Thursday, September 27, 2012

Thoughts on The Master




The Master is this year’s sexy film nerd movie. The film enjoys the distinction of having the illustrious trifecta: 1) an amazing cast boasting Joaquin Phoenix, Phillip Seymour-Hoffman, and Amy Adams; 2) meaty and contemporary subject matter telling the tale of the rise of a scientology-like religion; 3) a worthy director capable of thoughtfully realizing the off-kilter worlds of pornography, early 20th century oil tycoons, and frustrated novelty item salesman. Paul Thomas Anderson’s movies, though not as frequent as I selfishly hope, are consistent in terms of craft, introspection, and critical acclaim. A thread often touched upon is the structure of belief and power. These undefined pillars of life often intertwine especially in films like Magnolia and There Will be Blood, which both demonstrate the relationship between the two. In There Will Be Blood, Daniel Plainview’s contemptuous conflict with religion and faith eschews the tenderness and benevolence often associated with the church reducing it to a bastion of influence used to bargain with the townspeople and a method to curry favor for what he hopes to accomplish financially. In The Master, we’re given another view of that as the power of influence is portrayed in a more minute perspective.



As I continue to digest the film, I center upon the film’s insular perspective of belief and power. The film tells the story of a WWII veteran named Jeffrey Quell. The effect of the war is apparent as he struggles to reinsert himself into society; he lives his life to his detriment, drinking exhaustively, bedding random women, and attacking men at his job as a photographer. After presumably killing an elderly man with one of his improvised concoctions of moonshine, he finds himself figuratively at the doorstep of Lancaster Dodd. In Dodd, we find the perennial false prophet; he is the spiritual leader of his family and the author and discoverer of “The Cause,” a faith that claims that humans can absolve their imperfections and rise above the animals by keying into their past lives. Humans can recapture the perfection of humanity. Quell’s accidental acquaintance with this man turns into his seeming salvation as he is welcomed in to the family, travelling with them from city to city promoting/preaching the vague principles of The Cause to upper-middle class Anglos. They hope to cure their leukemia and access the secrets of their past lives as promised by Dodd himself.



Personally, the idea of indoctrination has always fascinated me. One of my favorite books is The Autobiography of Malcolm X. In the book, Malcolm X’s account of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad provides a clearing view of the political figure of Malcolm himself. Elijah Muhammad has the power to lead millions through the vessel of Malcolm X, exploiting his talent for oration and affective passion. Muhammad’s desire to spread his ideas was realized tenfold when he met Malcolm X. He turned him into a voracious ideologue for his cause that outwardly responded to what millions of African-Americans felt, a desire for dignity and retribution for the ills they had endured. But at its core, the movement was filled with hatred and hypocrisy. These types of men populate history. They provide the wish-fulfillment and deliver the needs of men and women missing something in their lives in exchange for allegiance to an idea and, at its most heinous, adoration. That adoration turns into loyalty for the vessel that delivers that fulfillment of the void.



Jeffery Quell’s interaction with The Cause and Lancaster Dodd surmises an alternate response to indoctrination; here, the protagonist struggles with his void-fulfiller. Phoenix’s Quell embodies the animal that Dodd so decries: he slants his body as if it is a chore to walk upright; he drapes himself over any woman with terse sexual advances; he drinks indiscriminately with little to no control, dousing fluids together leaving the audience unsure if he even knows what they are. So when Dodd makes the commitment to reform him, one thinks that he may be the one to bring some cause to his life.


This is a man without self-control, without regard for his life, and with no sense or desire for forward progression, only wayfaring aggression. Seemingly, Anderson wants us to hope that Dodd’s idealities of perfection, discipline, and knowledge can reform him. So when Quell defends Dodd’s rhetoric with such passion and violence, the notion that base men are easily susceptible to leaders with direction, wherever that leads. Intrinsically, we’re conditioned to follow even if the ideas that are perpetuated do not make sense: we respond to the confidence. However, it becomes increasingly clear as the film progresses that Quell is aware of the faultiness of Dodd’s belief system. His own son tells him that “he makes this stuff up as he goes along.” His shouting match with Dodd in the prison is quickly followed by his reconciliation in surface, but certainly not spiritually.

                                        
The Master works as a referendum on not only cult, but religion in general. Cults provide answers to people without them. For men who don’t know what they want, it is impossible to be all that they want. Quell never fully surrenders himself on all levels. He withdraws from his teachings and the family, retreating into his old ways of violence and the shimmering nostalgia of his pre-war life. When he finally leaves Dodd’s sphere of influence and engages in the same sex-obsessed behavior we saw at the beginning of the film. However the change he exhibits reveals an important notion of the film. His subtle change is recognized with his last sexual encounter at the end of the movies. He asks the woman questions about her life in a seemingly joking fashion much in the way Dodd interrogated him (a process called processing where one forces another answer truthfully to rapid fire questions under duress). As mockingly as it seems to play out, Quell’s attempt to construe this person as more than a sexual object and investigate her as a person shows a veritable accomplishment for a man who indiscriminately poured concoctions of liquor to dampen his perception of life. We see at the end a man who is at least willing to exercise more discretion with the people he lets close.



Considering that, the title, obviously pointing to the Dodd character as the leader of this faulty faith, can be read as Quell who asserts his reign over his destiny and that of others looking for solace from the questions of consciousness. Alternately, it can be read through the character of Quell who reaches a point, after a tremendously arduous experience (the pains of WWII) filled with death and destruction, where he can assert his own understanding and interrogation over the people in his life and thereby what it means as they are two connected notions. To broaden the argument, consciousness is populated with unanswerable questions like “what should I do with my life?,” “Should I be with this person?,” “Why is there so much pain in the world?,” and the one that scares all of us: “Why do I have to die?.” These unanswerable questions have plenty of people who believe they know the answer. As such, people flock, hoping for the answer and solace from the cosmic coldness of ignorance. To quote an Erykah Badu song, “the man that knows something, knows that he knows nothing at all.” Accepting the irony of believing someone who says that, I think that the truth of that statement undergirds what The Master says, at least to me. One should take what they can from these belief structures instead of wholly surrendering oneself to one as they cannot satisfy all of one’s questions about life. We are the master’s of our respective consciousnesses and conscripting ourselves blindly to men who promise answers in exchange for loyalty makes us slaves to blissful ignorance.

No comments:

Post a Comment