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The Antifascist Aesthetics of
Pan’s Labyrinth
By Kam Hei Tsuei
We’re the first potential parents who can contain the ancestral
house. -- Wilson Harris, The Whole Armour
Hollywood projects itself as a liberal and tolerant social institution,
even as a liberatory agent in the fight against prejudice and bigotry,
a courageous proponent of humanitarianism. It is, of course, a ridiculous
conceit and a necessary illusion, one well-nourished over the past thirty
years by the Christian Right in its endless attacks on Hollywood’s
so-called atheistic secularism and anything-goes cultural relativism.
In this way the religious Right and liberal Hollywood form a closed circle.
Corollaries of each other, they are also like mirrors in a funhouse, for
any person who passes through the apparatus must forget that the whole
experience has been put together by those who own and control it, in order
for the mirrors to produce the desired illusory effects.
Occasionally a film is distributed by Hollywood that breaks free of this
closed circle, a film that in fact did not come from Hollywood at all,
that is neither a pretentious “independent” production nor
the work of a veteran auteur like Brian De Palma, Francis Ford Coppola
or Sidney Lumet. A film with mass appeal in terms of its aesthetics, yet
boldly dissonant and disjunctive ideologically. This happened in 2006
when Hollywood released Mexican filmmaker Guillermo del Toro’s monster
movie El laberinto del fauno, marketed to American moviegoers
as Pan’s Labyrinth.
While the film’s content, the establishment of fascist rule in Franco’s
Spain, helps to explain why Hollywood chose to distribute and market the
movie to American audiences—that is, as a way of both appealing
to the strong anti-Bush sentiment in the country and showing at the same
time that fascism is something that happens somewhere else, that in the
U.S. such barbarism is unthinkable—its mythical dimension, which
constitutes Pan’s Labyrinth’s total form, offers
a new popular cinema aesthetic. My suggestion is that del Toro’s
aesthetic brings to the surface a startling absence in Hollywood film:
the lack of movies that use ancient or pre-capitalist mythology to animate
stories about modern capitalist social relations. In general, the Hollywood
aesthetic does the opposite: it superimposes present-day capitalist social
relations onto all history as if capitalism has no pre-history—as
if it has always existed exactly the way it is today.
Freud argued that this kind of creative artistic activity, in which ancient
myths are called on to explain events in the present, belongs to the realm
of “mass psychology,” or the collective psyche as a social
space. The mass, according to Freud, “wants to be dominated and
suppressed and to fear its master.” The expression of mass psychology
comes through the collective unconscious—“the unconscious
foundation that is the same for everyone.”1 For Freud,
the two great social institutions through which mass psychology expresses
itself are the army and the church. Here the masses are inspired to extremes,
knowing “neither doubt nor uncertainty.” Here they are encouraged
to compensate themselves for being “a helpless target for all the
taxes, epidemics, sicknesses, and evils of social institutions.”2
Here is where “the poor,” says Freud, act out their “libidinal
attachments,” namely “self-love, parental and infant love,
friendship, general love of humanity, and even dedication to concrete
objects as well as to abstract ideas.”3 Since being loved
is the goal, the army and the church spend much of their resources trying
to satisfy this desire and gear their entire propaganda apparatus to it.
Yet these revered institutions almost always fail in making people feel
loved. Consequently, the army and the church become home to a “universal
compulsive neurosis,” where people find ample opportunity to fashion
their own “system of delusion.”
Freud pointed out the obvious, that in the army and the church people
merely “echo” the real human experience of being loved and
thus in this “distorted form” every sort of perversion imaginable
(and unimaginable) can then be carried out. “If a culture has not
got beyond the point where the satisfaction of some participants requires
the oppression of others, [who may constitute] the majority (and this
is the case with all contemporary cultures),” he argued, “then,
understandably, the oppressed will develop a deep hostility towards a
culture that their labor makes possible but in whose commodities they
have too small a share.”4 Freud never got to see firsthand
the total expression in Europe of “the universal compulsive neurosis”—he
died in 1939. But he would very likely have agreed that the failure to
prevent fascist hegemony in Germany and elsewhere was a failure to see
in the commodity logic of capital the seed of authoritarian social control.
With the decline in U.S. society of the church and the army as the two
great social institutions (in the sense of mass appeal) and their replacement
by Hollywood, Freud’s theory of mass psychology – or the collective
unconscious – is useful for a study of fascism and Hollywood cinema.
My aim in this essay is to center this type of analysis on what we might
call del Toro’s “outside” aesthetics. His approach to
filmmaking comes not only from outside the Hollywood system of cultural
production, but also outside its closed ideologies, in particular the
ideology of U.S. liberalism—the notion that the mission of the U.S.
is to fight fascism and make the world safe for democracy. As we will
see, del Toro’s fascist monsters are loaded with pre-capitalist
mythical content of a kind that enables a full objectification of historical
fascism, that makes the invisible reality or collective unconscious of
fascism present. And that this is precisely what the Hollywood aesthetic
always avoids.
The monster mash
It would be a cliché to say that, because I am a Mexican, I see
death in a certain way. But I have seen more than my share of corpses,
certainly more than the average First World guy. I worked for months next
to a morgue that I had to go through to get to work. I’ve seen people
being shot, I’ve had guns put to my head, I’ve seen people
burnt alive, stabbed, decapitated…because Mexico is still a very
violent place. So I do think that some of that element in my films comes
from a Mexican sensibility. -- Guillermo del Toro
To judge by the most commercially successful Hollywood films, the desire
for apocalypse is the American masses deepest wish fulfillment in response
to the horrors of life under capitalism, that their abiding wish is to
see capitalism destroyed utterly.5 What might replace capitalism
is as alien to Hollywood cinema as the movie aliens are to their audiences,
yet that is not the point in Freud’s terms. The point is that capitalist
culture has produced social alienation on a scale so vast and extreme
that vastly extreme responses to it are the only appealing ones. Everything
in between, such as political reform or realistic hope for making a better
world, is rejected as pure fantasy.
