Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Poor Things is Poor Thinging

art by Aleksander Walijewski


A Movie Review by Didge Martin

 

Can I just say, or ask rather, before starting this essay that, is Duncan Wedderburn, in the contemporary world, a classic manipulative sad boy? Finding out that fresh-out-of-Marvel-movies Mark Ruffalo portrayed this character really made me laugh, and might I add, made me anxious as well after finding out that he was scared to do this role when he first read the script! To quote Bella Baxter: “what a confusing person you are, Duncan Wedderburn!”

 The thing about trying to understand the outwardly bizarre premise and off-putting vibe of a movie that is Poor Things makes me want to schedule a session with my make-believe therapist which is myself. But the solace that can only comfort me is a small self-talk as I try to tell myself “Oh, you poor thing” (Get it?)

 

I don’t know if this movie was reverse Benjamin Buttoning me when I first saw it, well that probably does not make sense, because the premise of a reverse Benjamin Button is basically, a normal human being born and growing old. But it did put a mind-bending experience, nonetheless. In a sense that the fast-paced plot with ridiculously abrupt nudity that hits you the least you expect, is still a theatrical experience, at least for me. If you carefully watch the movie, it’s as if you are experiencing a wild theater or play. To quote Karsten Runquist: “[Lanthimos’s] films often feel like dollhouses where characters are so stiff, and they have to explore human emotion from the ground level...”

Ah yes, ground level. Starting from scratch. When I was in college learning philosophy, tabula rasa was introduced to me. My philosophy teacher (shoutout to Sir Hollis, my Captain, oh Captain!) mentioned John Locke’s idea of this blank slate, I immediately associated it with Bella Baxter when I started watching this movie. Shall we color this blank slate/play then?

 

To showcase a blueprint, this essay will delve into three main topics:

1. Is the movie really about the Male Gaze?
2. The Polite Society Narrative and the Use of Philosophy. Are they important?

3. Love, hate, prostituting ourselves, and everything in between, what’s in them?

 

On to the Idea of the Male Gaze argument:

 

In the hours of researching that I spent on finding out the meaning and philosophy of Poor Things (mostly by YouTube essay videos and answers from Quora strangers) I found out that a lot of them argued that the entire movie was built upon this idea that it tries to put into a film the Male Gaze perspective.

 

The existentialist philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-1980) introduced the idea of le regard, or the gaze, in his 1943 book Being and Nothingness. According to this concept, the act of gazing at another human being creates a subjective power difference, which is felt by the gazer and by the gazed because the person being gazed at is perceived as an object, not as a human being.

 

Immanuel Kant argues in his second categorical imperative that people are meant to be ends-in-themselves, and not mere means. In this context, Bella was a mere means for the perverse and fetishized actions of Duncan, to say the least. Might I add that he is also on the top when it comes to the list of best people to showcase the fragility of the male ego.

 

Apparently, Bella is living an I-It relationship with all the men in her life. Godwin Baxter literally manipulated her with his Frankensteinesque (I don’t know if this is a term, but I love how it sounds) idea. Max McCandless loves Bella only after studying her and after following the orders of Godwin. Alfie claims her back as if she is a property at his own disposal, then goes to the lengths of binding her to ACTUALLY remove her clitoris as he says it “my life is dedicated to the taking of the territory” and to which she responds, “I am not your territory.” Also, isn’t he technically remarrying his daughter? Yikes.

 

Before continuing this essay, I would like to say that being a male person commenting and making a self-imposed review on this movie and agreeing that it might be true can be quite appalling. But to get it out the way; before even I get to my point, this allowed me to acknowledge that my viewpoints may have been shaped by patriarchal norms and biases, and it prompts me to actively seek to understand and empathize with the experiences of women and marginalized genders. To quote Cory Aragon: “Male Feminists find themselves in the weird position of opposing entrenched patriarchal gender hierarchies while effectively reinforcing them.” I would like to preempt as well that I teach ethics and one of the lectures I deliver during the Final term is feminism as an ethical perspective. This movie will now be sort of an additional requirement to create perspective in the intersectionality of this timely topic. To genuinely ask the students (especially the males) what they think.

