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Left Behind
By Andrew Tracy
Syriana
Dir. Stephen Gaghan, U.S., Warner Bros.
I sometimes
wonder if we’re all seeing the same movies.
Frequent, violent and bloody disagreement
may be our stock in trade, but willful misrepresentation
is something else entirely. While Armond
White may not be a measuring stick for any
degree of critical scrupulousness, his fanatical
hagiographizing of Spielberg’s Munich
and vitriolic dismissal of Michael Haneke’s
Caché—the latter a truly astonishing
display of critical dishonesty—depicts in
an extreme form the culture war currently
being fought within the informed critical
establishment: a war, essentially, over
what form of political cinema we’re going
to champion post-Fahrenheit 9/11,
which sent the self-beleaguered left field
of the critical contingent scrambling.
While some may not quite agree with Joe
Dante in Cinema Scope that Moore’s
film is a “beacon of truth,” he incisively
notes the fallout from its “success”: “[Moore’s]
last picture made a lot of money, but he
was vilified for it so much that he’s practically
in hiding. The right wing has marginalized
him to the point where his movie has been
completely discredited in America.” It’s
hardly just the right that’s responsible
for that marginalization, however. It’s
a fallacy unique, I think, to us critics
on the other side of the fence that when
it comes to political films, we’re so afraid
of getting behind potential white elephants
that we go hunting for white whales instead,
for the pure, unassailable, and total. It’s
what has led many smart folks to trumpet
Munich’s vagaries as some kind of
profound universalism, while dismissing
the specifics of Stephen Gaghan’s Syriana
as trifling.
In the latter case, the predictably ecstatic
and predictably unenlightening response
of great swathes of middlebrow critics to
Gaghan’s film produced a predictably sneering
reaction among us “young turks” and our
elder statesmen, and it’s the bloody predictability
of it all that I found most depressing:
a sign, I think, of laziness in both camps,
and a stubborn determination among the defiant
younger crowd to avoid the deadening company
of the Eberts, Schickels, and Denbys. But
as Arthur Koestler said, in rather more
fraught circumstances, “You can’t help people
being right for the wrong reasons. . . This
fear of finding oneself in bad company is
not an expression of political purity, it
is an expression of a lack of self-confidence.”
This is not to say that there may not be
critics who genuinely disliked Syriana,
and that they may have eminently good reasons
for doing so. It’s only that I’ve yet to
see any such appraisal that doesn’t seem
to be addressed to the film’s prospective
supporters rather than the film itself.
Most are simply content to point out the
film’s transparency and leave it at that,
as if clarity of purpose and presentation
was an aesthetic sin and a political dead-end.
Perhaps it’s the formalist predilections
of so many in our ranks that wire us against
a film so resolutely—and appropriately—of
the surface. Many of us are happier unpacking
genuine allegories like Land of the Dead
or sham ones like War of the Worlds
than simply following the dots of an explicitly
political film—or, in the disparaging language
which gets trotted out for these occasions,
a “thesis exercise.”
Why must that term be so implicitly damning,
though? When did a thesis become synonymous
with an untruth? As the French theoretician
Henri Lefebvre put it, “the political in
its oldest meaning [is] the theoretical
and practical knowledge of social life in
the community.” The political is theory
and action conjoined, and considering that
Syriana is almost all action—links,
connections, things being done rather
than just being—it’s telling that the bulk
of both the praise and condemnation has
fallen upon its few “theoretical” tentpoles:
Tim Blake Nelson’s “corruption is why we
win” speech, Matt Damon’s audience-baiting
rant to Alexander Siddig’s Prince Nasir,
Christopher Plummer’s diabolically silky
quotables. These varyingly regrettable moments—which,
hardly coincidentally, are also the ones
that turn up most often in the advertisements—give
both sides something to grab onto: the Message
for the middlebrows, and the (smug/paranoid/partisan/vacuous/complacent)
falsity of that message for the high. Yet
it’s the numerous points in-between which
constitute not only the film’s real content,
but the weight of its political being, and
it’s these very points which have gone largely
unremarked upon. Resentful that the film
is connecting the dots for us, we forget
that it’s the connections rather than the
dots which are important. In refuting the
viability of the film’s “positions,” the
majority of critical comment upon Syriana
has passed the film through the filter of
its own various positions, ruthlessly distorting
it in the process.