In this aspect, my analysis of Hollywood cinema is not new or original.
The treatment of ideology as a camera obscura or set of optical
illusions, of an upside-down world in which historical reality is inverted
into fantasy and fantasy into “historical reality,” goes back
to the Romantic era (Left and Right alike), and before the Romantics to
Vico. Frederic Jameson has referred to this procedure as thinking about
culture in terms of a “dawning historicity in the realm of taste.”
Jameson, accordingly, uses the term “ideograms” to describe
the artifacts of capitalist mass culture. Such thinking about culture,
he writes, is “marked by the will to link together in a single figure
two incommensurable realities, two independent codes or systems of signs,
two heterogeneous and asymmetrical terms: spirit and matter, the data
of individual experience and the vaster forms of institutional society,
the language of existence and that of history.”6 As a
result, one sees a clash not merely between illusion and reality (between
what really happened and how we imagine it happened), but between the
language of particular illusions and that language’s constantly
shifting terms and vocabulary in relation to epochal historical change.
In the case of film language, and in the monster movie genre specifically,
the clash of asymmetrical terms, between ideology and history, is of course
expressed visually and thus involves a set of analytic procedures different
than those used in literature or music criticism. Nevertheless, as a system
of signs film invites the same kind of the interpretive analysis as other
artistic fields, so long as the two conflicting “heterogeneous and
asymmetrical terms” are treated as the creative force of all artistic
activity.
It might come as a surprise that the monster movie is by far the most
popular genre of Hollywood cinema. It is not at any rate the romantic
comedy, the gangster flick, the musical, the western, the detective movie,
the psychological thriller, or the road movie. All the piles of awards
heaped on to such genre films notwithstanding, American moviegoers much
prefer monster movies and reward the film studios handsomely for producing
an enormous excess of them. Yet these monster movies are not monolithic.
There are a great variety of monsters—in fact, compared to the romantic
comedy for example, the monster movie genre is astonishingly eclectic
and totally unpredictable.
Doubtless this is part of the monster movie’s mass appeal. Whereas
the romantic comedy is essentially a date movie (strictly a means to an
end), the monster movie is pure cinema, pure in the sense of offering
to moviegoers a fully conceived alternate universe, a social space mathematically
constructed in images through which people’s everyday fears and
hopes are transfigured into a special visual language impossible to translate
or transfer outside those two thrilling hours in a darkened theater. That
said, the monster movie is certainly a formula-type genre film. Here it
should be stressed that I am thinking of the monster movie in broader
terms than is customary in film studies and in Hollywood marketing and
advertising, where horror movies, fantasy films, disaster movies, alien
movies, and sci-fi flicks are usually divided into discrete categories.
I find this kind of categorization of little use, since moviegoers themselves
appear to draw no distinctions between them. If the film has a sufficiently
kick-ass monster in it, whether he, she or it is an alien, a phantom or
ghost, a terrifying supercomputer, a malignant wizard, a vicious dinosaur,
a great storm, a freak of nature, a stuffed demonic animal or toy or Satan
himself, the masses will pay to see it. Therefore, when I say monster
movie I mean any movie featuring a massively destructive force committed
single-mindedly to annihilating the human race. From this open-ended beginning,
things fall into a fairly straightforward order. There are fascist monsters
and monsters of the apocalypse. Movies with fascist monsters tend to be
films of the apocalypse (or the end of the capitalist world), and movies
with monsters of the apocalypse work according to a fascist logic, in
terms of their dominant ideograms. In general, the Hollywood aesthetic
prefers the latter.
The Mexican filmmaker Guillermo del Toro made El laberinto del fauno
(2006), which has been translated for American moviegoers as Pan’s
Labyrinth, although there is no such Pan character in the film. There
is a faun (a goat-god or horned beast), but in del Toro’s construction
of the mythological figure the Greek Pan archetype is fused with Roman
as well as other ancient religious concepts of the great goat-god to produce
a new antifascist archetype. It seems likely, however, that the English
translation’s choice of “Pan,” instead of “faun,”
was based not on American moviegoers’ general knowledge of ancient
Greek mythology, which is very doubtful, but rather on Disney’s
version of the archetype, Peter Pan.7
Del Toro was born and raised in Guadalajara, Jalisco state. While his
films for Hollywood are remarkably fresh and elegantly singular in visual
style, he is nevertheless better known in the U.S. media for his close
friendship with two other Mexican filmmakers, Alfonso Cuarón Orozco
(Great Expectations, Y tu mamá también, Harry Potter
and the Prisoner of Azkaban, and Children of Men) and Alejandro González
Iñárritu (Amores perros, 21 Grams, and Babel).
The Mexican triumvirate has indeed taken not only Hollywood by storm but
the entire cinema world, collecting dozens of nominations and several
prizes, from Cannes and Venice to the Golden Globe and Academy Awards.
In addition to his intimate association and working relationship with
Cuarón Orozco and González Iñárritu, del Toro
is famous in world cinema for having rejected a hugely lucrative deal
with Warner Brothers to make the third Harry Potter movie in
favor of work on his lifelong obsession: turning the Hellboy
comic, a Dark Horse Comics character created by Mike Mignola in 1993,
into a major motion picture, which he achieved in 2004. Hellboy
is already considered a cult classic, and del Toro’s sequel to it,
to be released in July 2008, has become one of the most anxiously anticipated
films in recent screen history.
