Sex and the City 2


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Marxian Rating




Princesses of Persia: The Sandals of Time
By Gabriel Tupinambá

The Scene

After being rescued by Arab women in a public market in Abu Dhabi from men who were outraged with their flamboyant dresses, our protagonists are taken by their saviors away from the public gaze, where it is revealed to them that, underneath those women’s burqas, they are all wearing haute-couture outfits, just like their new foreign friends.

The Mise-en-Scene and the Ob-scene

Sex and the City 2 (2010) is the sequel to a film, which in turn is based on a tv series, which is itself based on a book by Candance Bushnell. To sum up the whole thing, let’s quickly turn to Cyriaque Lamar’ review of the film, which not only painted it with interesting colors (Sex and the City 2 as a Sci-Fi), but also managed to condense the entire franchise in five bullet points:

1) The lead of SATC2 is book writer and former sex columnist Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica-Parker). Carrie is the main character but also the least likable one. Her defining character trait is vacillation. Carrie ≠ SJP's witch in the seminal Neopagan documentary Hocus Pocus.


2) Carrie has three friends. The first is lawyer Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon). Miranda is the most relatable character but receives only 40 seconds of story arc. Her defining character trait is angst.



3) Carrie is also friends with homemaker Charlotte York-Goldenblatt (Kristin Davis). Charlotte is the least despicable character but also the most annoying one. Her defining character trait is privileged disapproval.



4) Carrie's final friend is PR impresario/erotic conquistadora Samantha Jones (Kim Catrall). Samantha is the most entertaining character but also the least realistic one. Her defining character trait is "anything-that-moves." Samantha is the same exact character as Gracie Law from Big Trouble in Little China.

5) The four of them live in New York City and have sex (not with each other). They eat brunch
.”
(We owe this reference to miss Luck)

The first question to be raised then is: Doesn’t Sex and the City 2 go against Lamar’s 5th bullet point? There are brunches, but there is no New York here!

This is exactly what the Scene described above comes to solve, giving a geopolitical twist to the portuguese saying that “If Mohammad won’t go to the mountain, the mountain will come to him”, which can now be read “If Carrie is not in New York, New York will appear to her from underneath a burqa”

The expansion of the City is thus made clear: It is not that the main characters traveled to another country - it is their country which expanded to include new territory.

But let us not be mistaken here: the operator of this expansion is not fashion per se, but the fetishistic relation to it - It would be a completely different situation if the other women displayed their designer clothing in their armoires, but to reveal them underneath the veil, as if they gave ‘the truth’ of their position (we are forced by men to wear this burqa, but underneath we are just like you!) is a completely different matter.

In his new book, Living in the End Times, Zizek gives a brilliant account of the relation between the veil and the face talking precisely about burqas:

why does the encounter with a face covered by a burqa trigger such anxiety? Is it that a face so covered is no longer the Levinasian face: that Otherness from which the unconditional ethical call emanates? But what if the opposite is the case? From a Freudian perspective, the face is the ultimate mask that conceals the horror of the Neighbor-Thing: the face is what makes the Neighbor le semblable, a fellow-man with whom we can identify and empathize. (...) This, then, is why the covered face causes such anxiety: because it confronts us directly with the abyss of the Other-Thing, with the Neighbor in its uncanny dimension. The very covering-up of the face obliterates a protective shield, so that the Other-Thing stares at us directly
(Zizek, Living in the End Times, p.2)

And he concludes:

Alphonse Allais presented his own version of Salome’s dance of seven veils: when Salome is completely naked, Herod shouts “Go on! On!”, expecting her to take off also the veil of her skin. We should imagine something similar with the burqa: the opposite of a woman removing her burqa to reveal her face. What if we go a step further and imagine a woman “taking off” the skin of her face itself, so that what we see beneath is precisely an anonymous dark smooth burqa-like surface, with a narrow slit for the gaze?
(Zizek, Living in the End Times, p.3)

In Sex and the City 2 the dichotomical relation between face and veil takes place within the scene, so that as we identify with the gaze of the main characters, which merely observe while the Other divides into two, we are on the side of unity. But, with a little help from Lacan, we can remind ourselves of a way out of this idealist, double-reality structure: the fact is that “it is not reality which divides itself, what gets divided is the subject when faced with reality”. And so we should turn this division back into Carrie and her friends, who are otherwise just ‘being themselves’ and ask what is the burqa they are wearing beneath their Halston Heritage dresses.

