Friday, 3 December 2021

WATCHING THE POWER OF THE DOG

 

We are in Montana, ably played by the high plains of Aotearoa (New Zealand). On an isolated cattle ranch, in 1925, four people – two brothers, a woman and her teenage son – bring us a story of repression and freedom, darkness and light, sex in all its confusions and little of its pleasures. It is a small story condensed into a huge space of vivid, soaring peaks, stunning clefts in high ravines and opaque interiors, laden with heavy, black furniture.

The interiors are dark and cold. The exteriors are light and exhilarating, even when snow dusts the mountains. Terrific tracking shots flip views of the mountains and people with blank walls, indicating that what we see includes what is hidden and what we can’t see remains present. Siting the camera inside cavernous stable and showing us the folds and clefts of the sunlit mountains, while silhouetting two men, is one of many searing images in the film.

A bevy of cowboys carry a baby grand piano into a baronial ranch house which stands isolated in the prairie, prominent as an unforced error. We are in Jane Campion territory, visually and narratively, with a tip of the hat to E. Annie Proulx. The film itself is burdened with visual and narrative metaphors. The story is told by sweeping through open spaces, thefocussing on intimate glades and pools, always bright and seductive. The narrative turns on the tension created in the dark interiors of the ranch house, the stable, the brothel and the hearts of all four protagonists.

The piano being carried into the house is the movement of the story from light to dark, from the potential for the satisfaction of desires to the dominance of repression and violenceunderlined by the failed attempt to play The Radetzky March. Campion’s choice of this piece of music fastens the film to male boorishness, as expressed in empires and war.

A woman fails to play the march at a stifling dinner party organised by her husband, to wed himself to the state’s establishment, by hosting the Governor. The party flops. The woman, formerly a piano-player in silent-film cinemas, collapses into herself. She gulps down a garish cocktail and sets out on the path to becoming a drunken hysteric.

She is tormented. Her chief tormentor is her brother-in-law, Phil Burbank (Benedict Cumberbatch), the younger brother of her husband, George Burbank (Jesse Plemons). Phil is the uncouth. George is the couth. Their fragile bond, running the ranch and sharing a bed, is severed when George decides, without preamble, to ‘take a wife’.

We first meet the brothers on one of their cattle drives to the rail-head, where their stock will be forwarded to the cities for slaughter and consumption. Dangers fester on the range, including from diseased animals. Anthrax stalks the valley.

In classic images of the Western USA of the late 19th century, we see cowboys in leather chaps and broad brimmed hats, smiling and wiping their sweat, before falling on their chicken dinners and later roistering to the rafters with the denizens of the brothel next door.

All but Phil and George. 

Phil harasses the young waiter, Peter (Kodi Smit-McPhee), whose widowed mother Rose (Kirsten Dunst) runs the restaurant. He brutally mocks the boy’s artistic flourishes and quiet manner. The cowboys pick up his mocking. Phil is their range-toughened leader. They call the boy ‘nancy.’ Phil disdains the company of women in the brothel and wanders the upstairs corridors, calling for his brother. The film’s engine is sex and desire as expressed in repression and cover-up.

Meanwhile, George has gone ‘a-courting’ with Rose. He finds her crying in the kitchen, pained to see her son traduced and hurt. George lays a hand on her shoulder in one of the film’s most gentle scenes. When he later serves salads to a party of guests, who are surprised to see the well-known rancher take on such a domestic role, we once again drive towards the out-working of desire.

George, as played superbly by Jesse Plemons, may be the film’s hero, if it is possible to name any character as such. In an achingly beautiful scene, Rose and he, returning from their honeymoon, stand facing the great mountains. She attempts to teach him to dance. He falters. He breaks away and starts to cry, emotionally overwrought. He explains that he is happy to no longer be alone.

Phil, the younger brother, is never anything but alone. We learn, almost as an aside, that he is a Harvard-educated classicist. He is also an accomplished musician, excelling on the banjo. His cover may include ‘playing’ at being a cowboy. 

When in the midst of his fellow cowboys, he holds himself aloof. They party with the women. He goes upstairs alone. They horse about in the river, naked and beautiful on a summer’s day. He rides by and goes to his private glade, where he strips to pleasure himself using the wine-stained napkin he lifted from the restaurant and which he teased the teenager for carrying in a simpering manner.