El laberinto del fauno is explicitly about fascism, but is of
interest not simply because of its subject matter but above all because
of del Toro’s iconoclastic approach to the rendering of fascism
on screen. In obvious ways, the film came through Hollywood by way of
a distinctively non-U.S. sensibility, a Mexican sensibility in which the
question of fascist dictatorship is perceived by the filmmaker both personally
and historically. In del Toro’s case, following his father’s
kidnapping in 1998 he was forced into exile, a condition in which he remains
today. But what makes del Toro’s artistic approach to fascism so
different from that of the run-of-the-mill Hollywood production, such
as Steven Spielberg’s Schindler’s List, is his construction
of a transcendent fascist-monster archetype. Schindler’s List,
in contrast, offers fascist social types that cannot exist anywhere but
in Nazi Germany. Moreover, unlike Schindler’s List, where
there are antifascist German capitalists and fascist German capitalists
(a clever ideological invention on Spielberg’s part, since in reality
there were no German capitalists who opposed fascism), in El laberinto
del fauno, all the capitalists are behind fascism, which is shown,
as we shall see, in one of the film’s most compelling scenes.8
First, however, it is necessary to describe del Toro’s visual style
and how he constructs his distinctive fascist-monster archetype.
From El laberinto del fauno’s opening scene, we understand
ourselves to be entering a magical place that is nevertheless coldly historical.
We are in Franco’s Spain, but we are also deep in the verdant woods,
where shards of brilliant light are knifing through thick and damp foliage
above. We are traveling with a fascist cavalcade, but we are not with
them: we are neither prisoners of fascism nor its unwitting accomplices.
We occupy, in terms of our gaze, a strategic location sharply dissonant
and ideologically disjunctive in relation to Hollywood’s representation
of the fascist experience. In del Toro’s imaginary, fascism is directly
in front of us to see and fear, but its power is thrown into direct relief
against forces much larger than itself. Importantly, fascism in del Toro’s
vision is not an unhistorical, faceless and invincible evil monolith extending
its reach everywhere, nor is it, in the manner of Spielberg, hypostatized
into period piece ethno-drama (German Nazis and Jewish victims). Rather
than Satanic or ethnic, it is thoroughly human, made by particular human
beings for specific political ends. Fascism for del Toro is much more
than an individual lust for totalitarian social control—this has
been the self-serving bourgeois interpretation. Rather, it is a systematic
attack on nature, in particular on the relationship between mother and
child.
As del Toro’s camera begins following a young girl through the woods
(the fascist cavalcade has stopped so that the girl’s pregnant mother
can vomit by the side of the road), the fascists are left behind to guard
their vehicles. From this point forward the fascists scurry around like
rats on the margins of del Toro’s narrative—he never allows
them any centrality. So we realize right away that this will not be a
movie about “the fascist mentality” or how everyday people
become fascists. This liberatory feeling dawns on us the deeper the young
girl, Ofelia, moves into the forest. For there she meets a fairy, who
will soon take her to the faun’s labyrinth which is in a different
place in the woods. Like all of del Toro’s mythical figures in the
film, the fairy is strikingly concrete. Always gender-free, his fairies
avoid the typical sort of crude Hollywood anthropomorphism whereby immortal
mythical characters are loaded with mortal human attributes, a tactic
aimed apparently to make them less alien, but that usually has the opposite
effect: it closes off the imagination to everything which is not immediately
recognizable or that lacks instant human potentiality. Del Toro’s
fairy in this opening scene is tiny, and is seen fluttering around like
a butterfly, incapable of human speech but gifted at physical gesturing.
His fairies will play a central part in the tale he tells.
Before we meet the faun we meet the fascist. He is Captain Vidal, dispatched
to the mountain village of Navarra by Franco to exterminate the antifascist
resistance there. He is Ofelia’s stepfather, and Ofelia’s
mother Carmen implores her young daughter, who has yet to meet the man
(the cavalcade’s purpose is to deliver the pregnant Carmen to Captain
Vidal so he might personally secure his heir, for he has convinced himself
that Carmen’s unborn child is a boy), to always address him as father.
Ofelia flatly refuses, and for the rest of the movie we witness the consequences
of her lucid intuition, that Captain Vidal is nobody any decent human
being would ever call father. That her mother has fallen in love with
such a monster does not, however, concern Ofelia. Her mind is always in
another place.
This utopian place in Ofelia’s mind is constructed by del Toro in
two ways: through a lugubrious lullaby that begins and ends the film,
and by overlaying the film’s main story of historical fascism in
Spain with an ancient resurrection myth. In del Toro’s use of the
myth, based on the Mother Goddess archetype, a young princess wanders
away from her kingdom of eternal happiness in search of what lies beyond,
only to find herself desperately lost in the world of the mortals. In
response her parents, the king and queen, order that all the portals to
the human world be opened in the hope their lost daughter will one day
stumble onto one of them and be returned to her place at the throne. After
all but one of the portals have been unsuccessfully used up and long since
withered away, those in the kingdom of eternal happiness come to fear
the very worst, that their princess has been disappeared by the mortals
and will never return—until a fateful day in the mountains of Navarra,
when Ofelia meets a fairy who takes her to the faun.
Karen Armstrong has identified the Mother Goddess myth as the most popular
myth of the Neolithic period (8000-4000 BCE). “A meeting with the
mother goddess,” she says, “represents the ultimate adventure
of the hero, the supreme illumination.”9 At first indefinable,
since he is rendered by del Toro with the same dangerously potent ambiguity
found in the ancient Greek and Roman myths of the goat-god, the faun’s
true identity becomes clear soon enough. He belongs to the kingdom of
eternal feminine happiness, sent by the king and queen to guard the last
remaining portal to the human world, which the faun has embedded inside
a labyrinth deep in the woods. The faun explains to Ofelia her true identity
as well as her destiny: a return to the throne where she will rejoin her
mother the queen and her father the king. First though, she must complete
three tasks before the moon is full. And at the same Ofelia is carrying
out the three tasks, Captain Vidal is carrying out his own, a massacre
of the antifascist guerrilla movement. Not only is there a doubling of
characters (mortal Ofelia and Princess Ofelia; mortal Carmen and Queen
Carmen); there is also a doubling of narratives. This mythical doubling
technique is not the only thing that distinguishes del Toro’s movie
about fascism from those of mainstream Hollywood, yet it is the most crucial
and enlivening. A slight digression here is therefore required.
