Showing posts with label MOVIES. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MOVIES. Show all posts

Monday, May 16, 2022

HANNAH ARENDT

Hannah Arendt: German Jewish Philosopher

The Human Condition
Between Past and Future
On Revolution
Men in Dark Times
Crises of the Republic
The Life of the Mind

I found this DVD at the library about a woman I had never heard of named Hannah Arendt. I grew up with a family named Arendt, but we pronounced it like one word “aren’t” . It seems the original is two syllables, like A-rend(t). 

She was an academic tenured professor and wrote about a lot of ideas, but the movie’s story was about her most controversial work called Eichmann in Jerusalem. It had the usual effect on my historical knowledge. It expanded it in a highly relatable format that I love (movie investments are short and sweet, if the writing or the acting or the cinematography is good, and great if it all comes together!) 

Like too many religious critics, her work was often reduced to controversy by word of mouth and reactions based on superficial knowledge instead of actually reading the book! Even the revised audiobook I obtained had a long preamble trying to tell me what I should think about it. It gave context that I better understood than most starting the book, because I had watched the film. Still, it bothered me so I skipped ahead to make up my own mind.

The movie director features actual footage of Eichmann on trial, which is brilliant, and manages, like many European and occasionally Quebec films, to flip back and forth between German, English, and Hebrew casually, spanning her life and languages.

I can’t say yet if the script does justice to her words, and I suspect she has a lifetime of other thoughts that I do not have knowledge of that the screenwriter, as a university professor, most likely does. I do, however, like the way she thinks, making up her own mind, no matter how the cards are laid on the table.

From what I gather, the trial, set in Israel, and made possible with Mossad agents and President Ben Gurion’s involvement skewed the public from the get-go. I have very little knowledge of international law and how it works for crimes against humanity, but (spoiler alert) Eichmann is hanged in short order. 

So far, Hannah Arendt, of the film, is not sure this is the right outcome, which to me is a brave position for a Jewish woman who was interred in France for over a year during the war to have.

Afterwards, I found that McGill library lends the audiobook, and I did errands lost in the first three chapters of her book. I have lots more to learn.

What she clarified for me was the definition of totalitarianism. I don’t think I really understood what it meant before. She defines it as being separate from “despotism, tyranny, and dictatorship”, all more easily understood concepts. This is how she made the much necessary distinction: that totalitarianism “applied terror to subjugate mass populations, not just political adversaries”. 

She is quoted as saying “Niemand hat das Recht zu gehorchen” [No one has the right to obey]. She is credited (although may have later regretted) coining the phrase “banality of evil”, which is in the subtitle of the book on Eichmann’s trial. It was really an astute observation that given the right bureaucratic pressures, we could all be capable of systemic evil. Replace evil with racism or sexism, and it’s a little easier to see.

There is a lecture she gives that I will quote here (subtitled movie English may not be the perfect translation, but with my rudimentary German skills, it seemed to track well):

“Western tradition wrongly assumes that the greatest evils of mankind arise from selfishness. But in our century, evil has proven to be more radical than was previously thought. And now we know that the truest evil, the radical evil, has nothing to do with selfishness or any such understandable sinful motives. Instead, it is based on the following phenomenon; making human beings superfluous as human beings.”

She was talking about the concentration camp system, designed to  convince the prisoners that they were unnecessary before they were murdered. Work doesn’t free you. (ARBEIT MACHT FREI). No matter what you do in that system, it doesn’t matter. The system of the concentration camp teaches you that everything you do is senseless.

In this way, “absolute evil is when it exists, whether humans are in the system, or not”. I would argue (especially in light of the Ukrainian Russian war currently) that all humans are harmed by this evil. Yes, those in it who are not the victims have it better, but they too pay a price to the evil inherent in such systems of systemic racism and dehumanization. For me, the problem I cannot wrap my head around is; how then do you dismantle such a system without too much cost to the humans already serving as cogs in the wheel?

