Monday, 16 December 2024

Des Teufels Bad

Ich wollt einfach weg von der Welt.
I wanted to be gone from the world.

Without having read about the film and what inspired it first, I found it incredibly difficult to locate this story set in rural Austria in terms of its time period. This is in no way criticism of the directing team Severin Fiala and Veronika Franz, who did ample research, asked their actors to live in the farm houses during shooting, and recreated costumes and farming vernacular from the period. It’s more of a reflection on rural Austrian life itself, I think: the film is inspired by events from the 18th century, but in terms of how these daily lives unfold, it’s hard to detect how they differ from what they would have looked like 400 years earlier. Viewers are used to tracking historical eras by lavish costumes and technological innovations, but both would not have been available to the rural population that the film is depicting. If anything, that feeling of temporary dislocation adds to the horror of the film: much of it shows the daily toils of the community, fishing and farming to eke out a living, arranged in tableaus that resemble Renaissance paintings of rural life. These chores make up life, and they are demanding enough that they strictly regiment the day, leaving very little space for anything else – and the sense of timelessness increases the feeling that there is no way out, that this is how it always has been and always will be, that there is no escape from the drudgery.

The film is framed by two moments in community life that do break up the daily routine: a wedding and an execution, two events that look eerily similar in how they are celebrated joyfully with music and dancing. Agnes’ (Anja Plaschg aka musician Soap&Skin, who also contributes music to the film) wedding to Wolf (David Scheid) sets off the events of the film. It’s a hopeful affair: she is excited on her big day; she enjoys the playful ritual of the wedding, she is desperate to have a child. As soon as the festivities are over, things go wrong: her husband, who seems to be a stranger to her, takes her to a house in the woods that he has purchased for them without asking her. It’s far from her family, and close to his mother (Maria Hofstätter). The passage from life with her own family to being married begins with the realisation that her husband is not affectionate or loving, but seems to consider her not too dissimilar to the animals on the farm: useful for their purpose, but nothing beyond that. Agnes’ natural inclination is curiosity and fascination with nature – she frequently wanders off the paths, getting lost, investigates, instead of finishing the long list of tasks that she is now required to undertake to make her husband (and god – “The Lord won't like it if you don't cook for your husband.”, as her overbearing and constantly present mother-in-law says) happy. Instead of tenderness and support, she finds hardness and blame, and in her isolation, she only finds solace in prayer.

Religion is as present as the hard work required. Frequently, the workers of the community are confronted with ill omens that they attempt to ward off, or interpret, mixing religion and superstition together. The opening sequence of the film – a woman, despairing, killing her baby, then immediately confessing the killing before being executed – turns into a constant presence in Agnes’ imagination when she stumbles across her exhibited corpse that serves as a reminder to keep people in line, the nature of her crime explained in an illustration for all to study. In addition to disciplining through exhibiting the result of committing a crime, the locals also use parts of the body as good luck charms – Agnes received a finger from her brother, as a wedding present. This dead woman is a haunting presence that Agnes is deeply fascinated by, especially as she begins suffering from depression that the local quacks attempt to solve with bloodletting and sewing horse hair through the back of her neck that she is meant to use like worry beads. Agnes – already regarded by both husband and mother-in-law as an ill-functioning piece of machinery that refuses to do the work it is meant for – further deviates from societal expectations, unable to leave her bed, or take care of herself, much less the animals or her husband (many horrible things happen to animals in this film, as a further reminder of the brutal reality of rural life in the 18th century). An attempt to flee to her family ends in a terrible return to her husband – there is no escape, no hope of change, no way out. She witnesses what happens to those who seek the last desperate resort of escape, a young man who has hanged himself, who is refused a burial by the church, having committed a crime that the priest calls worse than murder, because he could not confess before he died. In her imagination, she sees the man’s body rotting in a field of bones, ungrieved and without reprieve even in death.