Doubling is an ancient aesthetic practice; it can be found in the bronzes
of Benin in Africa and in the sacred Ugaritic texts of ancient Mesopotamia
(for example, in the epic of Gilgamesh) down to the elaborate cosmology
of the Mayan Indians, articulated systematically in the Popul Vuh,
the great Mayan Quiché book of life. In ancient Greek theater doubling
is also fundamental, seen in Oedipus the King for instance, where
Oedipus’s blind misrecognition of the doubling principle is the
source of his tragic fate. It is all through Homer’s Odyssey
as well.10 Psychoanalytic theory tells us that psychic doubling
is the beginning of all human subjectivity: the moment in which the infant
child realizes, in sheer terror, that mommy is not simply an extension
of herself but a real person, with needs and interests of her own. In
defense against this frightening reality, the child creates her own double,
to serve as a reliable mommy substitute but also to anchor the fragile
self in what has become a fallen and hostile world of other people and
their own demanding subjectivities. This double will become in Freudian
theory the ego, which undergoes in his revision of his initial theory
its own process of doubling. In fact, due to the power of narcissism and
what Freud referred to as the “dynamic” capacity of the unconscious
to absorb and then reconstitute blocked narcissistic desires, the doubling
process never finally ends.11
Tellingly, Freud in his final years went back to the ancient roots of
doubling, in his then extremely controversial work, Moses and Monotheism
(1938). Here he argued that all along there were two men called Moses,
the ancient Egyptian Moses and the Midianite or Hebrew Moses: the former
a prince, priest, or high official belonging to the ancient monotheistic
cult of Aton (1358 BCE), and the latter a son of the Midianite priest
Jethro, who belonged to the cult of the volcanic god Yahweh (around 1000
BCE). Freud was very reluctant to publish the text, and consequently only
its first two parts appeared during his lifetime.12 It is,
as Edward Said pointed out in his 2003 study Freud and the Non-European,
a truly revolutionary work, “carefully opening out Jewish identity
toward its non-Jewish background.”13 Freud’s underlying
thesis, as he stated it in the foreword to the last essay of Moses,
is that “progress has forged an alliance with barbarism.”
Because, he wrote tersely, “The corruption of a text is not unlike
a murder. The problem lies not in doing the deed but in removing the traces.”14
Removing the traces of the non-European (Egyptian) roots of Judaism and
Christianity has been done in the name of progress, but it is in fact
an act of extreme violence, a mass extermination at the level of popular
memory, which itself carries recognition of an original murder, that of
the first Moses, who according to Freud was killed by the Midianites in
response to the severity of his law. The second Moses then, the Hebrew
Moses, is an ancient masquerade: a collective attempt among the
Jews to remember their crime of murdering the first Egyptian Moses, their
real father, and to atone for it. Freud explains:
Putting our conclusion in the shortest possible form of words, to
the familiar dualisms of that history (two peoples coming together to
form the nation, two kingdoms into which that nation divides, two names
for god in the source writings of the Bible) we add two new ones: two
religious inaugurations, the first forced out by the second but later
emerging behind it and coming victoriously to the fore, two religious
inaugurators, both of whom went by the same name Moses.15
Yet in the end it is the baffling staying power of monotheistic belief
that provokes Freud’s controversial query, “the task of finding
out,” he says, “how those who have faith in a Divine Being
could have acquired it, and whence this belief derives the enormous power
that enables it to overwhelm Reason and Science.”16 Here
the connection between Freud’s theory of the double Moses and mass
psychology and del Toro’s narrative of fascism in El laberinto
del fauno lies in what Freud called “the ancient ambivalence
of the father-son relationship.” “Originally a father religion,”
says Freud, “Christianity became a Son religion. The fate of having
to displace the Father it could not escape.”17
Thus, to “unravel the masquerade of appearances,” as the Caribbean
novelist Wilson Harris has nicely put it, is the true task of the artist,
who needs to assume the role of “the lost child” in order
to recall what has been erased from the oppressed community’s memory—“to
deepen its insights into the soil of place in which ancient masquerades
exist to validate the risks a community may take if it is to come abreast
of its hidden potential.”18 Ofelia is a lost child in
precisely this sense, and through her del Toro tells his story of fascism.
But before turning back to his movie, it is important to note another
compelling connection to Freud’s theory of mass psychology: that
it took a non-European to recall for the masses of Spain its traumatic
past. To judge by the lack of any mainstream Spanish films on the subject,
the Spanish people’s failure to murder Franco the fake father (whose
brutal fascist regime was allowed to persist until 1975) is a deeply disturbing
memory that they are still unwilling to bring into the light. This helps
explain del Toro’s double narrative and the character-doubling which
drives his plot. Since Franco’s fascism has been given in Spain
a kind of unchallenged hegemony at the level of official national memory,
in which both the historical crimes of his regime and the heroic antifascist
resistance to them are kept in psychic limbo, the only way to unravel
this “masquerade of appearances” is through recourse to ancient
myth, in this case the resurrection myth. It is a simple idea but a rare
one in Hollywood cinema.
For now it is enough to register two basic principles of artistic creation
in relation to mass psychology. First, that to recall a deeply repressed
traumatic past can certainly be done by the artist without recourse to
ancient myth or aesthetic doubling, but that a rational and scientific
approach to the past will have little if any impact on a political unconscious
completely invested in unrequited love and in a corresponding singular
desire to see the real world in which we live – where “the
satisfaction of some participants requires the oppression of others”
– totally abolished so that eternal happiness can spring to life.