Arendt criticized the cooperation of the Jewish leaders as well as the failure to resist. I imagine my own life at that moment would feel incredibly valuable at the train station before you board the train, even though that would be the best place to revolt, before you are herded towards the gas chamber, or worse. I am not as sure as she was that this obviously the right choice. It must be incredibly hard to risk you life now when everything is screaming  for the need to survive until later. 

What are the options between resistance (which survival instinct may make impossible) and cooperation? 

Another problem I have is that this feels familiar. With no intention to diminish the concentration camp system level of evil, it feels like so many systems in which we humans play the cogs is rigged in such a way that evil exists. It is hard to see how to change it from within. The temptation is to revolt and dismantle, but no one can do that alone. 

So what is my personal responsibility? Eichman is criticized and condemned to death for upholding the rules of a system that ultimately lead to harm for others. How do you know if you are are doing your job for an evil end? If your terrorist cell just gets the victims to the murderers, and you don’t know the murderers, are you responsible? If you follow orders, and are disconnected to the next chain of events, should you blame yourself?

My thoughts are always to the mid-COVID pandemic health care system around me, and how do I find a way to change things that fail our patients. Patients and health care workers seems to be experiencing record high amounts of moral and personal distress in a system that seem, like Eichmann’s work, leads to inherent evils by making it so difficult to do the best by the patient because it is often at cross purposes with the efficiency of the system. 

It is so easy to “just do your job” and go home so overwhelmed and exhausted that you just want not to think about it. But years later, even if it was the job that never allowed time to consider, discuss, evaluate and criticize what the outcome was, aren’t you still to blame?

Those of us who try at every interaction to keep it human can succeed for a beautiful moment. It seems clear to me, however, that these acts of humanity are like cogs, being worn down and crushed again and again under the wheel, which feels no cost to our use and wear. We have to see this, and figure out how to change the way the wheel works. We can’t accept the consumption of our humanity and energy as the price to pay for the system to work. It is clear that right now, don’t win as a rule, then, but as an exception. We need to find a way to change the system so that it spares the cogs and the wheels turn without crushing those in the very system they were designed to serve.

Thursday, January 18, 2018

MONSTERS

I don't love monsters. I hate gore. I despise Halloween and zombies. I miss the simpler Halloween of my youth, full of candy and ghosts, but  now Halloween is so full of characters of the graphic horror films and walking dead that I literally feel ill  about how the macabre is celebrated. So I was surprised how much I liked Guillermo del Toro's point of view of a life dedicated to creating monsters. He was being honored for his movie The Shape of Water, and he convinced me to love his monster. I do like making silly monsters like Monsters Inc. in colour and string.

As he received his first Golden Globe, for 25 year of creative work, and fending off the music with the most charm imaginable, he said,

" Monsters [] are the patron saints of our blissful imperfection and they allow and embody the possibility of failure and life."

Maybe it's time to be a little more accepting of the bizarre and the strange. But I think the gore is enough in real life. I don't need any more than that, and continue to work towards minimizing that.

Thursday, October 26, 2017

MOVIE REVIEW: THE RACE

Since the movie Music and Lyrics came out, I have been much more aware at the art and craft of deciding the title of a movie. ( I dare you to watch the film, and try naming it something better. I still hate the title, but I have learned to respect the difficulty, and have yet to think of a superior alternative!) The movie title has two meanings, making it a homonym. Oddly, they chose it despite a solid French title of Dix Seconds de Liberté, and 2 other films in the last decade of exactly the same name! So I am speaking of the movie Race 2016.

Another interesting piece of trivia is that Jessie wasn’t his name. He was misunderstood when he said J.C. (James Cleveland) in his Southern accent when he moved to Ohio.

This movie was a unique story based in the reality of Jessie Owen’s Olympic wins at a time in history when two giant cultures were discriminating against different races. It explores the decisions Jessie would have faced before and competing in 1936 Berlin. The treatment of Jewish colleagues are touched on, and the freedom of black athletes at the Olympic village a sober reminder of the segregation that still remained in the US at that time.

