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All
That Heaven Allows You to Eat
Suzanne Scott on Defending Your Life
Limbo. The very word
has such a delicious ambiguity, such limitless imaginary
potential, that it seems to transcend all denominational
boundaries, blurs the polar absolutes of heaven and
hell. Films that focus on the way station between life
and death tend to embody the ethos of another dead guy:
it’s the journey, not the destination, that ultimately
matters. The pleasure is in the process, and there is
no more euphoric or enlightening depiction of afterlife
logistics and heavenly bureaucracy than Albert Brooks’s
1991 rumination Defending Your Life. Brooks,
in his tale of underachieving yuppie Daniel Miller’s
fatal encounter with Los Angeles mass transit and the
resulting examination of his existence, creates a truly
postmodern afterlife, paved in concrete rather than
clouds. Religion, spirituality, these intangible concepts
are all null and void, replaced with a system of Orwellian
surveillance operating alongside a mutated version of
Warhol’s theory that we will all be granted our 15 minutes,
here with possibly damning results. In a nod to the
materiality that has supplanted spirituality in our
culture, Brooks contends that we are all prey to the
great camcorder in the sky, convicted to eternal reincarnation
based on the panoptic quality of Big Brother’s home
movies as we each are put through a trial where moments
in our lives are replayed and analyzed.
Fittingly, the moments we see in Daniel’s life as “evidence” in his trial (or “examining period,” as his lawyer so diplomatically puts it) are as banal as they are life-altering. We don’t witness his first steps, or his graduation from college, or his wedding, or any other of the events typically considered momentous in their ability to mold us into our true selves, we witness Daniel cowing to a schoolyard bully, or suffering a bout of stage fright before an important presentation, each just a moment among many others, deemed a turning point only retrospectively. The assumption Brooks operates under is not that lives follow a linear trajectory from decision to decision, cause to effect, but rather that we are a product of a collection of all moments and memories at once. The reflexivity of Daniel’s trial, his visible discomfort in the cinematic retelling of his past (prompting curiosity as to why the omnipotent documentarian in question chooses to shoot everyone’s life with a Lifetime movie of the week aesthetic), is seemingly grounded in the nature of selective memory. The moments chosen as evidence are not worthy of home movie footage, they aren’t performative in the least. Rather, Brooks’s emphasis on the minute detail of daily existence, those we are most likely to forget but that form us nonetheless, supercedes the surreal nature of his story’s locale.
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Likewise, Daniel’s first
encounter with Julia (Meryl Streep) is fittingly mundane,
their subsequent interactions comprised of getting-to-know-you
banter and slightly awkward goodnight pauses that seem
all too familiar without veering into the “meet cute”
logistics of most romantic comedies. Perhaps that is
what makes the pair so refreshing, their instant love
affair so remarkably believable, the combination of
Brooks’s nebbish nervous nellie and Streep’s alluring
affable achiever seem somehow plausible. Perhaps it’s
the miracle of the caftans, and Thomas Moore was onto
something with his Utopian vision of ensemble uniformity
giving way to equality. Or perhaps it is simply situational.
In a space that exists somewhere between Earth and the
great beyond, love is a trial in and of itself. Limbo
is an ironic locale for love to flourish, as love has
everything to do with a lack of judgment.
But, speaking of judgment, back to that pesky destination
for a moment... “This reminds me of Disneyland,” Julia
remarks of Judgment City, with its color-coded trams
and strategically designed “familiarity,” and Disneyland
is precisely Brooks’s model for his vision of this layover
to the hereafter. This reference to “the happiest place
on earth” is as fitting as it is disturbing, as the
whole of Judgment City seems to thrive on watered-down,
socially encouraged sin despite its artifice of pleasantry.
To quickly run the list: Gluttony (the orgy of consumption
in this “all you can eat” buffet in the sky), Greed
(the town is overrun with lawyers, even if they are
pro bono), Pride (Daniel’s constant fretting over h-oLady
and the Tramps ), Envy (“I” ), Wrath (Daniel’s simmering
annoyance with his legal proceedings), Lust (Julia’s
open invitation to Daniel, which he hasn’t the courage
to fulfill), and Sloth (Daniel’s palpable jealousy over
Julia’s Backdraft-worthy rescue of her family
from a burning building functions as an indictment of
his own ineptitude). Sure, the murder rate is nonexistent,
but Judgment City still functions as a geriatric Pleasure
Island, where diversions abound (comedy clubs, dancing,
horseback riding, and on and on, all touted by billboards
and incessant television advertisements) all in the
hopes of making death a little more enjoyable.
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But even here, in the
land where everyone is equally dead and the perks extend
to all, there exists a hotel hierarchy, and the difference
between what types of chocolates are left on your pillow
every night could mean the difference between going
on and going back to square one. “You’re very concerned
with ‘normal,’ aren’t you? It’s cute,” Daniel’s bemused
defense attorney (boisterously embodied by Rip Torn)
remarks early in their meeting. It is a throwaway line,
especially in an environment that we are repeatedly
informed has been constructed to seem as “normal” to
its temporary denizens as possible, but it crops up
again and again, the middle-class American struggle
for the status quo. From the smallest of gestures (Daniel
fishing absently in his robe for a tip from the hotel
bellboy) to the film’s more whimsical touches (the Past
Lives Pavilion, which provokes horror-induced hilarity
from most everyone who visits it in the hopes of a star-studded
past and is shown less than stellar incarnations of
their reincarnated selves), Brooks concurrently satirizes
our all-encompassing preoccupation with conformity as
he reinforces its importance through Daniel’s obsession
with averageness.
We’re told that the point of this whole thing, the life
we live, is to keep getting smarter, to reason away
the fears that threaten to wield their control over
us. And what a message, to be steeped in such blissful
absurdity, to be sandwiched into what is ostensibly
a love story, in which Daniel must learn to love himself
before he can truly love another. Love, cannot be rationalized,
nor is it convenient: as Daniel sardonically notes,
“Where do we find it? In the pit stop. Thanks, God!”
And, in this place of judgement, love is its own lapsed
religion, it feeds off of faith rather than rational
thought. The running gag that all the “little brains”
dwelling on Earth are utilizing less than three percent
of their brain capacity seems somewhat poignant in this
regard. While intellect is held above all else in Judgment
City, love is what ultimately saves Daniel, passion
free from reason and ultimately free from fear.
Like Hirokazu Koreeda’s 1998 film After Life,
another sterling example in the same thematic and situational
vein, Defending Your Life is a film that prompts
self-assessment from its deft play with questions of
consequence. While After Life depicts a “middle
point” in which the recently deceased are asked to select,
film a re-enactment, and be ultimately reabsorbed into
their happiest memory, Brooks proactively elicits an
examination of the memories we are each currently making,
ultimately encouraging each of us to leap along with
Daniel towards what we may not rationally allow ourselves
to desire and create our happiest memories in the process.
A blistering comedy as insightful as it is gut busting?
You bet your life.
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