Of course, I have a position to put forth
myself: namely, that I like Syriana
just fine and think that it positively contributes
to a discussion of the pressing matters
it depicts. I don’t have the presumption
to claim that I alone have seen Syriana
without passing it through some “bullshit
ideological filter,” or that many of what
I see as the film’s virtues may not double
as flaws in another’s perspective, or that
we should merely be grateful for any “major”
movie that is About Something. But I do
believe that the pre-emptive cynicism which
so many critics evidently brought to the
film is more a guaranty against being possibly
caught out by compromise—after all, any
Hollywood movie pretending to political
import must be compromised, no?—than
any kind of honest reaction to the film
itself. “[Syriana] does just what
the multinational global crooks and their
right-wing political allies would have it
do—underscore the lay observer's sense of
bafflement and powerlessness,” says Laura
Sinagra in the Village Voice Take
7 poll, incidentally utilizing the very
generalizations for which the movie has
been undeservedly taken to task. And while
she may be right, such a reading can only
be gleaned by paying attention to and engaging
in discussion with what the film so acutely
depicts.
After all, if we reject out of hand a film
which directly addresses a determining reality
in our world while generating endless babble
about those which hide their “politics”
behind a better or worse aesthetic smokescreen,
aren’t we doing the other side’s work for
them just as well? If we pay more attention
to Hayden Christiansen’s “If you’re not
with me, etc.” line in that piece-of-shit
sci-fi flick than to a film that tries to
show how our world works, aren’t
we just lazily surfing the zeitgeist
and ignoring what goes on in the zeit itself?
Even while smacking the film down, Noel
Murray in the Voice cuts closer to
the heart of the matter: “As public opinion
about the war in Iraq began turning, critics
started seeing anti-war commentary in everything
from A History of Violence to Star
Wars. . . At this point, even the blunt
policy wonkery of Syriana is preferable
to another political shadow-play. Sometimes
subtlety is overrated.”
So here’s just a few of the wholly unsubtle
details sliding across Syriana’s depthless
surface, in riposte to some of the distorting
charges made against it. To wit:
The film is an exercise in onanistic,
self-congratulatory liberalism. The
most common, and lazy, of the reactions
to Syriana, given at least an eloquent phrasing
by Walter Chaw at Film Freak Central. A
few different lines of inquiry emerge from
here. Firstly, what do we mean when we speak
of “liberalism” in this context? Since it’s
certainly not a question of film aesthetics—Stanley
Kramer, after all, was as stodgily conservative
a stylist as they come—it must therefore
be a certain set of values expressed implicitly
or explicitly, but unmistakably, within
the film. As for “onanistic” and “self-congratulatory,”
the question here is of the tone in which
those values are imparted and the relative
substance they carry—thus the terms would
suggest, to my mind, cant shorn of determination,
airy pronouncements bereft of specificity,
and a final opting out of passing judgment
on the very subjects it had presumed to
criticize.
Where do we find any of this in Syriana?
If there is certainly a moral onus hovering
above its identification and observation
of the mechanisms of global power, it cannot
be reduced to mere partisanship and self-vindication.
If anything, the film is exemplary for giving
us no safe place to lay our righteous heads.
Clooney’s CIA agent may speak hard truths
about Iranian repression, but, contra Syriana
supporter David Denby’s blinkered observation,
he’s no “nobly burdened figure”: he’s a
kidnapper, a murderer, and, in his dramatic
and unexplained final action, remarkably
ineffectual (nor is his ineffectualness
celebrated as martyrdom). Damon’s Innocent
Abroad is given no points for his naiveté
and cluelessness, nor is his return to wifey
and remaining kiddie painted as some kind
of redemption; Jeffrey Wright’s buttoned-down
attorney is a pivot with a few tricks up
his sleeve; Siddig’s heir apparent may want
to introduce free elections and female emancipation
to his country, but his laudable initiatives
are tied up with his hard-nosed business
acumen (selling oil to the Chinese rather
than the Americans, after all, is no great
leap in moral alliance). Syriana
is about functions, not values—or values
only to the extent of their functions.
If the charge does not, then, reside with
anything in the film itself, then it is
more a swipe against rich, white movie stars
with well-known political affiliations acting
in a film which they no doubt thought was
Important. This is tabloidism, not criticism,
and thus singularly unhelpful.
The film is a conspiratorial fantasy
for a lazy left who ascribe all the evils
of the world to corporate bogeymen.
Don’t know about anyone else, but I see
nothing fantastical in positing collusion
between big business, the intelligence community,
and departments of government; simply keeping
up with the news and reading a bit of history
is enough, one would hope, to testify to
that basic reality. In any event, Syriana
is not about master plots, but alignments
of interest. While kingpin figures abound
(Plummer’s “cat’s paw,” Chris Cooper’s volatile
oilman, Clooney’s boss at CIA headquarters),
not every one of them knows precisely the
details about what everybody else is doing.