Many many years ago, in a land not that far away...

Knowing that the biggest mistake one can make with an ideologically charged film is to dismiss it as ‘just fun’, let us take this film seriously and do some serious historical research on its foundations. And what could be a better foundation to understand what is happening in the United Arab Emirates today than a look into the Achaemenid Empire, back in 400 b.C? We have a faithful source of historical material for analysis in Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (2010), Jerry Bruckenheimer’s attempt of finding a new Caribbean for his Pirates.

Many aspects of the two films point towards the fruitfulness of this historicist endeavor of ours: Both films pretend to take place in other areas of the Middle-East while being actually shot in Morroco - where they can get cheap labour and the authorities don’t mind the distortions of the portrayed countries’ cultures; the two films are accounts by the same group of materialist democratic ideologues (Hollywood) and were shot around the same time, so the ideological distortion in them take similar patterns, making it easier to cross-reference the discourses without losing important information due to lack of understanding of the political developments of the time, as it could happen if we went back to more traditional sources of historical data...such as a proper book.

So, let us turn our attention to Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time and see if we can spot Carrie Bradshaw’s ancestors in the background somewhere.

Prince of Persia gives a strange twist to Marx’s “first as tragedy, then as farce”: The film revolves around the turning back of time so that the same event is experienced first as a tragedy - the invasion of a Holy City by the Persian Army, the killing of innocent people, the forced marriage of the sacred city’s princess to a persian prince and the bringing about of the end of the world - and then as a farce - the invasion is not needed because the main character, the young, illegitimate prince who lived to see the consequences of the tragic invasion goes back in time and prevents it from happening, only to be rewarded with the love of the princess (and thus uniting of the Holy City into the Persian Empire anyway!).

This shift from invasion-as-eradication to invasion-as-appropriation could help us to understand the terrorist dimension of the anti-terrorism campaigns propagating quickly around the globe today, specially in the guise of the ‘tolerance discourse’. It is not difficult to see the conceptual problem with tolerance: It implies that we already have common ground with the other - otherwise, I could tolerate the other but not be tolerated! Zizek, apropos of Wendy Brown’s Regulating Aversion, writes:

there are all the self-referring paradoxes centered on the impasse of tolerating intolerance. Liberalist multiculturalism preaches tolerance between cultures, while making it clear that true tolerance is fully possible only in the individualist Western culture, and thus legitimizes even military interventions as an extreme mode of fighting the other's intolerance - some US feminists supported the US occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq as a form of helping the women in these countries...

Isn’t this paradoxical issue the one obliterated by Sex and the City 2 when the film posits as the truth of the veil the dress underneath it, a dress just like ours, so that the obscene terrorism of the Manhattan-girls behavior can be understood as “girl bonding”?

And the narrative of Prince of Persia tracks the opening of this possibility. It shows us the passage from a direct Mastery to a form of indirect one, one which first posits in the other a certain common ground, so that there is a turn from eradication of otherness into a ‘recognition’ of the same, thus making it an indirect form of subjugation, which cannot be tracked back to the workings of a Master, because the first step of assimilation was a given, it was naturalized into a ‘common feature’.

By the time the hero, Dastan, has turned back time, stopped the war from happening and unveiled the plot of his uncle to take the throne, what we find out is that Princess Tamina, the guardian of the sacred city of Alamut, would have given the key to the city out of love for the Prince. This strange redundancy allows us to sum up the film as:

1) First Dastan lifts Tamina’s veil, and finds horror and destruction.
2) Stop, Rewind.
3) Now Dastan lifts Tamina’s veil, and finds a woman who (really) looks just like him.
4) The end.