It goes without saying that making this argument through rational and
scientific critique—for example, by proving that the inherently
destructive and radically alienating nature of capitalism more often than
not produces fascism—has consistently failed to move the masses
of humanity. Whenever the working classes and the poor have taken up arms
against capital, it has been to avoid mass starvation or another catastrophic
war. And second, in the absence of such imminent real apocalypse—that
is, the visible presence of fascism—the masses of people are not
thinking of proletarian socialist revolution but instead are consumed
with endless daydreaming and fantasy about a totally different world,
which under a capitalist-controlled media usually takes the form of monotheistic
religious belief, that Big Daddy Capital will save us all—hopefully
in the form of an apocalypse.
Del Toro’s narrative of fascism is a rejection of the monotheistic
religious turn. His concept of religion comes not from Catholicism but
from Mexican spiritualism or the Obra Espiritual, as it is popularly
known. The Mexican novelist and anthropologist Elena Poniatowska has written
authoritatively of spiritualism’s mass appeal to the Mexican poor.
“Their cultural roots have been disturbed by television and radio,”
she says, “and for them, spiritualism is more satisfying than Catholicism:
the emotions are stronger, and they are treated like ‘people.’
Spiritualism makes men and women feel as if they were chosen by God from
among all the whirling souls on Earth.” She argues that in the Obra
Espiritual, “Men and women of all ages recognize the catharsis
that occurs when they are spiritually possessed by their protectors.”19
This is clearly evident in El laberinto del fauno, where the
lost child Ofelia is spiritually possessed by her double the Princess
Ofelia, who with the help of the faun and his fairies protects her from
fascism. The fascists, in contrast, who carry out their massacres of the
poor on behalf of monotheism and the Fatherland, are left unprotected.
Not only have they cut themselves off from the ancient past, from spiritualism
in the popular sense, as the religion of the poor, but they have also
committed themselves to eradicating all memory traces of it from the land
they are militarily occupying. And this seems to be the underlying motive
for Captain Vidal’s extermination campaign in the mountains of Navarra:
to make sure the ancient resurrection myth of the Mother Goddess never
happens again.
Here the tragedy of El laberinto del fauno emerges in full view,
the tragedy of Ofelia’s mother Carmen, who has forbidden her daughter
to walk through the woods and who constantly admonishes Ofelia for reading
fairytales. And yet Carmen’s heart is not in it, thus Ofelia is
able to pursue the faun and the mission he has laid out for her without
constraint. Meanwhile Captain Vidal, being a misogynist, is blind to the
subversive activities of Ofelia and even more so to those of Mercedes,
a local villager whom he has hired to manage his household. Above all
he is indifferent to the fate of Carmen, her sole purpose on earth being
to bear him a son. Mercedes is the real hero of the story and a different
side of the Mother Goddess archetype. Sister to the antifascist underground’s
commander, she also leads a double life, playing the part of a docile
peasant woman in the face of Captain Vidal, while stealing from him medicines
and supplies and delivering messages for the resistance. All this doubling
will come to a head when Captain Vidal discovers, much too late for him
as it happens, Mercedes’ antifascist activities and Ofelia’s
support of them. The resistance prevails, but it is not a happy ending,
not by Hollywood standards: Carmen dies a horrible death in childbirth
and Ofelia is murdered by Captain Vidal. As the film’s beautiful
and haunting lullaby returns once again, the blood of Ofelia, who has
been shot in the back by Captain Vidal before she can enter the portal,
drips into the portal, triggering her resurrection. As the lullaby continues
we see Ofelia enter the kingdom of eternal feminine happiness, where she
is welcomed by her father and her mother Carmen, rendered by del Toro
in magnificent splendor, in dazzling rich red and gold hues. A huge chorus
then rises to its feet in thunderous applause, to thank Ofelia for never
once compromising with fascism.
A myth happens all the time
A myth is an event that happened once, but which also happens all
the time. An occurrence needs to be liberated from the confines of a specific
period and brought into the lives of contemporary worshippers, or it will
remain a unique, unrepeatable incident, or even a historical freak that
cannot really touch the lives of others. -- Karen Armstrong
Utopia wants speech against power and against the reality principle
which is only the phantasm of the system and its indefinite reproduction.
It wants only the spoken word; and it wants to lose itself in it.
-- Jean Baudrillard
As
earlier alluded to, the general approach in Hollywood to historical fascism
is non-mythical, even anti-mythical. Rather than liberating fascism from
“the confines of a specific period,” it does the opposite—it
de-universalizes and then sublimates the bourgeois roots of fascism by
either making “true stories” about it (Sophie’s
Choice, Marathon Man, Schindler’s List, The Pianist) or concocting
freakish, thinly-veiled allegorical monster tales about invading foreign
terrorists hell-bent on imposing fascism on democracy-loving Americans
and destroying their “way of life” (True Lies, Independence
Day, 300).
Armstrong shows that in the ancient world, “a symbol became inseparable
from its unseen referent. Because likeness constitutes some kind of identity,
it makes the invisible reality present.”20 In El
laberinto del fauno, the underlying invisible reality is a Mother
Goddess Utopia, where the mother-child bond or the Eternal Feminine is
the foundation of all human happiness. Del Toro, who was raised by a female
community headed by his grandmother, is explicit about this in the film:
what enables the visible antifascist resistance to succeed are its “invisible”
women organizers, invisible in the sense of using cunning dual identities
to trick the fascists. For example, when a male medical doctor tries to
use a double identity to fool Captain Vidal, in order to give the resistance
medical supplies, he is caught and murdered, but Mercedes always eludes
the captain, even in the midst of being tortured by him. Again, this has
to do with the captain’s misogyny: he cannot conceive of a woman
with guts enough to challenge his fascist authority. His misogyny is the
antifascist movement’s security. In this climactic scene, Mercedes’
secret role in the resistance has just been discovered by Captain Vidal,
who excitedly takes her over to his torture chamber. While preparing his
sharp and heavy metal instruments of torture, with his back turned to
Mercedes who is tied to a chair, she cuts through the rope with a paring
knife and then uses the knife on the captain’s face. Rather than
killing him, she slices a deep gash from the corner of his mouth all the
way up his cheekbone, symbolically turning him into the deformed monster
he has in reality always been. Symbolically marked as he now is, even
if the resistance loses the battle for Navarra the fascist Vidal will
never be able to disguise his true identity.