When Peter, the teenager, comes upon him and upon his collection of physical health magazines, which include black and white images of male nudes, the film shifts gear and gallops towards the development it was set on from the outset: the bringing together of Phil and Peter. 

The pommel of a saddle is pertinently portrayed and lovingly caressed. A cigarette is exchanged in the classic film-trope of a sex act. The braiding and plaiting of a rawhide rope is used by Phil to bind Peter to him, an echo of the way he was bound to his heroic mentor from the ‘old days’, Bronco, with whom he bundled (naked?) in order to survive a winter’s night among the high peaks.

When Peter, sitting with Phil under an isolated haystack, a perfect location for a love-tryst, deftly and dispassionately dispatches an injured rabbit, Phil is not alone in sensing that the story may not conclude as it might have seemed it would. The teenager is a trainee surgeon. He knows how to cut. And he made a vow to save his mother.

The film has already gained numerous awards. It is likely to feature in all the Oscar lists. The principals perform well and embody the film and its themes. The other cast members are set well-back and are no more than cyphers for maleness, family, power and commercialised sex.

Does the film resolve into a cosy, heterosexual, domestic outcome, affirming the traditional nuclear family, albeit one spancilled by a tragic legacy?

It has stayed with me. It has drawn these words from me. I am glad I watched it. 



The Power of the Dog by Jane Campion (Netflix)

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt10293406/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1

Peter Bradshaw review in The Guardian (London)

https://www.theguardian.com/film/2021/nov/17/the-power-of-the-dog-review-jane-campions-superb-gothic-western-is-mysterious-and-menacing

The Radetzky March

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ebe0Z7k6YdA





www.facebook.com/DaveDugganWriter

Monday, 29 November 2021

READING WILDE IN READING

 

At six o’clock we cleaned our cells,

At seven all was still,

But the sough and swing of a mighty wing

The prison seemed to fill,

For the Lord of Death with icy breaths

Had entered in to kill.



The Lord of Death roamed Reading Gaol when playwright and celebrity Oscar Wilde resided there, as punishment for loving a man poetically, physically and publicly. Rail travellers had spat on him as he stood on the platform before he began his journey to Reading, in the cast-iron manacles of a convict.

I travelled the same train, un-manacled, in the company of family members, all of whom I love publicly, one of them poetically, others with fatherly and grandfatherly tenderness.

We strolled the banks of the Kennet, beside Reading Gaol and I thought of Oscar.

I read aloud from his famous ballad.



I know not whether laws be right,

Or whether laws be wrong;

All that we know who lie in gaol

Is that the wall is strong:

And that each day is like a year,

A year whose days are long.



We know now that the law which convicted the playwright was wrong, so we, the humans who live in these regions, changed it. 

But walls remain strong and days continue long, for many.



A lone swan cruised the Kennet, then glided under an office block and away. A grand-daughter pottered and tottered. A mother scampered to keep her safe. 

I read verses to the woman seated askance upon a love-seat, set under the prison walls.



But though lean Hunger and green Thirst

Like asp with adder fight,

We have little care of prison fare,

For what chills and kills outright

Is that every stone one lifts by day

Becomes one’s heart by night.



Then we walked on, through the ruined Abbey, which monarchs built, then tumbled. The stones their subjects lifted remain, humanly shaped and elegant in their desolation. We walked into Forbury Park, inviting in the chilly Autumn sunlight. A grotesque cast-iron lion stood high upon a pedestal, on which were etched the names of local lads who had perished in the imperial war in Afghanistan in the 1800s.

Lads who were loved and who themselves loved, until tossed into the growling maw of war.



We walked on. 



There is no glory or joy to be had in cast-iron manacles or war memorials. 

Coffee, cake, conversation, the smile of a child.

Petty things, perhaps, might yet save us from further immolation.



For they starve the little frightened children

Till it weeps both night and day:

And they scourge the weak, and flog the fool, 

And gibe the old and grey,

And some grow mad, and all grow bad,

And none a word may say.



It is a season of war refugees. Of children drowning, not smiling. Of screams and wailing, not conversation. Of cold briny suffocation, not coffee. Of death, not cakes.