Not only this gnomic arrangement of the film already makes it clear that Carrie Bradshaw is a descendent from old Persian Kings (what would explain a lot just by itself), it also shines a light on the mechanism at play in both films. Couldn’t we say that:

1) works with the structure of Terror: the forcing of the Event, taking the veil off of Being, looking to force the Trauma by trying to escape the order of the Symbolic (the city was sacred, but they invade it anyway, moving away from the paternal-symbolic prohibition towards the ‘integration’ of the City-Thing)

But then, 3) doubles this structure, because 1) was the terrorist forcing of the Event - but after it happened the Terror should have been inscribed into the Symbolic order as a failed-Event. What the ‘second coming’ does is that it obliterates this inscription and turns it into the first movement of a real Event (Love, between Dastan and Tamina).

We should ask ourselves if the Trauma doesn’t come about not by the first tragical situation, but because in its repetition as farce, the first tragedy is left unnamed.

And, by the end of the film, every bit of the terror inflicted by the Persians (who are the bad guys in the film, invading Almut in the beginning, trying to kill Dastan when he flees, etc) is neutralized because we don’t have to inscribe it in the past, it got caught in a time-loop, it is ‘what could have happened’, an ‘alternative’ reality. This is the important aspect here: it never happened, but at the same time it did happen: It actually fills the place of the well-known freudian ‘Other Scene’ - The phantasm implicated by a certain situation, though not directly enacted in reality.

The Princesses of Persia!

And, mutatis mutandis, isn’t this the same ‘Other Scene’ taking place in Sex and the City 2?

Couldn’t we imagine that when the four friends left their hotel to go shopping in the market in Abu Dhabi, they had at first decided to dress more appropriately - but still their behavior offended the locals, creating a big confusion which ended with the brutal death of three of them, stoned to death because they didn’t know that making flirty comments with everyone was not well taken by the population.

Luckily Carrie escaped, with the help of a woman who was oppressed by her husband into wearing a burqa, and who helped her and taught her that they are share the same dream (Manolo Blahnik shoes etc). They then looked for a magical shoe, which turned back time, so that the american-quartet managed to re-live the situation, now dressed like ‘themselves’, and safely escape, because all the local women could identify with them now.

The passage from the ‘old mystical dagger’ to the ‘Manolo Blahnik shoe’ is also very fruitful to our analysis, because it is the very combination of the two which gives us the double dimension of the structure of the commodity: it operates a condensation of both Time and Space.

What was not clear in Prince of Persia gets explained through Sex and the City 2: the dagger does not only turn time back, so that things can be re-enacted, it also operates a change in space, it brings America to Persia, because this very re-enacting is done in accord to the most democratic materialist principles.

And the other way as well: We can now understand that the ‘shoe’ doesn’t only bring New York to Abu Dhabi (after all, the film is called ‘Sex and THE CITY’, not ‘Sex and MANY CITIES’), but it does so by re-introducing the temporal logic which is structural to the inner-working of the modern capitalist discourse - terror as the Other Scene, while the mise-en scene is of tolerance/love.

1001 Nights revisited

Another comparison which is well worth attempting to make is regarding the particular place of narration both film-fantasies.

Sex and the City (the tv series specially) works in an almost anti-Altman narrative way: All the different threads of each woman’s storylines are united by Carrie’s narration of the episode, normally ending with a ‘moral of the day’ speech, one last thought by the main character, showing us what they learned from the conflicts they went through. This can be set in opposition to Altman’s exquisitely crafted stories because rather than exposing the contingency of the fragments, her final narration (accompanied by hovering shots of all the characters going to sleep safe and sound) comes in to tie all the loose ends, to show us that whatever tragedy might have happened, it was actually just part of the farce.

