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to WESTERN PATRIOTIC FORUM
âInto the Wildâ is one of the better films of recent years, but itâs
not without considerable problems. Sean Penn is an able director and
has an eye for nice details but lacks a sure-footed personal vision or
style characteristic of the great âauteursâ. To be sure, personal
style can get in the way or overwhelm a particular subject or themeâ
impose the directorâs narcissistic willâ, and it is true that some
films have more to gain by less directorialism. Still, Penn was
shooting for personal filmmaking with âInto the Wildâ. Itâs not your
average flat-footed and earnest road movie/story of self-discovery.
Penn has employed the vast array of cinematic language to tell a story
of this guy who ventured into the wilderness to find his true inner
soul. The problem is these techniques generally donât amount to much
beyond art-film eye candy; as such, it may be higher quality eye-candy
than most but eye-candy nevertheless. There are breathtaking moments
in âInto the Wildâ, but they are momentary. We donât sense a sustained
directorial vision that pulls it altogether. In some ways, âInto the
Wildâ is comparable to âDances with Wolvesâ and âPassion of the
Christâ, also films made by actors-turned-directors. Perhaps, actors
have a different approach to directing. Most directors approach cinema
as something watched and choreographed whereas an actor-turned-
director may bring his acting mindset to filmmaking. An actor is
always the center of attention, he is watched than doing the watching.
This may explain why the eye-candy emphasis in the films made by all
these men.
Nevertheless, âInto the Wildâ is a pretty good film and some of the
images and the story left an impression on me. The story is
compelling enough, there are harrowing moments, and the road movie
aspect is enjoyable. Most of all, Penn should be lauded for having
approached this story from a psycho-biographical than from a socio-
political angle. The temptation would have been great in many a
liberal or leftist director to turn this story into an inspirational
tale of an idealistic young man searching for justice, truth, beauty,
and purity in a world corrupted and compromised by greed, deceit,
compromise, and whatnot. Though Pennâs sympathies are with the
rebelliousâand left-leaningâhero, âInto the Wildâ isâwittingly or
unwittinglyâa penetrating analysis and exposure of the left-
libertarian rebel mentality(or any radical departure from the norm).
We see the desperation alongside the heroism. We see the self-
deception within the search for âtruthâ.
Itâs often been said that the personal is political, but itâs also
true that political is personal. The emotions that fuel the youthful
heroâs quest or escape in the movie are largely familial and
personal. By temperament, heâs a contrarian who wants to do
everything differently. And, his family life, though economically
stable, has been lacking in the kind of warmth and trust essential to
happiness. Like most young people, heâs full of energy and not quite
capable of understanding his own soul. Intelligent and aggressive, he
looks and searches outward. Since heâs lived in the world of men all
his life, he figures all moral and social discontents are associated
with civilization. The only way to find truth is to take leave and
reconnect with nature. Or, at the very least, one must always be on
the move, not attached anchored to anything or anyone. In this
sense, this is a much more truthful film than âMotorcycle Diariesâ
which would have us believe that Che Guevaraâs enraged passions were
all about social injustice and American imperialism than his own ugly
hangups and megalomania.
In âInto the Wildââagain, whether Penn meant it or notâwe canât help
but see the megalomania at the core of Bill McCandlessâthe hero. He
obviously wants attention, recognition, and adulation as a special
kid, a wonderful kid, a brilliant kid, a courageous kid, etc, etc.
Problem is heâs not really That Special. Sure, heâs smarter than most
kids but no Einstein(in an Ivy League setting, his smarts would be
dime-a-dozen). He likes to do the odd or wild thing, like running to
the stage to receive his diploma. Been there, done that. Maybe in
the 50s or early 60s, that might have attracted attention, but in the
age of âGirls Gone Wildâ, thatâs Mr. Rogers crap. Heâs read a good
deal of books and romanticizes about some ideal life apart from
civilization, but the 60s generation has done that already. Indeed, he
meets a hippie couple who ride around in a trailer and grow old on the
road. Again, been there, done that. Also, in this age of the internet
where every kidâsmart, dumb, pretty, ugly, American, foreign, etcâis a
celebrity with his own blog and myspace site, Billâs egomania is dime-
a-dozen. There is no escape, not even in escape, because itâs all
been done and told about and read about before in a million books and
magazine articles. Bill, at least from what Iâve been able to gather
from the film, has a personality much like Mao Zedong, Adolf Hitler,
and Che Guevara. Heâs a poet-rebel-tyrant, the sort whoâs not even
satisfied with power but must keep pushing the envelope.