The film is based on research into the historical practice of “suicide by proxy”, committed by people aware of the church’s taboo against suicide, who instead commit a crime that will lead to execution. What Severin Fiala and Veronika Franz utterly succeed in is creating a fictional context in which all other pathways out become unthinkable, while the situation itself is so unbearable that the idea of a woman – who we have seen as deeply devout, loving, and yearning for a child of her own – committing suicide by proxy becomes thinkable. In Agnes’ mind, there is no other way out of a world that has become unliveable. The depiction of depression – misunderstood entirely by everyone who surrounds her, and bleakly horrifying in how debilitating is without anyone showing compassion or caring to help – is the true horror of the film, while it is contextualised in an environment that is abundant in everyday violence and a sense of deep superstition that misinterprets reality. Agnes, tortured and with no way out, leads a young boy to a shrine where they pray together, and then stabs him to death. She goes to confess – just like the woman did in the beginning – and is later beheaded, in a ceremony that ends in a joyful celebration not unlike her wedding, as if it didn’t matter what kind of event breaks up the daily toils of rural life – and its depiction is even more effective for how it breaks up a film that is bleak, how it contrasts Agnes’ suffering with the celebratory nature of her death. The community drinks schnapps or beer to celebrate a wedding, and Agnes’ blood to ward off melancholy after the execution, the violence seamlessly integrated into their daily lives.

2024, directed by Severin Fiala and Veronika Franz, starring Anja Plaschg, Maria Hofstätter, David Scheid.

Thursday, 12 December 2024

random mixtape - you only hold yourself to the things you do.

   

caribou | broke my  heart. two shell | come to terms. floating points | key103. mabe fratti | kravitz. laura marling | devil's resting place. kim deal | coast. emika | wild is the wind. doechii | death roll. two shell | (rock✧solid).

Tuesday, 10 December 2024

Links: 10/12/24

Politics:

After 13 years of civil war, Bashar al-Assad's reign over Syria collapsed this week after the rapid advance of rebel forces over less than two weeks, utilising the window of opportunity presenting itself because of the weakening of Assad's allies Hezbollah (under Israeli attack in Lebanon) and Russia (pre-occupied with its war in Ukraine). Assad is reported to have fled to Moscow. The most memorable aspect of the overthrown is the liberation of Syrian prisons: The Guardian documents the freeing of prisoners from Sednaya, one of the most notorious prisons, and the desperate search for lost friends and relatives.

We're in for new elections in Germany and a likely new government in France, once more testing if the cordon sanitaire against right-wing extremist parties will hold or not.

I'm not really sure yet how to tackle what is already turning into a theatre of the absurd a month before Trump becomes US President again. Appointments that range from accused abusers to Russian spies, and in almost every case, whatever the opposite of qualification for a role is.

Pop Culture:
 
It's the end of the year, and we are setting up for 2025's new television seasons. There's a new trailer out for the third season of The Wheel of Time, which is reliably a solid show with some outstanding performances. Yellowjackets' third season will premier in February, and has added Hilary Swank to its already packed roster of stars. The new Star Trek show Section 31, focusing on the shady intelligence organisation and Michelle Yeoh's Philippa Georgiou, will come out in January. 

Somebody Somewhere, one of my favourite TV shows, has ended its three season run. Vulture has an interview with star Bridget Everett

And some films to watch to wrap up the year / to look forward to next year: Austrian horror film Des Teufels Bad (we love the genitive case) starring musician Soap&Skin/Anja Plaschg, Luke Gilford's National Anthem, Lake George, starring Carrie Coon and Shea Whigham, NZ film We Were Dangerous.

Sunday, 8 December 2024

Saturday, 30 November 2024

Reading List: November.

Non-Fiction: 
 
Valerie Bauerlein: The Devil At This Elbow. Alex Murdaugh and the Fall of a Southern Dynasty.
Hallie Rubenhold: The Five: The Untold Lives of the Women Killed by Jack the Ripper.
Erik Larson: The Devil in the White City.
Erik Larson: Dead Wake. The Last Crossing of the Lusitania.
 
Fiction: 
 
August Clarke: Metal From Heaven. 
Bethany Jacobs: On Vicious Worlds. 
Mikaella Clements & Onjuli Datta: Feast While You Can.
Lauren Elkin: Scaffolding. 
Yume Kitasei: The Stardust Grail.
Jun'ichirō Tanizaki: Quicksand. 
David Peace: Tokyo Year Zero. 
David Peace: Occupied City.
Tasha Suri: The Lotus Empire.
 
Films: 
 
Good One (2024, India Donaldson).
Candyman (1992, Bernard Rose).
My Old Ass (2024, Megan Park).
Nugget is Dead: A Christmas Story (2024, Imogen McCluskey).
 
Shows: 

Arcane, Season Two.
 
Other: 
 
Life is Strange: Double Exposure Walkthrough.