Captain Vidal has his mythical double also. He is the Pale Man, whom Ofelia
must overcome in order to achieve the second of the tasks the faun has
set for her. He is a seducer of children, who by way of a long table of
luscious foods is able to lure them into his grasp and then eat them alive.
For his malignant perversity, he has been banished by the gods to a cavern
where he is forced to sit in a state of paralysis at his table of delicious
sweets, fruits, and roast meats, his eyes gouged out and resting on a
plate in front of him. Inside the Pale Man’s cavern, where dusty
piles of children’s shoes and clothes can be seen, is the key that
will open a door inside which is a dagger, a ceremonial weapon Ofelia
needs to complete the third and final task. Needless to say, the faun
has warned Ofelia not to partake of any of the foods on the table, not
even a single grape. Yet Captain Vidal has just punished Ofelia for being
late to a dinner party by depriving her of her supper, thus she is very
hungry as she enters the Pale Man’s cavern. After locating the key,
unlocking the box with the dagger and securing it, she cannot resist the
food and eats a grape, bringing the Pale Man back to life. The Pale Man
devours two of the fairies that have gone with Ofelia to the cavern and
begins chasing her down. She narrowly escapes, and is later harshly chastised
by the faun for failing to resist her appetite.
What makes the Pale Man Captain Vidal’s double is twofold: his hatred
of children and the way he uses food to achieve his fascist objectives.
We see this early in the narrative when the captain seizes from two local
farmers, a father and son, a bag of wild rabbits they have hunted and
killed, after which he brutally murders them, and later when he imposes
on the villagers a strict food rationing program. If the villagers do
not collaborate with the fascists, they will be starved to death. Prior
to the Pale Man scene, we switch between double actions: Ofelia carrying
out her first task, which is to overthrow a giant, grotesque and stupid
toad that has occupied an ancient and beautiful tree in the forest and,
through its insatiable greed for the tree’s nutrients, is causing
it to die, and the dinner party, at which are gathered all the members
of Navarra’s ruling class, the priest, the village magistrate, the
local sheriff, the big landowners and their wives, and the county governor.
Without exception, each strongly supports Captain Vidal’s campaign
to exterminate the resistance. While Ofelia is slaying the mythical fascist
toad, the real fascists are plotting their repression of the villagers.
This narrative doubling technique structures every scene in the movie,
where the figures of historical fascism such as Captain Vidal and the
ruling-class members of Navarra are made inseparable from their “unseen
referents,” that is, the mythical symbols of fascism such as the
giant toad and the Pale Man. To put it another way, still following Armstrong’s
insight, the likeness drawn between the identity of the grotesque and
idiotic toad, as well as the deathly child-eating Pale Man, and the historical
fascist Captain Vidal makes the “invisible reality” of fascism
present. This invisible reality is the political unconscious or mass psychology:
the way fascism uses our basic libidinal attachments (“self-love,
parental and infant love, friendship, general love of humanity, and even
dedication to concrete objects as well as to abstract ideas,” in
Freud’s words) on behalf of concentrating economic power and putting
down laboring-class resistance to bourgeois oppression. In so doing, it
also seeks to eradicate from popular memory any and all myths that tell
the story of an original crime: the murder of ancient communalism by an
emergent capitalist class.
In El laberinto del fauno, this idea is subtle and complex. For
example, not until the final scene does it become clear that Captain Vidal
murdered Ofelia’s father in order to replace him as Carmen’s
husband and steal from them the rights to their unborn son, by claiming
the child as his own. For it turns out that the faun’s final task
for Ofelia is to use the ceremonial dagger on her newborn brother. The
spilling of his blood, the faun tells her, will open the portal whereupon
she will be returned to the kingdom of eternal happiness. It is a clever
stratagem, of course: the final test is not the sacrifice of her brother
but proof of Ofelia’s purity of heart. She passes the test, choosing
her own mortality over taking the life of her brother to gain immortality.
And so there mortal Ofelia perishes, at the mouth of the portal, shot
in the back by Vidal in pursuit of Ofelia’s brother, whom she has
taken to the faun’s labyrinth to hide him from the captain. He kills
Ofelia, after grabbing the child from her. But as mortal Ofelia dies,
immortal Ofelia is resurrected to her rightful place at the throne, next
to her mother the queen. Meanwhile, with the child clenched in his arms,
Captain Vidal emerges from the labyrinth, thinking he has prevailed. Yet
at its entrance he is greeted by the leaders of the antifascist resistance.
“Tell my son…Tell him what time his father died. Tell him
that I…” he orders the resistance leaders, after Mercedes
has taken the child from him and begins preparing his execution. “No,”
she says plainly. “He won’t even know your name.”