Some tyrants are satisfied with power and control. Stalin, though
murderous, wasnât much of a gambler. But, Hitler wasnât satisfied with
being Fuhrer of Germany. He wasnât even satisfied with having won
control over much of Western and Central Europe. He dreamt of building
a mega-city called Germania and had to gamble everything to defeat the
Soviet Union and turn all the eastern territories into parts of the
German empire. Mao wasnât satisfied with power either. As a poet-
intellectual, he tended to see everything in a kind of mythical and
mystical way. So, he embarked on the Great Leap Forward, as though men
could achieve godly deeds if imbued with the proper zeal. After that
failed, Mao called on the most cataclysmic revolutionary excess in
history, the Cultural Revolution, which was suppose to cleanse the
revolution of impurities and re-energize it for a future
generations. And, Che wasnât satisfied with the victory in Cuba. He
felt restless and hit the road, traveling to Africa to foment
revolution there; the utter failure of that venture only whetted his
appetite for more, and he went into the jungles of Bolivia to ignite
communist revolution that he hoped would spread all the way to Canada.
All these men spoke of history, the people, justice, and so on, but
they were driven by their own megalomania, self-importance, passion
for power, etc. They tended to have a romantic, mythic, and artistic
view of history and humanity than the âcompromisedâ, ânormalâ,
âsquareâ, or âbourgeoisâ kind. Such people are found in all areas of
life, perhaps most in the artistic community where itâs no sinâindeed
a necessityâto be wildly imaginative, different, contrarian,
rebellious, etc. As art is fiction and fantasy, who cares if the
rules and ideas are crazy? Wagnerâs madness was no problem as long
as it was restricted to the operatic stage. Of course, Wagnerianism
was a problem on the historical stage, and this is where art can be
dangerous. Art or the system of idol-making does inform the way we
see and feel reality, and it has a way of becoming entangled or
interwoven with ideas and politics. In time, ideology may become
inseparable from Idology. Indeed, a great many people gain their
ideology through idology. The songs, the rituals, paintings, and
architecture of the Catholic Church have been as importantâif not more
soâas the Biblical Text in converting non-believers or in making good
Catholics out of children. Most communists never read much of Marx.
They were won over by catchy slogans, songs like the International,
the pageantry and shameless kitsch, leftist artistry, the cult/image
of rebellion. And, this is also true of democracies. Manyâperhaps the
majorityâpeople vote based on the appeals of symbolism, imagery,
presentations, and performances. It was not political or intellectual
sobriety that led to victories of George W. Bush or Barack Obama. If
democracies are generally preferable to autocracies, itâs because no
single person or group can grab all the powerâthough it must be said
that US has pretty come under control of the liberal/leftist Jewish
elite which gained almost total domination of the media, arts, and
academia, the institutions that shape our imagination, ideas, and
sense of reality.
Anyway, I got the impression that Penn wasnât stupid enough to swallow
whole the idealistic aspects of the story. Perhaps, he was attracted
to this story because it made him face his own demons. As we all know,
Penn is a moral narcissist, radical maverick, and a self-centered prick
(not necessarily bad for art). Penn must have seen himself in the
story of Billâthe good and bad sides. Perhaps, Penn made it partly as
a celebration of the wandering free spirit and as a cautionary tale of
being wrapped up tightly within oneself. Indeed, that is the irony of
Billâs story. He travels and sees more than most people, but he is
trapped in the same placeâwithin himself. On the one hand, he feels
morally and intellectually superior and wants to match it with
physical superiority; but, his need to prove himself to himself and to
people around him betrays a sneaking self-loathing and self-doubt. He
roams about freely, but in some ways, heâs a one-man totalitarian
state, a kind of hermit kingdom of the soul that seeks utter isolation
and independence. Of course, he never isâas his needs are always met
by contact with humanity, and indeed when heâs finally alone and
isolated in Alaska, he pitifully meets his doom. Also, personal
memories keep creeping through the cracks of his iron-walled psyche.