Favourite Books I've Read This Year In Progress

Non-Fiction:

Gilbert King: Devil in the Grove: Thurgood Marshall, the Groveland Boys, and the Dawn of a New America.
Bill Gammage: The Biggest Estate on Earth.
Adam Shatz: The Rebel's Clinic: The Revolutionary Lives of Frantz Fanon. 
Adam Hochschild: King Leopold's Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror and Heroism in Colonial Africa.
Ta-Nehisi Coates: The Message.

Fiction: 

Andrea Barrett: The Voyage of the Narwhal.
Michelle Paver: Thin Air.
Sarah Lotz: The White Road. 
Maggie Thrash: Rainbow Black. 
Mikaella Clements & Onjuli Datta: Feast While You Can.
Gabrielle Zevin: Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow.
Richard Powers: Playground.
James S.A. Corey: The Mercy of Gods.  
August Clarke: Metal From Heaven.
Barbara Kingsolver: Demon Copperhead.
Kelly Link: The Book of Love.
Jiaming Tang: Cinema Love.
Yael van der Wouden: The Safekeep.
Emma Copley Eisenberg: Housemates.

Andrea Barrett
's The Voyage of the Narwhal follows a fictional American expedition looking for signs of John Franklin's lost ships Erebus and Terror in the early 1850s. The voyage is also meant to be a scientific journey, gathering data about the fauna and flora of the Arctic. The main character is a scientist, naturalist Erasmus Darwin Wells, who is also coming along to look after his sister's fiance, the headstrong expedition leader Zeke. The story may be fictional, but to anyone who has read accounts of real polar expeditions during the 19th century, it holds little treasures of recognition and references many actual events, including the horrifying Inuit accounts that Rae collected about the fate of Franklin and his men. The beauty of the novel is the scientific work though, and the close relationship that Erasmus forges with the surgeon on board (a relationship almost romantic, and tragically doomed), who is similarly fascinated by everything he encounters. There are echoes here of the television adaptation of Harry Goodsir's character in The Terror and of the (in my opinion) best part of the seafaring classic Master and Commander. One of my favourite aspects of the novel were the attempts Erasmus makes to include Ned, the eager and curious young ship cook (with his own tragic story of surviving the potato famine in Ireland), in the journey of discovery. Of course, most things that can go wrong do, including scurvy due to inadequate preparation for overwintering, a nipped and lost ship, and severe discordance within the crew when individuals begin to disagree about priorities and plans. Interwoven with the accounts and thoughts of the explorers are the women back at home, waiting for the men to return and contributing to the scientific work in the only way they're reluctantly allowed to (I thought that Alexandra, a woman who is learning the art of engraving, was deeply fascinating). There is also a discussion of science in relation to racism, both in regards to the understanding of the Inuit that the expedition connects with and the question of slavery back home in the United States just before the Civil War. This is a fantastic novel of fiction that weaves together philosophy, science and polar exploration with all of its dark sides included. 

I like when by sheer coincidence, two books appear to be in conversation with each other. Michelle Paver's Thin Air chronicles a fictional 1935 attempt to reach the summit of Kangchenjunga. Soon after arriving at the foot of the mountain, expedition doctor Stephen, eager to prove to his comrades that he is just as valuable as his older, sneering brother, begins experiencing a haunting - T.S. Eliot's "There is always another one walking beside you", but, as he comes to realise, malevolent, unlike the calming presence that Shackleton felt when he first reported the phenomenon after his trek through the mountains of South Georgia to save his stranded expedition. It appears that the mountain is haunted, perhaps by a member of a previous expedition whose body was never retrieved. Thin Air is a great portrait of the same kind of doomed English arrogance that cost Scott's life at the South Pole, putting a focus on the way the white men of the expedition look down on their support staff (the ones actually doing all the work, while they sip their tea). 
Sarah Lotz
' The White Road doesn't begin on a mountain - it starts in a place that I personally find even more scary, a cave system in Wales in which protagonist Simon is attempting to film the dead bodies of a previous group of cavers for a morbid and sensationalist website he runs with his friend. In the caves, his guide dies after they get trapped by rising water levels, but his presence doesn't leave Simon, as if his bad intentions are now being judged by the constant presence of another malevolent "third man". Simon carries that spectre with him to Everest (again on a mission to film the dead), where he finds himself in the middle of another man's attempt to find closure from the death of his mother on the mountain years earlier. The climb ends in more disaster, and Simon is stuck trying to artificially create closure so the haunting stops. 
 