Prince of Persia also features a sort of narration, but a slightly different one: Every step of the way, while Dastan and Tamina are trying to prevent Armageddon, Tamina constantly introduces new - completely out of the blue - information on what they are doing. They go into a cave, fleeing from bad guys, and suddenly she starts...”Oh, this is the mystical cave of xxx! If you do this and this, x will happen!”. Then the dagger stops working and the sand that went inside of it - before said to be irreplaceable - is gone...then Tamina starts again: ”Oh, but there is a secret place, where the wizard kept some of the sand!”. Most of the back-story she slowly unveils has no place whatsoever in the plot, or is related to things which already happened (a bad guy is killed and we see he was infiltrated amongst the good guys...then she says “He was an assassin, but he infiltrated in the order of the priests! That’s the curse of xxx!!”). Here, the farce is directly superposed to the tragedy as they go, almost bluntly improvised by the Princess, to make sure that the much more intricate situation actually turns into the magical adventure they actually want to live. (The american crusade for nuclear weapons in the Middle-East strangely springs to mind here....)

We should ask ourselves here what it would mean to have these entropic narrations removed from the films. Wouldn’t the Other Scene shine through a bit more?

(In a sense, this is a question worth asking regarding V for Vendetta (2005) as well, since one of V’s main character traits was narrating his own adventure as it happened, some sort of revolutionary subject who tells himself the revolution is happening now, so as to be aware of the moment of the Event)

Final note: Alice as a friend of Carrie

As a quick final note, it would be also interesting to sketch the parallel between Burton’s Alice in Wonderland (2010) and Sex and the City 2. Don’t we get the exact same narrative structure? Woman with marital problems escapes to magical Wonderland to deal with her problems.

It is enough to shed some light towards the turning points in these narratives - they are always similar moral deadlocks, which end up justifying the intrusion into the world of an Other, the staging of this other territory as a place to articulate problems which don’t belong there, at the cost of their very difference. The disavowal of these deadlocks turns Descartes’ insight...

“I further recognized in the course of my travels that all those whose sentiments are very contrary to ours are yet not necessarily barbarians or savages, but may be possessed of reason in as great or even a greater degree than ourselves.”

...into:

‘I further recognized in the course of my travels that all those whose sentiments are very contrary to ours are yet not completely barbarians or savages, but are possessed by the same reason as ours, they are just unable to articulate them because they don’t know freedom of speech’

And wasn’t it that the way Tim Burton managed to transform Carrol’s Wonderland into Carrie’s Wonderland was by portraying it not as the Other place, the place where the Symbolic articulates itself without the inertia of our own imaginary identifications (even if there is an Imaginary consistency to Wonderland, Alice didn’t understand its coherence), but by turning it into a continuation of the same Scene? The whole Wonderland became a big farce staged for Alice to solve her issues with her family, by listening to everyone’s stories and finding they all share a lot in common. Underneath the Symbolic, Tim Burton unveiled a beautiful Imaginary tapestry.

No wonder the Mad-hatter became such a prominent character in his film - isn’t he the fashion designer of this Wonderland?

Synecdoche, New York (2008)


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Frames within Frames within...wait a minute:
who the hell is providing all these frames??
By Gabriel Tupinambá

1.

Charlie Kaufman’s intricate scripts have been received with great acclaim by critics all around and have slowly won him the place of a subject supposed to be an artist in Hollywood, as well as defined a certain audience as subjects supposed to recognize artistic merit. In the ocean of adaptations which now covers almost the entirety of Hollywoodian film scripts, Kaufman’s original scripts attract attention like a little fishing pond - where the fishes swim backwards.

His directing debut, Synecdoche, New York (2008) was no different. Premiered at the Cannes Film Festival, it represents the very epitome of the work he had been developing as a screenwriter.

The film tells the story of Caden Cotard, a theatre director who, as his life veers wildly off the track, struggles to mount a new ambitious play. Through his failed marriage with Claire, the agonizing absence of his daughter who left for Germany with his ex-wife, the suspended love affair with Hazel and the awful discovery of his strange disease, slowly shutting down each of his autonomic functions, we watch Caden’s depressive life moving deeper and deeper into total despair. And while we watch all these threads develop, we also witness the ever-growing scale of his new artistic project.

Caden gathered a huge ensemble cast into a warehouse in Manhattan and builded there a small mockup of the city outside. The cast then started to play mundane characters, trying to create a piece of ‘brutal and realistic’ theatre. As Caden’s life plunges into complete emotional misery, it also gets more and more implicated in the play he is making, as he decides to create, inside the mockup city, another warehouse, where actors play actors playing their part in his play, and so on. He also hires someone to play himself directing the play (and this actor later enacts the hiring of yet another ‘Caden’ to play the actor playing the actor etc).