The fact that he keeps moving or running is proof that he is running
FROM something; as long as he keeps running, he will never be free
from that something.
Penn canât help being a narcissistic-leftist-bullying-clown. People
like him are actually as contrarian as theyâre radical. They always
wanna stick out in the crowd. So, Penn is pro-gay-agenda in the US but
will also hang out with the Castros and Hugo Chavezâvery anti-gay
latin machomen. How is this possible? Because of Pennâs
contrarianism. The way he sees it, US is run by evil heterosexual
white males, and so Marxism and gay-agenda are both suitably anti-
American. There is no real rational system to Pennâs thought process;
itâs really a knee-jerk emotional response.
Penn may also have been drawn to this story because of his compromised
position as a Hollywood star. Penn sees himself as a true artist, a
great actor, and even a greater potential director. Yet, heâs made a
good number of box-office hits and have enjoyed Star treatment. He
knows heâs talked the talk but hasnât always walked the walk. Also,
even genuine artists are fakers in the sense that they are dealing
with artifice. They are pretenders, not doers. Marlon Brando figured
this out and disdained acting in his later years. He could play the
best this or that, but he was only acting; he was a performer before
the camera, not an actor on the world stage. He felt phony, and I
suspect Penn shares some of this doubt. As such, Penn celebrated a guy
who didnât just talk the talk but walked the walk of totally âfreeâ
behavior. Bill really did what he set out to doâstupid or wise.
Warren Beatty may have felt the same way when he made âRedsâ. John
Reed, whether you like him or not, threw himself into the Bolshevik
Revolution. He helped Lenin, Trotsky, and Stalin become the leaders of
Russia. He wasnât just a writer or just a journalist but a crusader
who devoted his life to a cause. Foolish or not, he wasnât just an
observer or imitator of history but a doer, an actor on the world
stage.
Wanting to actively practice oneâs ideals or throw oneself into
historymaking has long been the theme of many creative and
intellectual people on both the right and left. Mishima staged the
ridiculous coup and slit his own belly because he felt insufficient as
a mere intellectual and writer. Pasolini and Godard both grew
increasingly radical and political, feeling compromised as mere
âbourgeoisâ artists; they came to use their cameras like AK-47s or
Khmer Rouge-ish machetes. Writers like Garry Wills have condemned
John Wayne for having been all talk but no walk, all bark but no biteâ
Wayne, the hero of many war films, did not ever serve in WWII.
Some artists want to live up to their popularized ideals while others
shy away and work to counter the public image of themselves. In
American cinema, perhaps Clint Eastwood has gone furthest in the
latter regard. Having become world famous for his roles in the
nihilistic Spaghetti Westerns and bloody Dirty Harry films, Eastwood-
as-director has tried to play down the image of the invincible killer
or enforcer with the infallible gun. Some artists need to be more-than-
human; Eastwood has been stressing the need to be more-human.
Eastwood as director has been telling us that heâs not a star but a
rockâalbeit a special rockâon the ground. While many directors go for
Greatness, Eastwoodâs style is unassuming and without Pantheonic
gestures. Orson Welles wanted to be the god of cinemaâand he had the
talent to prove himself. Eastwood wants to be an honest filmmaker.
âInto the Wildâ lies somewhere in between Wellesianisms and
Eastwoodisms. Stylistically, itâs quite ambitious. Penn is pretty
adeptâif not brilliantâat composition, editing, and. But, the movie
is also down-to-earth and realism-istic at other times. The story
shoots for the stars, reality hits the ground over and over.