Okay, so now that is in the way, I shall now really think what the movie is telling us, the viewers.

Our understanding of the world because of our sense-experiences and this notion that people can be objects stemmed from our own entitled views of power. To quote Palazzo Fedrigotti:

“Objectification represents a powerful and potentially damaging way in which we can see and treat others. When people become tools, instruments, or objects of our appreciation they can lose out on their humanity, inner mental life, and sometimes even moral standing. This objectification can have a sexual element - sexualized women and men become objects of our sexual attention. However, objectification goes beyond the sexual sphere; it can be the worker or the boss, the patient or the practitioner who becomes the object. Objectification - reducing a someone to a something - can occur in any human relationship.”

Nicolai Hartmann (1882-195), a German Philosopher and Metaphysician tries to tell us that in the layers of existence in this world, only humans can achieve the highest level, which is the mental layer of existence. Other layers are conscious (higher animals can achieve this), live (plants belong into this layer), and lastly, physical (where objects belong).

Bella, in the beginning of the movie, is seen as a baby inside a grown woman. Her mental capacities are obviously low (I also managed to laugh at Max’s comment of her being a pretty retard) and that she is an actual child being developed with an environment that is not typical (because of the bizarre setup of God) This presupposes that this pretty retard is still in the process of developing the layer of existence from a conscious being to a mental being.

In contrast to the treatment of Duncan, he treats her as a physical being, to feed and satisfy his egoistic and sexual desires. Bella was made to believe that she indeed is an object to be set free, to explore the world and be an enjoyer of furious jumping—a clever term she uses as a substitute for the word sex. As we are hooked by the story, the juxtaposition of the colorful world and the dark undertones of its dialogues and scenes dramatically lifts off as the movie progresses. The isolated sounds are also adding flavor and emotional weight to the entirety of the story and its scenes.

Bella later finds out that the act of selling sex is a thing in the world (to which infuriates Duncan) and prior this, allows her to meet other friends in a ship to talk about philosophical perspectives and life in general. (more on this later)

Swiney, the head of the brothel delivers some of the most interesting and poignant lines in the movie that explores the impact of the line of work Bella was about to enter. When asked what the purpose of this endeavor is, she says: “We must work. We must make money. But more than that Bella, we must experience everything. Not just the good, but degradation, horror, sadness. This makes us whole Bella, makes us people of substance. Not flighty, untouched children. Then we can know the world. And when we know the world, the world is ours.”  

And when confronted with the idealist statements Bella tries to advocate for, she also replies with the statement: You are an idealist. Like me. How delightful you are. But we must give in to the demands of the world sometimes. Grapple with it. Try to defeat it. To which Bella replies: so, you believe as me? And she immediately replies with the statement, that perfectly encapsulates the misogynistic reality: “some men enjoy that you do not like it… [it is] sick but good business.” What I hate about the film is that they could’ve used this moment to dive deeper into this aspect to empower these women. To quote YouTube commenter Ashley Bird: “The concept of being forced to have sex with men she doesn’t want to is not explored at all… in the end, her experience is framed as liberating and positive, and having sex with someone she doesn’t want to is a mere bump in the road.”

But I guess to its merit, again, to quote Karsten Runquist: “without it being preachy, the film examines sexual liberation in a pretty empowering way—exploring the nuance of topics like sex work [in a way I’m surprised to see out of a big movie]”

Now, to fully become aware of the problem is to recognize the impact it makes towards the audience. As an average reasonable person, I would automatically think that this is already the status quo even in the fictionalized Victorian era time-period it portrays. Tolerance used as a beacon for the norm to stay the same is clearly weaponized by men but also taken back by the women in their line of work. A form of victorious claim, to say the least. Bella understands this, yet the most baffling issue, as Ganymedia would say in her Video Essay entitled Poor Things: feminist or degrading? “… the film does also raise really unsettling questions about consent that it potentially doesn’t explore critically enough.” The casual furious jumpings on the end of Bella makes her a victim of her own narrative. She is a child that does not know the idea of consent, more so its implications when not given, and yet the viewers are made to believe that she indeed emerged victoriously towards the end.