1.1

The structuring of the narrative as a story-within-a-story, which so clearly drives his latest film, is surely the most defining element of Kaufman’s work. So, let us briefly recall the appearance of this repeated trait in his original scripts:

- Being John Malkovich (1999): the possibility of being inside John Malkovich’s mind while at the same time keeping one’s own consciousness. A mind inside another mind.

- Human Nature (2001): the Kaspar Hauser scenario - the possibility of watching from the outside (as a scientist) the “becoming human” of an otherwise wild monkey-man.

- Adaptation (2002): A writer includes himself in the script he is writing, which turns from the direct adaptation of a book into the story of a writer adapting a book.

- Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004): A man consciously watches his memories being taken away from his own consciousness. Also, the scientist watches from the outside the inner workings of the other man’s consciousness.

- Synecdoche, New York (2008): A man writes a play which features him writing a play, ad infinitum.

1.1.1

The summed up description of these stories already make it quite evident that there are two ways - which tend to appear intertwined - in which the story-within-a-story scenario is played out:

a) The Other as an other: the author inscribes himself into his own work:

Malkovich uses the portal to experience his own consciousness from outside; Kaufman (Nicholas Cage’s character) includes himself in the story he is adapting (a gesture which repeats what Kaufman the author himself did); Joe Barish consciously witnesses his memories fading away from inside his own consciousness; and Caden writes himself into a play.

b) An other as the Other: man watches from the exterior the development of another man’s interior:

Craig Schwartz and many others experience Malkovich’s mind as if from outside; Dr. Nathan Bronfman watches Puff become a gentleman out of the wild beast he was; Donald Kaufman, Kaufman’s made up brother, tells Kaufman how to end his script - and thus also his own personal story; Dr. Howard Mierzwiak re-structures patients memories from outside; and Dianne Wiest’s character starts at some point to narrate Caden’s thoughts and actions to himself through an ear piece.

These two stances could be described as two different movements: a movement towards an infinite inside (of the inside, of the inside etc) and one towards an infinite outside (of the outside, of the outside, and so on).

In between the two, we find the main characters. They rely on one of the two movements to make sense of themselves - as if an outside perspective could tell ‘what it all means’ - while using the other one to stop the first’s infinite spiraling. As an example of this, just recall how Kaufman’s brother (in Adaptation) and Millicent Weems (in Synecdoche) appear to stop the infinite reflexivity of the main character’s inscription of himself within the story. As the character loses himself into this inward reflexion, and the film tends to lose itself as well, we get the agency from another character who, from the outside, if it were, gives the lost character some ‘divine’ sense.

The opposite is also true, the repetition towards externalities, the opening of the question: so who’s watching the watcher?, is solved in Human Nature, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and Being John Malkovich by getting the watcher to watch himself somehow. Dr. Bronfman is obliged to tell his story over and over in limbo; we find out that Dr. Mierzwiak had the procedure done to himself; John Malkovich goes through that little door into his own head, etc.

Thus we have as the basic structure of Kaufman’s films the fantasy of an Other of the Other, which appears either by repeating the place of the author, externalizing it, having an author of the author or by repeating the place of the character, internalizing it, by having the character of the character.

1.1.1.1

This double structure - story within story - was discussed by Freud, when he articulates in the Traumdeutung the book’s main thesis - that a dream is the fulfillment of a wish - in relation to dreams in which the dreamer either acknowledges that ‘this is only a dream’ or has another dream inside of the actual dream:

“When the thought ‘this is only a dream’ occurs during a dream, it has the same purpose in view as when the words are pronounced on the stage by la belle Hélène in Offenbach’s comic opera of that name: it is aimed at reducing the importance of what has just been experienced and at making it possible to tolerate what is to follow. It serves to lull a particular agency to sleep which would have every reason at that moment to bestir itself and forbid the continuance of the dream - or the scene in the opera. It is more comfortable, however, to go on sleeping and tolerate the dream, because, after all, ‘it is only a dream.’ In my view the contemptuous critical judgement, ‘it’s only a dream’, appears in a dream when the censorship, which is never quite asleep, feels that it has been taken unawares by a dream which has already been allowed through. It is too late to suppress it, and accordingly the censorship uses these words to meet the anxiety or the distressing feeling aroused by it.” (Traumdeutung, Chapter VI, Second Revision (I))

So Freud argues that this meta-formal element appears to discredit the representations in the dream, making them more bearable for the dreamer and thus allowing the unconscious desire to be enacted in the dream without waking the dreamer.

