In a yoga class this week, I asked my
teacher about how to perform a movement which involves “sucking in” the abdomen
without letting the chest rise (uddiyana
bhanda, for the yogis). Should I think of this movement as pulling the
abdominal muscles upwards within the body, or straight back toward the spine?
He replied that I shouldn’t think about it at all. He warned against trying to
understand everything through analyzing it (he’s read some of this blog and
picked up that this might be my habitual way of doing things).
Instead, he advised me simply to watch how
he does it and try to emulate his example. Eventually, I will “get it” and it
will be clear when this happens. He used the image of a candle bursting into
flame due to its proximity to another lit candle to describe this process of
learning. He asked if I was happy with this answer. I said yes, but even I
could hear that I didn’t sound overjoyed. Being told to stop thinking didn’t
really thrill me.
However, the idea that some kinds of
knowledge, possibly the most important ones, cannot be acquired by intellectual
analysis or even by cultivating artistic skill, came up again when I went to
see Michael Haneke’s latest film, Amour.
The central topic of Amour is how we deal with the deteriorating health and eventual death
of aging loved ones. The film touches on issues raised by the availability of
medical care (in privileged Western countries) that can keep people alive long
beyond the point where they would have died without it, but can also mean that
the quality of life in the last months may be very low, and caring for the
not-yet-dying is a very demanding, even heart-breaking task. Is it love that leads
us to keep people alive as long as possible, or is it a combination of
confusion and selfish attachment? Or is human love so mixed up with these less
desirable qualities that the judgments implied in this way of framing the
problem are unhelpful?
Haneke’s film tells the story of an elderly
married couple (the actors who play them, Emmannuelle Riva and Jean-Louis Trintignant, are both in their
80s). Anne has been a successful piano teacher. In the course of the film, she suffer
a stroke, undergoes unsuccessful surgery which leaves her half-paralysed, and
then suffers a second, more serious stroke. Georges, her stoic and affectionate
husband, honours Anne’s wish to remain at home after the surgery, and
heroically takes on the challenge of caring for her as she becomes increasingly
incapacitated, both physically and mentally.
Apart from one scene at the beginning (an
audience shot which provides us with a rough mirror image of ourselves as
viewers – implying that we are involved in this story), the whole film is shot
in the apartment where Georges and Anne live. This enclosed space, with its
empty entrance hall and doors leading to a nest of different rooms, powerfully
evokes the claustrophobic, subdued intensity of the emotional situation that
unfolds as Anne’s condition deteriorates. Although Georges is devotedly
determined to carry out Anne’s wish not to be institutionalized at the end of
her life, when she expresses the more final wish to be released from her
increasingly painful situation by dying, he reacts violently.
Michael Haneke |
Georges’ confusion in the face of Anne’s
desire to die and the great difficulty he shows in accepting the grief of her
loss are sympathetically portrayed, and are balanced by the moving tenderness
he shows towards his wife. Haneke does not lead us to judge Georges harshly,
but nor does he spare us a sense of horror at the fear, helplessness and
violence that surface in the lives of this cultured and contented couple as the
inevitability of death approaches, like bones breaking through soft skin.
The empty entrance hall of the apartment in
this film reminded me of the empty upper room in the apartment of another
Georges and Anne in Haneke’s earlier film, Hidden.
In both films, the empty, central space can be read as a metaphor for the
absence of god, or of any clear source of spiritual or moral wisdom in a
society that is wealthy in so many other ways: not just materially, but also in
terms of artistic culture and scientific knowledge.
In this film, it might also be taken to
signify the absence of robust resources of love and connection to draw upon
when facing death and grief. A sense of emotional brittleness is particularly
palpable in the scenes between Georges and his daughter, who attempts, but
largely fails, to make any meaningful connection with her parents during her
mother’s decline.
Isabelle Hupert and Jean-Louis Tringigant in Amour |
Science can tell us how to keep people
alive longer, and give us tools to do so. Artistic culture provides a rich
language for expressing the subtleties of human experience (music and paintings
are an important part of this film). But it seems that neither science nor art
can tell us when to accept the end of life, or how to do so with kindness. These
powerful forms of knowledge and expression cannot substitute for love.
If science and art are not enough, how then
can we learn to love? In the film, Georges’ encounters with a pigeon who flies
in and out of the apartment a couple of times seems to symbolize an intuitive,
if tentative, process of learning about loving in the form of catching, holding,
and letting go.
Clearly, this isn’t a process of
intellectual analysis.
I’d go so far as to say that Haneke’s film
suggests that love might be learnt simply by carefully observing, and waiting
for it to pass on like a flame, when the moment is ripe, from those who already
know how.
But who are the ones who already know how
to love? The optimism of this film, at least compared to Haneke’s earlier work,
lies in the suggestion that, in spite of all the disconnected and overly
intellectualised aspects of modern Western culture, the ones who already know at
least something of how to love might include types as common as pigeons – in
other words, us.
1 comment:
Justine- I hadn't seen this film before and saw it today. Very powerful and moving. I thought I definitely want to write something about this. So I did a little search to see what else was out there and found your piece! Great thoughts here. I agree that my sympathy for Georges remained strong throughout the whole film - which surprised me somewhat. I think there were clues about the outcomes earlier in the piece which prepared me. I am still processing the story and its telling. So I don't have much more to say except I like that you wanted to write about this also! x beck
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