 

The Polite Society Narrative and use of Philosophical Thoughts:

            What constitutes a polite society? I had similar line of questioning when I teach ethics in my class. Most of the answers of my students would either be a discussion on socially acceptable norms and people conforming to it, then they would claim that if someone violates these said rules, they must pay for the consequences. In a typical sense, of course.

            In the movie, Duncan tells Bella that he doesn’t care for a polite society because it was “f**king boring. This line was callback to the apple insertion scene of Bella finding pleasure in self-touching. To which Max tries to stop Bella because the polite society may not accept such acts.

Harry backs this up during a conversation with Bella by saying: “Do not accept the lie of religion, socialism, capitalism, we are a fucked species. Hope is smashable. Realism is not. Protect yourself with the truth.” Harry is another sad boy person, I presume. Well, as Bella presumes as well, because she replies that Harry is just a broken little boy who cannot bear the pain of the world. His lines also encapsulate an old-age nihilistic viewpoint. He even retorts that “this improvement through philosophy is people trying to run away from the fact that we are all cruel beasts. Born that way. Die that way.”

Erich Fromm (1900-1980) a German American psychologist and philosopher, has a famous quote that goes “Man is born as a freak of nature.” In his book "The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness" and other works, Fromm argued that humans possess a remarkable capacity for both creativity and destructiveness. Just like how the film is portrayed as creative and destructive. This is emphasized in the brilliant cinematographic style of the strategic changing of lenses throughout the whole movie, its score, and just the gorgeous set design and the characters’ costume juxtaposed with its dark scenes and lines.

Fromm further believed that humans are born with an inherent potential for freedom, rationality, and creativity, but they also have the capacity for destructiveness, aggression, and violence. By calling humans "a freak of nature," Fromm was pointing out that humans stand out in the natural world due to their complex psychological and social attributes. Unlike other animals, humans have developed sophisticated cultures, languages, technologies, and social structures. This is the reason why Bella was also so intrigued by the essence of Duncan in the beginning. Well, she was a child. However, this unique position by Fromm also brings with it certain challenges, such as the potential for alienation, anxiety, and destructive behavior. Beasts, as Harry Astley would argue. Bella’s response was also nihilistic but more on the optimistic side. In a sense that, she was utterly confused with the new wisdom given to her, she hated it but also wanted to know more about it.

In fact, when she was “shown” the real-world problems being exposed to the dying babies, Harry’s absolute nihilism kicks in. Creating this idea of a loop, or a cycle or the world that there is nothing else people can do but to wing it in living a polite society. It’s a situation of them vs. us. Bella of course steals Duncan’s money to give it to the poor and dying people. Her act of hopelessness or desperation is a manifestation of her purity and naivety. Developing a sense of empathy that she clearly only realizes when faced with the actuality of the world and its problems that seem to be impossible to be solved. Cue Paramore’s “Ain’t it Fun? Living in the real world!”

On the philosophy aspect. Bella actually journeyed towards the different philosophical schools of thought in the entirety of this movie, from a tabula rasa (a literal child-brained person) who gains rationality (experiencing anarchism with her tantrums and chaotic self-exploration, not only of the psychosexual but also psychosocial) then she explores hedonism (pleasure philosophy)and dismantles the idea of the soul as she then tries to traverse nihilism (with her boat ride) and finally towards realism. (shoutout to jasons5916 of a random YouTube comment from the video of Lucas Blue’s Analysis of the movie) Bella is our Optimistic Nihilist Queen!

 

 

            But in the end, did Bella really find her purpose? Technically yes because she became a doctor. But it also does not sit with me right that she became a doctor in the fashion that Godwin was a doctor. She became a doctor who also manipulates people, quite literally. Carving with compassion and what not. As Godwin would say: “My father once told me, always carve with compassion, he was a f**king idiot, but not a bad advice.” Did Bella take the same advice unironically? Or was it something else?

 

The Perception of love, lust, and everything in between:

            One of the songs I love in the entire Panic! At the Disco’s Discography is this song called “But it’s Better if you do” This song is about a man who goes to a strip club to help him get over a girl. While there, he realizes that this isn't what he wants, and what he really wants is the girl:

"Well, I may have faked it, and I wouldn't be caught dead in this place." He recognizes that the girl is playing hard-to-get.