Conspiracy is about connections made, not
a single radiating point of origin. When
a Texas oilmen’s dinner is intercut with
a CIA assassination in the Middle East,
the film is not simply saying that this
equals that; rather, it has shown
that the one is connected to the
other through numerous channels of coordinated
and uncoordinated actions. So a conspiracy,
yes, but not in any fantastic sense. Unless,
that is, we share the view of self-professed
“liberal” (how little these labels matter)
Richard Cohen in the Washington Post,
who scoffs at the notion that the CIA would
assassinate “a perfectly nice Middle Eastern
potentate to ensure that his oil remains
in friendly hands. This sort of thing is
distinctly against the law, a true career-ender
at the CIA and elsewhere, but never mind.
A movie does not have to stick to the facts.”
Though it seems that a columnist can cling
to ignorance like a life preserver.
The film gives the illusion of insider
knowledge to first impress us with our ignorance,
then convince us that we have been duly
wised up. From Jonathan Rosenbaum at
the Slate Movie Club, alluding to the film’s
air of authenticity and essentially agreeing
with Sinagra that the film is appealing
to and validating our complacency. This
may have validity if the film tried to mystify
its portrait of professionalism, to play
on the sensual thrill of powerlessness in
the face of the secret, “true” world of
expertise. I’d contend, though, that the
sometimes bewildering speed with which Gaghan
has his characters display their professional
erudition is not intended to impress us
with their possession of that knowledge,
but rather focus us upon what they do with
it, and the consequences thereof: Wright’s
neat betrayal of his professional pater,
Damon linking his economic know-how to an
attempted coup, Clooney turning his spook
tactics against his masters. There’s no
shadow-world Le Carré romanticism here;
it’s the fact that everything is so out
in the open that makes Syriana feel
convincing, and that connects it to what
we can read about in those news media which
deign to report on such matters.
All right, then: if we concede that the
movie does present some measure of fact,
it does so, in Sinagra’s words, “at the
expense of any real education.” It’s luxurious
despair rather than a call to arms, a confirmation
of political impotence rather than a spur
to political action. This is the most
contentious point in the debate, I believe,
and the one most dependent upon the eye
of the particular beholder. But I’d offer
that my reasons for supporting Syriana,
and any points I may have hopefully scored
in its favour, are because it has not impressed
me as a paean to powerlessness, but an aid
to clarity. Lucidity is not the same as
pessimism, in Bresson’s formulation—and
please, no scoffing accusations that I’m
affixing Gaghan to those starry climes.
Perhaps the film’s brusqueness, speed and
efficiency appeal to me because it ties
in to an idea I favour that movies—even
$50 million Hollywood movies—can sometimes
act as missives rather than masterpieces,
can forego their own aesthetic completion
in order to impart at least some degree
of information about the wider world. As
a film that, by way of its very design,
points resolutely away from itself, Syrianacannot
exist without the talk around it, but fer
chrissakes, let’s talkabout it—about
specifically why its strategies succeed
or fail, about why it’s accurate or misleading,
about whether it’s truly political or merely
dressed up in political trappings—and avoid
the vacuous generalizations of the middlebrows
or the contemptuous dismissals of our more
skeptical breed.
So, in light of one more perceived debit—that
the film merely presents ideas instead of
dramatizing them, that it’s more or less
aesthetically null—a consideration of some
of the cinematic virtues existing apart
from the talk the film seeks to generate—
indeed, those things without which it would
not be worth talking about at all. The young
Pakistani immigrant worker’s path to religious
fundamentalism through those milieus with
which any teenager in any country would
be familiar: drinking with his buddies in
the field, playing soccer, watching videos.
The portrayal of Clooney’s torturer as a
thoroughly Westernized Arab who angrily
insists on the use of his Muslim name, one
small twist of character which globalizes
rather than regionalizes the conflict at
hand. Gaghan’s keen eye for setting and
the human presence within it, seeking neither
to seduce us with the decadent luxury of
the Arab princes nor flatter our consciences
with the immigrant workers’ cramped quarters
(indistinguishable from the genuine shanties
on view in Michael Glawogger’s superlative
documentary Workingman’s Death).
The efficient and effective shorthand (which
is not the same as sketchiness) of character
and scene, which intimate unrevealed depths
while demonstrating how those depths are
subordinated to the relentlessly moving
chain of events.
Perhaps this is what I find most refreshing
about Syriana, why I think it is
far from pessimistic: it shows clearly and
forcefully that a lot of frantic activity
is required to create what we think of,
in our darker hours, as the inevitable.
If Syriana is a systemic narrative
rather than a dramatic one, it affords us
a closely observed and entirely plausible
glimpse of the loose, unstable, and improvisatory
ways that system may work—and that, flaws
aside, is certainly cause for discussion.
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