Brand Upon the Brain – dir. Guy Maddin, 2006 – Originally toured as a
cinematic event, this silent film – with accompanying folio artists and guest
interlocutors- is a personal, moving and delirious excavation of family, memory
and desire. Maddin weaves together libidinous distortion and autobiographical
(mis)remembering to conjure a film that, like no other, disorientates past and
present. Imagine a surrealist raconteur: one eye on the fuzz of old home/family
footage, the other roving promiscuously amidst archives of silent film and
Greek tragedy. An amazing achievement that works as a logical antecedent to the
more cinematically polished vision of Keyhole,
or, drawing upon the director’s own comments – as a less cynical companion to Coward’s Bend the Knee.
The film’s score, by Jason
Staczek, is a beautifully realised work in itself; it accompanies the visual
journey through humour, feverish melodrama, the macabre and tragic with emotive
and natural (for the uninhibited Maddin world) flare. Apparently Maddin was aiming
to harness his enthusiasm for the scores from Jean Vigo’s two main films: L’Atalante and Zero de Conduit. There are even two falsetto songs that, like the
pulse of memory, disappear as abruptly as they arrive – like condensed and
child-like arias they perfectly resonate with the often operatic scale of
emotion.
A film that can convey the
mesmeric charm and melancholy of memory and how our perception of textures,
scents and the incidental can prompt encounters with the past, it is stunning.
The erratic skip and judder of its cinematography (a technique discovered,
fittingly, through chance in editing) creates a restless cinematography, one
that enthrals with its own (distinctly surrealist and wonder-filled) visual
syntax.
All this without mentioning the imaginative insanity of its
peculiar content: vampiric science experiments, a maternal lighthouse, an
invented tool of faulty communication, an orphanage, the reversal of time, a
tension between Lord of the Flies
esque barbarism and romanticised innocence, blurring of sexuality, Freudian dramas,
nostalgic and quaint American teen mystery (think Hardy Boys…like an American Famous
Five for adolescent adventure…all boyish treks into the wilderness and
solving mysteries, while neatly evading
imminent peril- be it crocodiles, smugglers or figures of parental authority),
strains of surrealist sexuality (L’Age
D’Or foot kissing, erotic incest, confused identities and even the
appearance of a Fantomas – esque
mask…which crops up as both linked with death, marriage and desire)…dear god
it’s a bountiful pic n mix of the eccentric, the absurd and the bizarre…all
lathering up in a steamy confusion of secrets.
L'Age D'Or |
For anyone with an interest in surrealist film, silent film,
the relationship between music and image, family and the poetry of remembering
– this is an altar of curious genius to kneel before, with hushed and
inappropriate arousal…offering occasional toe fellating, by way of appreciation…metaphorically…whatever that
might entail…!
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