I suspect many historical liberties were taken in the writing of the script, but if you accept the characters as the best version of themselves, it was a great story of raw talent in the midst of difficult times. It stands as a reminder of ongoing injustice, and how an individual has to swallow a lot of bile to be a difference the world can admire. It was inspirational, personal, and well worth watching!

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

MOVIES WORTH WATCHING

Race- Jessie Owen and the USA in 1936 Berlin Olympic Games
Now you see me- Fictional slight of hand and performance magic with a little long game
You've Got Mail - charming romance set in NYC in the fall
The Imitation Game - mathematician Alan Turing cracks the enigma code during WWII
Schindler's List - Oskar Schindler saves Jew from the Holocaust
Catch Me if you Can - the bold life of Frank Abagnale is better than fiction
A Beautiful Mind - an alternate life for John Nash living with schizophrenia
Erin Brockovich - a plucky single mom becomes a legal resource and environmental advocate
Flash of Genius - the story of the invention of the intermittent windshield wiper
Amadeus - the story of Wolfgang Mozart
To Kill a Mockingbird - Atticus Finch is a just lawyer and father in a terrible time of prejudice
La Dolce Vita - one man makes the Holocaust reality more than just survival
Harry Potter series - one the best fantasy junior fiction books brought to life
Inception - mindblowing cgi with a great soundtrack
Matrix - turned my world upside down
Iron Man - a great super hero flight of fancy
Mary Poppins - the combination of a great story and Disney magic
The Princess Bride - the best romantic adventure story ever told
The Truman Show - things are not as they seem
Groundhog Day - what would you do if your life reset every night?
Finding Nemo and Finding Dory - an adventure with two fish that help each other find their way
Spy Kids - every kid's dream adventure
The Sound of Music - a great musical from a blended family
Becoming Jane - if Pride and Prejudice was from real life
Night at the Museum - NYC natural history
Da Vinci Code  (Inferno)- run through Paris with symbolist Robert Langdon (run through Florence and Istanbul)
Can't Buy Me Love - before he was McDreamy, he was a geeky guy that had to grow into his own
50 First Dates - one of my favourite sweet romances
Shakespeare in Love - Where did you go Joseph Fiennes?
Narnia - beautiful rendition with an amazing CG Aslan
Prince Caspian - My favorite of the series
10 things I hate about you - shakespeare dummies comes to a high school near you
How to lose a Guy in 10 days - Funny and true
Moneyball - when you risk it all and win
Fool's Gold - a great adventure story
Jumanji - kid's adventure movie
Star Wars - I don't have to explain this one
Return of the Jedi - ditto
Pirates of the Caribbean - a great disney adventure
Sultan - bollywood - it has it all
Slumdog Millionaire - difficult life made beautiful
Memento - mind binding
Butterfly Effect - parallel lives
The Age of Adelaine - beautiful romance
Le Fabuleux Destin d' Amelie Poulin - Montmartre at its finest
Hidden Figures- what you didn't know at NASA
Lion - adoption story that is all heart
Dead Poets Society - education with soul
The Big Short - what you need to know about investing
Salt of the Earth - beautiful documentary of the world
The Social Network - the man that gave us Facebook
The Blind Side - heartwarming story of a supportive foster mom
Spotlight - true story of the Catholic church coverup in Boston (and the world)
Mr. and Mrs. Smith - my favorite date night
Date Night - when things go awry with the best comedians!
The Other Guys - I laughed so hard
Fun with Dick and Jane - it could be you and me!
Yes Man - what a relief from a world that too often says no
Girl on the Train - not the greatest thriller in book (Gone Girl wins my vote but movie is terrible) but the greatest book to thriller movie yet (not the grandeur of Da Vinci Code, but way more developed)
The Shape of Water- Oscar winning, complex, exquisite work of Art by Guillermo del Toro