Perhaps the most striking example of cosmic doubling in del Toro’s
narrative is that between Ofelia’s unborn brother and a mandrake
root. Given to Ofelia by the faun, to aid Ofelia in the care of her deathly
ill mother Carmen, the mandrake root, through Ofelia’s nurturing,
comes alive: she feeds and protects the root as if it were her own infant
child. Kept in hiding under her mother’s sick bed, the mandrake
root begins to flourish, and its growth and happiness cures Carmen of
her illness, baffling both her physician and Captain Vidal. The captain
is of course very pleased to see this development, for it convinces him
fate is working in his favor, that his heir will soon be born and in good
health. In a scene that leads to the film’s conclusion—the
resurrection of Ofelia to the throne and the execution of Captain Vidal—the
captain discovers the mandrake root and brutally murders it, provoking
the unborn child’s premature birth and with it massive hemorrhaging
in the body of Carmen. Like every scene in the movie of violent death
caused by Captain Vidal and his fascist henchmen, Carmen’s death
is accompanied by the birth of new life, the birth of Ofelia’s brother.
Importantly, the mandrake root has cosmological significance in many ancient
religions, from the lands of China to Palestine. Its magical, heavenly
properties, given that the plant is both poisonous and has a human semblance,
tend to be alchemical in nature. In ancient mythology the idea is that,
if not treated delicately and with special knowledge of its dynamic life-giving
potential, the mandrake root can take the form of a dangerous weapon,
since it is believed that if dug up without forethought and care the mandrake
will become murderously violent. In the Book of Genesis, the mandrake
is referred to as a “love plant,” and this view of the mandrake
can be found in other ancient religions as well—that it stimulates
conception. The mandrake is therefore a symbol of the life force, but
it is also an actual medicinal plant, thus it is itself the ultimate double,
and as such possesses the most force among del Toro’s many monster
archetypes. To put it another way, when put in the context of modern fascism
the ancient myth of the mandrake root becomes, like del Toro’s other
mythical archetypes, loaded with political signifying power. Contempt
for the life force, the life force here being represented by the mandrake,
is the hallmark of fascism, and it is exactly the fascist’s hatred
for everything alive which brings about his own violent death.
Now we can return to Freud’s theory of mass psychology with a better
understanding of the relations between the political unconscious and the
creative artist. Without recourse to pre-capitalist mythology, imaginative
narratives of historical movements such as modern fascism run the risk
of confining themselves to specific places and times, as if the true history
of fascism is begun the moment the narrative departs and ends as the narrative
reaches its denouement. While this is a straightforward problem—the
attempt to create a whole world entirely sealed off from the dialectic
of history, by removing all traces of it from the work of art—the
deeper, much less resolvable one has to do with the definition of a common
humanity. Del Toro’s solution is to use ancient cosmologies that
are extremely multi-voiced but that at the same time always return to
the same common lullaby, a primal scene in which our development as a
species begins with faith in the movement of history itself, that history’s
forward march is unstoppable because of the life force in us all. It takes
concrete shape with proper respect paid to the Mother Goddess archetype
in everyday life, through careful cultivation of the mother-child bond.
When this type of secular worship is disrespected and repressed fascism
takes control, and when it is enabled to flourish our hidden potential
comes to life. The political unconscious then is the place where our hidden
potential resides, and it is always being added onto, from ancient times
down to the present.
Most liberating about del Toro’s story of fascism in this respect
is that the ancient archetypes he chooses to draw on, those he perceives
as most deeply embedded in humanity’s collective unconscious, are
all about the self-emancipation of women, which in his view is inseparable
from a militant confrontation with patriarchal repression. To confront
patriarchal repression—embodied in del Toro’s vision by Franco’s
Spain—without recourse to the Mother Goddess archetype is to squander
a ripe opportunity, he suggests: the opportunity to create through the
political unconscious, or rather in direct relation to it, a new concept
of emancipation, a concept that has deep roots in our common ancestral
past. That is, del Toro’s aesthetics belong to the revolutionary
antifascist tradition not simply because his mythical heroes and heroines
risk their lives fighting the fascist movement, but rather because of
the way their heroic actions are “brought into the lives of contemporary
worshippers,” to borrow Armstrong’s insightful phrase—in
the way del Toro deliberately undermines the deceptive and self-serving
bourgeois “common sense” perception of fascism as “a
unique, unrepeatable incident, or even a historical freak.”21
Del Toro wants us to see that the blundering endurance of male supremacy
is also the staying power of fascism as ideology, that antifeminism is
the “invisible reality” of fascism, for without it fascist
movements lose their connection to mass psychology.
Pan’s Labyrinth arrives at this enlightened understanding
of fascism through del Toro’s double narrative technique, yet the
double narrative is itself never schematic or formulaic, it is always
dialectical. Rejecting confinement to a specific period, even though the
film has an explicit historical setting, del Toro’s achievement
is the linking together in the single figure of fascism “two incommensurable
realities,” the individual experience under fascist oppression and,
to continue with Jameson’s terminology, “the vaster forms
of institutional society.” In del Toro’s conception, these
forms of institutional society transcend individual fascists such as Franco,
Mussolini, and Hitler. In fact, what makes del Toro’s fascist monsters
so alien to Hollywood’s favored method of rendering fascism on screen,
a method by which we remain “in the world of common reality”
and “are spared all trace of the uncanny,” as Freud put it
in his analysis of the uncanny in fairytales and literature, is precisely
their uncanny dual identities.
Freud’s theory of the uncanny is instructive here. It is a feeling,
he says, which “cannot arise unless there is a conflict of judgment
whether things which have been ‘surmounted’ and are regarded
as incredible are not, after all possible.”22 The problem
in literary tales of the uncanny, Freud argued—from Homer and Dante
to Shakespeare and Oscar Wilde—is that they bring about “events
which never or very rarely in fact happen.” While in the fairytale
this problem “is excluded from the beginning by the setting of the
story,” in literature the storyteller’s “less imaginary”
setting still maintains a sharp distinction from the real world, “by
admitting spiritual entities such as daemonic influences or departed spirits.”