Perhaps, Penn made this film partly to tell his critics that he knows
all about the dangers and foolishness of unfettered radical or
maverick mentality. Many people see Penn as a self-absorbed nut, and
Penn could be saying, âlook, if I made a substantially critical film
about someone I admire and identify with, doesnât it tell you that Iâm
aware of the pitfalls of megalomania?â Nice try, Penny, but we know
youâre a nutter just the same. No one can escape oneself. Not Bill,
not Penn, not you nor me. We is what we is.
There is a number of films that came to mind while watching âInto the
Wildâ: âVagabondâ by Agnes Varda, âJeremiah Johnsonâ with Robert
Redford, âEasy Riderâ, âPicnicâ, and most of all, âHereâs Your Lifeâ
by the great Jan Troell. There were also aspects of the films of
Terrence Malick, especially in the voice-over narration, but that may
be the weakest part of the film. For Malick, it worked for âBadlandsâ
and to a lesser extent with âDays of Heavenâ, mainly because the
simple musings against the backdrop of the big world suggested a
troubled irony. But, it was disastrous in âThin Red Lineâ where we
were supposed to regard the voice-over narration as profound
philosophical ruminations. In âBadlandsâ and âDays of Heavenâ, the
narration emphasize the mystery of the world beyond human
understanding. In âThin Red Lineâ, the pompous narration cheapens and
reduces what we see; we think... âoh, so THATâs what all of this is
aboutâ.
In âInto the Wildâ, the narration consists of ernest thoughts and
observations by Billâs sister, and they are painful to the ear. They
are inane, precious, mushy, gooey, and etc. And, we are supposed to
take them straight. âInto the Wildâ is not without irony, but irony
flies out the window whenever we hear the trite poetic waxing of
Billâs sister. (Maybe, he was trying to get away from her). Her
observations donât really tell us something we couldnât glean from the
story as it unfolds. Also, her words have a way of, at once,
sanctifying, spiritualizing, and Dr. Philosophizing Bill to death.
Oh, if heâd just ended up on Oprah instead of Alaska, it would have
ended up oh so nicely for everyone!
It must be tough sometimes to be both a tough guy and a progressive.
Penn sees himself as both and shares the insecurities of fellow
leftwing Jewish artists like Oliver Stone and the late Paul Newman.
Penn wants to be seen as a tough and rough guy but also a caring
sensitive guy. The story of Bill captures both aspects of leftism. On
the one hand, there is Bill who is upset with the hypocrisy of mankind
and wants to be a âgood guyâ. On the other hand, thereâs Bill the
rugged man of the wild; and heâs no vegetarian and hunts for food.
Heâs like Che Guevara of self-reliant survival; indeed, his Alaskan
venture ends rather like Cheâs Bolivian venture. Both Che and Bill are
restless types who must always seek new excitement and new challenges.
They want to push the envelope. Thankfully, Bill only wanted to push
himself whereas Che wanted to push all of humanity toward his vision
of justice. Another figure Bill has similarities with is Ted
Kaczynski the Unabomber. Kaczynski was somewhere between Bill and
Che. On the one hand, he did want to radically change society; on the
other hand, he was hermetic and wanted to be on his own. To his
credit, Bill never means no violence to anyone. Also, he hunts only
for food. But, I wonder if he realized to what extent he relied on
the people and society he held in such low regard. After all, books,
guns, clothes, and even most of the food heâs eats were all man-made
and mass-produced by modern society. Indeed, people like him could
putz around through great distances because there are man-made roads
stretching all across this vast continent and because surplus of goods
allows a good many people to be generous.
Bill is strange in having both greater empathy and contempt for most
people. Unlike most people who stick to family and friends, Bill
wanders and gets to know all sorts of people. But, he will not commit
to anyone because his personal religion is himself and his own sense
of freedom and destiny. He feels that everyone is like a turtle
without the balls or guts to do what heâs chosen to do.
Finally, he comes to a bad end, and this is where the movie turns into
great art. Billâs final days are presented with power and poetry. It
has the ring of truth without dramatic overload or stylistic excess.