Maggie Thrash's Rainbow Black is about the 1980s Satanic Panic, capturing how the (historically real) moral panic around it affects a family running a daycare in New Hampshire: the fall-out spans 20 years, crosses borders, and captures how the traumatic events severely impact the family's thirteen-year old daughter Lacey, who has to rebuild her life from scratch. Lacey fights hard to 
help her struggling parents, who are caught up in a fight against revered specialists (within the justice system, but the book is particularly damning about the social workers and psychologists involved) who have fallen for the panic completely, but in the end, the odds are too stacked against them, and Lacey flees across the border to Canada with her best friend. Years later, the precarious new life they have built together in Quebec comes under threat when old accusations resurface.
 
Gabrielle Zevin
's Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow is a book about a complicated friendship between Sam and Sadie that begins in a hospital games room. Sam is in it for the long haul after a severe leg injury from a car crash that killed his mother, Sadie is there to visit her sister, who has cancer. They bond over their shared love of computer games and form a tight friendship that runs into some difficulties when Sam finds out that Sadie is collecting brownie points for the community service she is providing by keeping Sam's company (she's gamified friendship, but it's pretty obvious she's being genuine in her affection for Sam). They later reconnect after years of not talking to each other and begin playing again, except this time they make games together - a beautiful, artistic game, ambitious. The book also adds Marx to the mix - a lovely if privileged "tamer of horses" who becomes their producer and thinks about all the things they don't, because they're focused on the work. 
This novel works because it is passionate about the computer games, which are written in a way that the reader can imagine them, maybe even play along. The characters are flawed, but difficult not to root for. I think what really made this exceptional is that it reads like a spin-off of Halt and Catch Fire, specifically the seasons after the first one when the focus was on Cameron and Donna: It's about two incredibly creative people creating beautiful things together, but clashing on principles sometimes, and they both care so much that their differences threaten the friendship constantly. 

Demon Copperhead
is an incredible chronicle of Appalachia in the late 90s and early 2000s: it is about an orphan who somehow survives the horrors of the foster care system, who is failed again and again by the people who should be helping him, contextualized within the (deliberately created) economic deprivation of Appalachia - through the care of a teacher who is passionate about teaching his students about where they come from, and how their situation came about, the book speaks about the history of Appalachia, the fights between miners and owners, the politics of creating an environment in which possibilities are being limited so that resource extraction can happen as cheaply as possible. The novel then goes on to show how the introduction of Oxycontin changes everything yet again, a drug deliberately test-driven in the parts of the country where people put their body on the line for their work. All of this is done through the (frequently incredibly sad) stories of the characters, who are just trying to survive and build a life for themselves against the odds. 
 
Halfway through the year, by complete chance, a group of books bowled me over with their portrayal of intimacy and desire, of characters trying to know each other, and how the process is difficult. All three books - Jiaming Tang's Cinema Love, Yael van der Wouden's The Safekeep, and Emma Copley Eisenberg's Housemates, also feel deeply embedded in a specific place and time period (Cinema Love goes from Fuzhou to China Town in the later decades of the 20th century, The Safekeep is set in the late 1950s/early 1960s in a small town in the Netherlands, Housemates is about Pennsylvania after the 2016 Presidential Election up to the post-Covid present). With all three of them, it feels wrong to give anything about the story away - they're all stunning books about place-finding, and how it's connected to belonging, history and politics.

n+1: Hollow Man, August 19, 2024.
n+1: The Last Days of Mankind, September 28, 2024.
Aeon: The joy of clutter, October 11, 2024.

Thursday, 7 November 2024

...

"White supremacists are angry; those who claim that title and those who do not but who act in the interests of white supremacy. Not only are they angry, but also “we” are told that their anger must be understood--that “we” must make room for it.
This “we” is across race, sex, class, gender, and geography.
This unmoral, unethical anger has the full support of the state. It is the only anger that the state recognizes; the only anger not criminalized or met with deadly brutal force. It is the anger of Ryan and Ammon Bundy and the understanding of the jury of their all-white peers that found them not guilty of the illegal occupation and armed takeover of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge. It is an unmoral anger that hits in the register and the grammar of violence, in the logics of law and order, in electoral victories and the grammar of reconciliation with kin by any means."

The New Inquiry: Lose Your Kin, November 16, 2016.