We find here an use for the fantasy of there being an outside of the dream, while still within the dream: it neutralizes the intensity of the unconscious desire by referring to it as a ‘mere’ dream. The position from which this soothing insight is enunciated - somehow being outside of the scene so to look at what is happening and cal it a dream - is the position of this Other of the Other, a place which is not touched by the developments and consequences of the actual situation. Literally, it is obscene - ob (out of the) scene.

1.1.1.1.1

But what could be the uncomfortable representation which feeds on this structural recurrence in Kaufman’s narratives? What gets to be displayed on account of fact that the frame within the frame is ‘just a mere narrative’? Here we should turn to another element which is featured in all of his scripts and, rather than an aspect of formal organization, like the one we have been describing, is its very operating agency.

From Being John Malkovich to Synedoche, New York, the possibility of this meta-reflexion is always connected with the idea of a business which turned the strange reflexivity into an affordable service:

In Being John Malkovich we have the ‘experience being John Malkovich’ service, for 200$. In Human Nature the on going behaviorist research of Dr. Bronfman is funded ad infinitum - and the same goes for Caden’s play-experiment in Synecdoche, New York, which is funded for almost twenty-years by a mysterious ‘MacArthur Grant’. Adaptation also relies on Kaufman’s “free pass” to work on the script for as long as he likes, while Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, very much like the Malkovich movie, also offers the memory erasing service for a cheap price - we don’t know the exact figure, but everyone seems to be able to afford it.

Couldn’t we say that there is a strange correlation between the infinity of scenes (within scenes) and the infinity of resources which actually allows for the formalist infinity of the story in the first place?

The re-doubling of the narrative takes the foreground over the actual vertiginous stance that is apparent as a minor representation in the story: the almost totally resourceful/demanding Other which sets the story in motion by providing a continuous flow of money into the character’s spiraling stories - this ‘Bank’ figure is, at the same time, hidden or discredited by the reminder that it is ‘just’ a film (within a film). It becomes another little funny, quirky element of this already ‘absurd’ storyline.

2.

So we have used Kaufman’s particular way of structuring stories to establish how an otherwise complex, articulate and highly sophisticated narrative, which seems to be playing with the very fabric of its making, by doubling its form within itself, can actually serve as the diversion to a much less spectacular fantasy: that of an endless flow of money.

Extrapolating - but then again, not that much - don’t we find an homologous structure in the broad spectrum of current social phenomena?

Let us consider the two main social movements today: one towards an always greater externality - the growing importance of ecology and the new ‘anti-specist’ conception of it, which demands that we expand our notion of ethics to include animals as well - and one towards greater internality - the cult of the body, of the inner-self, and the “me-ist” demand of personal expression.

These two movements, being products of the capitalist discourse, are not finite demands, they aim towards an infinitude: after animals, we will need to include plants, and then minerals. After expressing ourselves through a Blog, we’ll do it through Facebook, and then move on to Twitter.

And, last but not least, while we relish in the sophistication of our two infinite horizons - Ecology as Echo-logy and Budism as Buddy-ism - this ideological spectacle makes it easier to bare the actual phantasmatic Other at play: the one which would support this big circus with an apparent endless and consequence-free investment of cash.

After all, wasn’t the answer to the financial crisis the rise of the fantasy of a stance that could feed back into the endangered banks huge amounts of money, thus keeping the economy alive, and consequentially our own noble ambitions?