Itâs painful to watch, and even skeptics must feel obliged to respect
a part of Billâs being which accepted his fate with whatever grace and
inner-peace he could muster up. In one way, he dies as the petulant
kid wishing to lay a guilt-trip on his parents and feeling superior to
rest of compromised mankind. But, in another way, such things no
longer matter; weakened, weary, dying of starvation, poisoning(from
eating mis-identified plants), and the cold, he comes to sense
something bigger than his ego, convictions, and conceits. Up until
then, heâd traveled all around United States; finally, itâs as though
some higher spirit is traveling through him, carrying his soul to a
peaceful place.
âInto the Wildâ also keys us as to why leftists make better artists
than conservativesâat least in the modern world. However crazy
leftists may be, there is a sense of adventure, empathy with others,
curiosity, and open range spiritualism. Itâs true enough that good
many talented leftists are egomaniacs, but they feel a need to
understand and connect with the larger world or with the deeper areas
of their souls. Thereâs also a Promethean sense of going where and
doing what no one has done before. Much of this may simply be a self-
delusional conceit, but delusions may lead to creativity and new
ideas.
Oliver Stone and Sean Penn both have this spirit.
In contrast, take conservative entertainers like the Frasier guy and
Drew Carey, and you got little more than comfortable notions about
good vs bad and social niceties. To be sure, Mel Gibson of
âApocalyptoâ and John Milius of âApocalypse Nowâ have been powerfulâif
not necessarily greatâartists, but notice both have essentially
wandering pagan souls(despite Gibsonâs Catholicism). Radical leftism
may be stupid, but many leftists havenât been afraid to go to the ends
of the worldâor at least pretend to--to see and do something
different. Of course, leftism is ultimately foolish because its
stated goal is a totalitarian society run by radical intellectuals
where individuals no longer have any freedom. Of course, anarcho- and
libertarian-leftists will claim they are for a progressive and
pluralistic order of free individuals, but anarchism and
libertarianism are social impossibilities.
Still, leftistsâas long as they donât have total powerâhave a certain
spirit that fuels their creativity. Itâs also crucial to creativity
that leftists tend to be irreligious or anti-religious. As such, they
see themselves as gods. Though this may be immoral and sacrilegious to
conservative or religious folks, itâs good for art. All great artists
see themselves as gods of sorts. Beethoven couldnât have composed what
he did if he had the personality of your average conservative. Okay,
what about Bach and Handel? I would argue that in their art, they
didnât just accept God but searched for God, explored the richness and
depth of the spiritual realm. For them, God was as playful and
humorous as great and awesome. Today, most conservatives worship God-
as-dogma, the Gun-as-baby-bottle, or Greed-as-religion-unto-itself.
Thereâs nothing wrong with God and Guns as long as they are spiritual
or political crutches. As for Greed, thatâs what money becomes if one
sees and judges everything in terms of dollars and cents. This is all
the funnier when liberals and leftists generally beat out
conservatives in the Game of Greed. Your average Naomi-Klein-reading
leftist yuppie is likely to be richer and more materialistic than some
Ayn-Rand-reading conservative clod.
âInto the Wildâ is not a perfect movie, and Penn is not one of the
greatest directors âof all timeâ, but Penn and his movie show us in
spades that leftists have the adventurous spirit necessary for
personal art. âRedsâ by Beatty may be a stupid movie politically, but
we can admire the romanticism of Beattyâand that of John Reed. They
believed in the drama of history, the epic poetry of the adventurous
ego. Bad for politics but good for art. Show me a creative
conservative spirit who feels a mad passion to make a great film about
Teddy Roosevelt or Ronald Reagan. None. Instead, most conservatives
are Dilbertarian pundits who politically talk the talk but donât
culturally walk the walk. Art and creativity requires a degree of
madness. There is plenty of madness on the right but the energy is
directed toward religious moralism than toward paganesque creativity.
The Right needs to go into-the-wild to discover its own fire of
creativity.