It is always such a time. Boats collapse in short spans of water as great cargo and passenger crafts plough past. Follies of Empire repeat and persist. 



The brackish water that we drink

Creeps with loathsome slime,

And the bitter bread they weigh in scales

Is full of chalk and lime,

And Sleep will not lie down, but walks

Wild-eyed, and cries to time.


Stephen Fry, with an excerpt from The Ballad of Reading Gaol

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QMQK0aWpAPY

Afghan war memorial in Forbury Gardens, Reading

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forbury_Gardens#/media/File:Forbury_Gardens,_Reading.jpg



www.facebook.com/DaveDugganWriter


Monday, 11 October 2021

DESPOTISM 2 DECENCY 0


It’s been a bad week for Decency in the league of world affairs, finding itself on the end of a two nil thumping at the hands of Despotism.

Decency went one down on 7th October when the UN Human Rights Council voted not to renew the mandate of the Group of Eminent Experts on Yemen (GEE). The Group examined human rights abuses and other atrocities being committed in Yemen. Saudi Arabia, leading the charge for Despotism, increased its lobbying efforts in state capitals around the world and undermined support for the GEE and succeeded in getting rid of it.

This result promotes impunity for war criminals and other violators of international law who drive the conflict in Yemen. Itwill lead to further devastation and loss of life for Yemeni citizens.Getting rid of the GEE green lights actions that condemn millions in Yemen to violence and death. Brutal attacks continue against civilians throughout the country. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, in coalition with United Arab Emirates, is the lead actor in these attacks, as well as the Ansar Allah (Houthi) armed group. 

Saudi Arabia wanted rid of the GEE because a recent report highlighted a lack of political will amongst the parties to the conflict and the international community to cease violations of international law. This drives actions delivering civilian harm and broader human suffering within Yemen. 

Reports from Yemen tell of at least 233,000 deaths, including 102,000 as a direct result of hostilities and 131,000 from indirect causes, such as conflict-related famine, and the destruction of health services and infrastructure. Over 400,000 Yemeni children are at risk of dying of starvation and malnutrition and 16.2 million people face acute food insecurity. Yemen is heading towards one of the largest famines in modern history. Attacks on homes, schools, hospitals, civilian infrastructure and humanitarian aid provide compelling evidence that targeting and starving Yemenis is a widespread method of warfarein the country.

The votes at the UN Council went 21 against renewal of the Group’s mandate, 18 for, with 7 abstentions. Scanning the list of abstaining countries, as well as those who voted against, indicates the strength of diplomatic and economic clout Saudi Arabia, its allies and associates, wield in the world. It is time for states like Japan and others who abstained on this issue to step up and demonstrate they are committed to upholding international law and protecting the people of Yemen.

Saudi Arabia is among the world's biggest military spenders, along with the United States of America and China. It received half of all US arms exports to the Middle East in the past five years. What makes the Saudi Arabia regime different from the Taliban regime in Afghanistan is simply its trade in oil and armaments. 

A second strike for Despotism doubled the deficit suffered by Decency in the same week. A financial consortium from Saudi Arabia bought the English Premier League Club Newcastle United. This was easily achieved because many clubs in the league are already own by international consortia, often with dubious financial and political records. The city of Newcastle in the north-east of England is ripe for picking off by the fund because of the collapse of old industries which sustained the population, such as ship-building and coal mining, without meaningful economic regeneration by the UK and other investors.

Saudi Arabia deviously formulated an investment fund that it claims is not run by the state. The Premier League accepted this formulation, even though the Public Investment Fund (PIF) is a Saudi Arabia sovereign wealth fund, chaired by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. It’s a bit like saying that a forthcoming commercial festival is not Christmas, but yes, Santa is in charge.

Football supporters in Newcastle are delighted, mainly at being rid of the club’s (smaller-scale) despotic previous owner. Their much loved club has now joined the ‘big league’. The investors will plunder it for soft-power and social capital, while acting like Victorian mill magnates doing good works.

Two nil for Despotism, then. Decency took a beating. Still the game continues.

Who’s supporting Decency?