"Isn't this exactly where you’d like me... praying for love in a lap dance—and paying in naivety” and doesn't like it. 

            The sexual liberation that Bella experiences in the movie is also a good foreshadowing on what comes after. Duncan went literally crazy after finding out what Bella did. But Duncan is aware of what he did to her! Which is to liberate her and make her understand the value of furious jumping in the lens Bella sees or saw after. He even told her that “gosh, you look pretty, how it agrees it with you to be ravaged!” I just kept imagining that the burlesque scenes from the movie is the perfect metaphor for the song But It’s Better If You Do, and it was Duncan who was singing this as a persona of a manipulative sad boy.

            Bella asks: does the whoring thing challenge the desire for ownership that men have? I believe this was addressed to Max in the latter scenes of the movie. Which also now encapsulates the entire existence of her being able to manipulate other men as well. Even in its weird and submissive undertones, I would like to believe that Bella fully recognizes the point of why she was doing all those things, because the movie is not critiquing that women feel most sexually liberated through sex work, but it tries to see or questions the origins of such idea.

Take for example the case of Grace Quek aka Annabel Chong, the star of the porn movie “World’s Biggest Gangbang.” For me, this story has the same effect to how the movie explores sexual liberation. Mark Dacela on his research entitled Sexuality, power, and gangbang: A Foucauldian analysis of Annabel Chong's dissent.”

Chong claims in subsequent interviews that more than anything else, she did it to challenge the stereotypical notion that female sexuality is passive—that women like to be “seduced, kissed and cuddled, and [are] basically biologically monogamous”. She quips that “if a guy did 251 women in one day . . . everyone would think he’s a real stud”; But if a girl does the same “she’s considered a terrible slut.”

Dacela on his research further asks:

Is Annabel Chong the quintessential feminist, defying an oppressive system, asserting her individuality, redefining the parameters of a gender-determined sexuality? Or is she a victim of her own misguided ideals, objectifying herself in the belief that this affirms her subjectivity, submitting herself to domination to reclaim control, eventually propagating the same oppressive system she professes to end?

            Recently, a Filipina named Salome Salvi (I’m not really sure if this is an alias or her actual name) was interviewed by Toni Gonzaga via her self-titled talk show in YouTube. And the entire interview was also hinting on this idea of why there needs to be sexual liberation to be used as a form of validation (not entirely from men) but from society in general. (this is my personal opinion, I might be wrong) Opinions from this interview were polarized, but of course, in a conservative Catholic country, she is more despised rather than uplifted by the society.  

            Which now goes to show that even if women prostitute themselves as a form of sexual liberation, most men in general would STILL see this as an invitation of fulfilling fetishes and perverse desires.

            And then goes the idea of love. Alfie, the weeping widower who suddenly had hope because he saw that his dead wife has come to life is the final arbiter of the movie for Bella’s decisions. But take note that she is now fully developed at this stage and has already acquired the truth to her existence. She asks God: “is it hard to be in the position where one wants to hit someone who is already in obvious pain?” and that was such an expressive line for me.

            There was also this dinner scene where Alfie and Bella converse on a table where they are far from each other. Alfie suggests: “marriage is a constant challenge, some we bend to, some we bend to us” and delivers something somewhere “If one must drown, let it be in the river of love!” Bella further asks Alfie: “so, am I a prisoner?” I think this entire scene before the finale of the movie speaks to us about these faux feelings that we have when it comes to love. The way we put people into pedestals and the way we act towards our feelings and how we portray them to people who we trust and love.

            A good example can also be seen in the creation of Felicity as a substitute for Bella. This also means, the way I interpret it at least, that one cannot simply create a version of a person to be passed on to another, because our uniqueness can never be replicated. I mean, Alfie was no longer remarrying the same Victoria, that as Bella, he was remarrying his own daughter (quite disturbing, I know) It is unfair to see a person from another person just because there are similarities, or just because you can recreate the elements of how you view a person to pass it to another. I don’t know if this makes sense, I hope it does.

            The question remains. Was Bella really liberated at the end of the movie? Or was she still in the same bubble, only put into a pedestal? What are your thoughts?