And as a consequence of remaining “within their setting of poetic
reality,” he concludes, “their usual attribute of uncanniness
fails to attach to such beings.”23
As we have seen, del Toro’s monster movie of fascism begins not
in fairytale land but in historical reality—Franco’s Spain
in 1944—and his mythical entities are actually doubles of real historical
fascists. Crucially, they do not pretend to live in common reality. Instead,
their uncanniness lies in their deeper ancestral identity: they are transcending
figures inhabiting the collective unconscious and as such can be brought
into common reality at any moment. They are always historically possible.
Thus the incredibly possible in del Toro’s aesthetics is
not what fascism once did to humanity but that it is always ready to do
it again. Accordingly, a vital part of the struggle against fascism is
at the level of myth. To prevent fascists from returning to power, the
constant production of counter-myths is necessary, new myths of antifascist
resistance derived from the collective unconscious in which the abiding
wish among the masses of humanity is to be forever free of such monsters.
The breakthrough del Toro makes is to animate this ancient human desire
without losing any of its uncanniness—without acting as if we have
already surmounted it. This he achieves by showing the centrality of male
supremacy in fascist ideology. For del Toro, the opposite is true: we
have not finished with antifascist resistance, we are really just beginning.
Notes
1. Sigmund Freud, Mass Psychology and Other Writings, trans. Jim Underwood
(London: Penguin Modern Classics, 2004), 26, 22.
2. The Letters of Sigmund Freud, selected and edited Ernst L. Freud (New
York: Basic Books, 1960), 46f.
3. Freud, Mass Psychology, 41.
4.
Freud, Mass Psychology, 11, 117.
5. Of the 50 top-grossing movies of all time in the United States, only
one isn’t about either the supernatural/paranormal or an apocalyptic
event—the 2002 film My Big Fat Greek Wedding. This low-budget movie
about normal everyday people embroiled in the chaotic, frustrating and
often joyous details of normal everyday American life rests at number
fifty. Next to the other 49, My Big Fat Greek Wedding is like an evolutionary
biologist forced to sit through a Billy Graham sermon at a sold out football
stadium: in front of it is a spectacular religious monolith. Most of these
films feature swashbuckling humans with superpowers fighting back rampaging
forces of catastrophic evil (Spider-Man, Batman, Men in Black, The Incredibles,
Transformers, Star Wars, Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings, The Matrix),
while the rest are about rampaging catastrophic evil getting the better
of the humans (Jaws, Titanic, Jurassic Park, Independence Day, Twister),
or animals who have replaced humans in this eternal battle between good
and evil and turn out to be more successful at it (Shrek, Finding Nemo,
The Lion King, Toy Story 2, Monsters, Inc.).
6. Fredric Jameson, Marxism and Form (Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1971), 6f.
7. In Greek mythology Pan is a goat-god and an important nature spirit.
His name means “herdsman,” and Pan plays a central part in
many ancient Greek legends, such as the battle with the Titans and in
the myth of Echo. In both tales Pan becomes closely associated with his
famous flute. The Roman version of Pan is Faunus, from which the Indo-European
name “faun” derives. Many ancient religions have a Pan-like
god or horned beast, and in most cases he is an archetype of virility.
Of course many Americans associate Pan with Walt Disney’s version
of the archetype, Peter Pan, a boy who refuses to grow up. Del Toro’s
version of Pan is a hybridic re-creation of the ancient concept of the
goat-god, and thus the term “faun” is much closer than “Pan”
to what del Toro intends.
8. Henry Ashby Turner sets out in his history of the German capitalist
class and Hitlerism, German Big Business and the Rise of Hitler (New York:
Oxford, 1985) to disprove the myth that German financiers were responsible
for significantly funding the Nazi Party. He shows that the bourgeois
parties – the DVP (Deutsche Volkspartei), the DDP (Deutsche Demokratische
Partei), and the DNVP (Deutsche Nationale Volkspartei) – were in
fact badly disorganized and as a result had no coherent policy in favor
of Nazism. But he provides no evidence that even a single German capitalist
offered any organized resistance to fascism.
9. Karen Armstrong, A Short History of Myth (New York: Canongate, 2005),
54.
10. See Armstrong’s Short History of Myth for a concise and eloquent
explanation of ancient doubling, in particular her chapters “The
Early Civilizations” and “The Axial Age.”
11. Freud writes in The Ego and the Id (New York: Norton, 1989) that “When
the ego assumes the features of the object, it is forcing itself, so to
speak, upon the id as a love-object and is trying to make good the id’s
loss by saying: ‘Look, you can love me too—I am so like the
object’” (24). This “antithesis between the coherent
ego and the repressed which is split off from it,” Freud argued,
is the beginning of psychoanalytic practice (9).
12. Sigmund Freud, Moses and Monotheism, trans. Katherine Jones (New York:
Random House, 1939).
13. Edward Said, Freud and the Non-European (London and New York: Verso,
2003).
14. Freud, Mass Psychology, 202.
15. Freud, Mass Psychology, 210.
16. Moses and Monotheism, 157.
17. Moses and Monotheism, 175.
18. Wilson Harris, “A Note on the Genesis of The Guyana Quartet,”
The Guyana Quartet (Boston and London: Faber & Faber, 1985), 13f.
19. See Elena Poniatowska’s masterpiece, Here’s to You, Jesusa!
(New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2001), for a full description
of the Obra espiritual, in particular her elegant Introduction to the
text, which is a memoir as told to Poniatowska by Josefina Bórquez,
a working-class Mexican woman born and raised in Oaxaca, who spent most
of her life in the barrios of Mexico City.
20. A Short History of Myth, 69.
21. Armstrong, A Short History of Myth, 70.
22. Sigmund Freud, “The ‘Uncanny,’” in On Creativity
and the Unconscious, ed. Benjamin Nelson (New York: Harper & Row,
1958), 158.
23. Freud, “The ‘Uncanny,’” 158f.
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