Mwatana for Human Rights (Yemen)

https://mwatana.org/en/renew-the-gee/

Table of votes:

https://www.facebook.com/mwatanaen/photos/a.656100531156024/4177863622313013/

Newcastle Football Club bought by Saudi Arabia Fund:

https://www.theguardian.com/football/blog/2021/oct/08/saudi-takeover-of-newcastle-leaves-human-rights-to-fog-on-the-tyne


www.facebook.com/DaveDugganWriter




Monday, 28 June 2021

VAN’S BELFAST COVID KARAOKE


Van Morrison concerts are very popular internationally, but nowhere more so than in his home city of Belfast. Streets were closed off and commuter traffic seriously disrupted to facilitate his 70thbirthday concert on Cypress Avenue in 2015. 

The Hastings Hotel Group organised four “dinner and a show” nights in their prestigious city centre hotel in Belfast starting on Thursday 10th June last, with Van Morrison as the star attraction. Tickets for the events in the Europa Hotel sold briskly, despite public concern at the incidence of Covid infections. Given the regulations and restrictions on indoor dining and entertainment, it was highly unlikely the events would go ahead.

Relations between the hospitality sector and the Northern Ireland Executive, which sets the restrictions, have been strained. The Hastings Hotel Group is damaged by the lockdowns caused by Covid. The concerts were the business owners’ attempt to push through a test case and get some people through the doors.

The Legislative Assembly and the Executive were not minded to facilitate the Euopa Hotel concerts. They remain knee-deep in Covid-Related problems, as well as overseeing the worst hospital waiting lists in the UK and a school system that leaves children and families scrambling to transfer from primary to secondary level, often not making it. The Executive has a simmering furnace of divisions regarding languages, band parades and marches. Brexit and the EU/UK Protocol arrangement have set the city sizzling.

The first show in the Europa Hotel was due to start with pre-dinner drinks’ and nibbles. The hotel, a favourite of hacks, British, Irish and international celebrities, tourists and locals, was resplendent in early summer evening sunshine. The rooms were prepared, the food was purchased and cooked. The bars were well-stocked. The staging and sound equipment were rigged and tested.

The attempt to have the events labelled a test event failed. When Van’s celebrity charm didn’t work, the hotel owners blazed ahead. 

A bemused BBC Radio Ulster journalist, reporting from the street outside, said that people seemed to be arriving, at the same time as his colleagues in BBC Broadcasting House, around the corner on Ormeau Avenue, were reporting that the event was off. As a triumphant shambles, it took some beating, in a city where triumph and shambles are often default settings in public life.

There were highlights nonetheless, led off by Van chanting, in his very recognisable mid-Atlantic, growl

Robin Swann is dangerous! Robin Swan is dangerous!”

Robin Swann MLA, the Minister for Health in the Executive, is widely accepted to be doing a decent job in the face of the pandemic. Van and the Minister have history, with Van’s song criticising vaccinations and lockdowns described as “dangerous” by the Minister. 

The star-turn took a farcical political turn when Van called out “Junior! Junior!” and invited Ian Paisley Junior, one of Northern Ireland’s most senior MPs, onto the stage. The MP joined the singer and echoed the chant in full-scale political pantomime. 

Ian Paisley Junior’s North Antrim seat is secure in Westminster. Despite scandals and rebukes, he continues to be re-elected. He is the son of Ian Paisley, the founder and first leader of the Democratic Unionist Party, one half of the Chuckle Brothers, with Martin McGuinness, who kicked off our fledgling Peace Process. 

On stage at the Europa Hotel, Junior played Pantomime Dame to Van the Man-Prince, outperforming his father and warming up the public for the full-scale disaster-romp that has befallen the DUP. 

Edwin Poots MLA took over as party leader, ousting Arlene Foster MLA, in an acrimonious move. Thus began Edwin Poots’ MLA’s short tenure as leader of the DUP. The pantomime moved from the hotel concert, merely a sideshow, onto the main stage of Stormont.

Van’s chant turned on himself and on his karaoke partner. It infected the rest of the party, so that another heave has seen Edwin Poots MLA deposed as DUP party leader. He enjoyed just three “Astral Weeks” as leader. Jeffrey Donaldson is installed as the new leader of the DUP.

Hospital waiting times and lists still need addressed, while Covid cases are on the rise again.