
‘so much more meaningful than what was planned’. Recently, a bevy of implacably
middle-class young hacks were taken on a freebie trip to the Arctic by a green
group, and all of them dutifully filed newspaper columns about their Damascene
conversions to green apocalypse-fretting, because ‘there’s nothing like a
glacier crumbling into the sea in front of your eyes’ to remind you that the
end of the world is nigh, intoned one.
Just as von Trier’s wayward planet
of Melancholia seems to mould itself around Justine’s moods, so today’s
climate-change hysteria always seems to encapsulate at-sea rich kids’ feeling
that life is losing its point and their view of people (Other People, that is)
as dirty and dangerous. In one of the more controversial scenes in the movie,
Justine writhes naked and with undisguised glee in the nighttime light cast by
Melancholia upon Earth. But is that really such a weird image at a time when,
day in, day out, we’re snowballed with eco-porn about coming floods and storms
of locusts written by people who clearly get some kind of kick from
doom-dredging? It is tres amusant that Europe’s cultural elite is heaping
praise upon von Trier’s film (even if much of it is deserved), because this
movie looks to me like a sometimes stinging exploration of the cultural elite’s
own superbly narcissistic habit of magicking up ‘coming apocalypses’ which
always seem perfectly to reflect their own fears and prejudices and desperation
for some Day of Judgement momentum in their increasingly purposeless lives.
The final 10 minutes of Melancholia
contain some of the best special effects I’ve ever seen, way more subtle yet
far more believable than the end-of-world fare dished up in apocalyporno films
like 2012. The intense noise and oppressive growth of Melancholia (the cinema I
was in felt like it was shaking) will nearly convince you that life as we know
it has just ended - and that it’s all down to a bourgeois princess’s desire for
doom, her loathing of ‘life on Earth’.
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