Couldn’t we say that the current worry about the environment and the concern with the world’s demise (to be read as: we are just one more species) - as well as the undivided attention to questions of tolerance and the Other (to be read as: we are just one more culture) - hides its very reliance on an agency that funds this reflexive movement endlessly, supporting the actual unconscious fantasy: the environment is at risk, the world could end at any second, morals are going down the drain - but capitalism is a-ok: it is immortal.

And, in an ultimate analysis, what we get here is quite an interesting structure, for we are faced with basic the elements of St. Thomas Aquinas’ cosmological proof of God: we have infinities moving towards an ungraspable beyond and an immortal cause at the beginning/end of it. What a surprise it would be to find out that the broadest frame and the deepest Self coincide...in the Capital!

2.1

Now that we had a glimpse of how intimately connected Kaufman’s films are with the current structure of social-economical life, it shouldn’t be difficult to see why he is the author of such seductive scripts: offering themselves as complex, meta-formal cathedrals, the stories can incite our desire to ‘broaden our minds’ or ‘to go deeper’, giving us the taste of having gone through some sort of highly philosophical experience. But, like dreamers, if we are by chance confronted with the terror of our own unconscious desires - for example in the explicit fantasy of this always-absent fountain, from which money is supposed to spurt out - we are reassured by Kaufman’s film, which whispers back to us, not in its content, but in the level of its very form: don’t worry, its just a dream!

3.

Against the dismissal of the scene as a ‘mere’ dream, we join in unison Garcia Lorca’s good advise given to that very same New York , in his Ciudad sin Sueño:

“No es sueño la vida. ¡Alerta! ¡Alerta! ¡Alerta!

Nos caemos por las escaleras para comer la tierra húmeda
o subimos al filo de la nieve con el coro de las dalias muertas.

Pero no hay olvido, ni sueño:
carne viva. Los besos atan las bocas
en una maraña de venas recientes
y al que le duele su dolor le dolerá sin descanso

y al que teme la muerte la llevará sobre sus hombros.”

This affirmation of the scene as there where it happens is the very essence of Badiou’s Affirmationist Manifesto. To disavow it, in the name of a proximity of the Real, supposed to expose all framings, showing the “behind-the-scenes”, is just to choose the route of pornography: to sacrifice all eroticism for the sake of ‘reality’ - pornography now includes the camera man, the whole stage is on display, everything is done in the name of ‘the passion of the real’, as Badiou calls it, which is supposed to arouse us to the utmost, but then...all sexuality goes out of the window (the only frame left!). And we are left then with the "spectacular exposition of desires, phantasms and terrors."

Thus, when a certain situation is dismissed by someone with a ‘but it’s only a dream’, an affirmationist shall reply: ‘yes! it is only a dream but you are not the dreamer!!”

And, as our conclusion, Badiou’s own words:

“The Affirmationists will, of course, defend the totality of contemporary artistic production against the current reactionary attacks. We will distrust all those who try to use provisional theoretical weaknesses in order to impose the restoration of our pompous heritage, or even worse. But we should not be blind to the problem we have in common: the domination in the arts of all the figures of “me-ist” or communitarian expressivity, which is nothing but degraded Didactic-Romanticism, a kind of avant-gardism without avant-garde. In a certain way, it combines with a recurring pomposity. Pomposity proposed violent technologized and grandiose decoration as affect, and it dominates Hollywood cinema and even certain sectors of architecture or multimedia design. But the artists of the post-modern circuit merely oppose it with a poor anti-Classicism whose single resource is Spinoza’s phrase: “We do not know what a body can do.” With this meager viaticum, a number of them (a majority?) continue to search in a paroxystic particularity, be it ethnic or “me-ist,” for something to affirm the ruin of both the Classical conception of art and the absolutist affirmation of subjective expression, private or public. Now, the motif of the expression, whatever its modalities might be, saturates the artistic gesture with a Romanticism whose only known variants are funereal Romanticism or ludic Romanticism, depending on whether one pronounces the morose end of the human race or one pretends to celebrate it.



We cannot understand what is gripping us and causing us to despair if we do not return again and again to the fact that our world is not at all a democracy, but rather an imperial conservatism under the guise of democratic phraseology.” (Manifesto of Affirmationism)