I am a
trans woman, and I love The Silence of the Lambs.
I know,
I know, I know. I shouldn’t. The serial killer that FBI trainee Clarice
Starling attempts to capture kills women so he can cut off their skin and wear
it as a suit. He puts on dresses and makeup and dances around to “Goodbye
Horses.” Despite the film’s attempts to insist that Buffalo Bill isn’t trans,
all anyone remembers of the character is the scenes in which he seems to be
making a cruel mockery of trans womanhood (to say nothing of queerness more
generally). What’s more, the entire film is about the ways that women are forced
to navigate a world of men who look down on them at best and want to kill them
at worst. It places Bill within that rubric — and firmly on the “man” side of
the ledger.
To say
seeing Silence at a formative age made accepting my own transness harder would
be an understatement. I came of age in the 1990s, and movies like Silence of
the Lambs and The Crying Game, which at least tried to suggest that trans
people might be actual humans, blended together with the transphobic comedy of
movies like Ace Ventura: Pet Detective. There were two paths for me, according
to pop culture: mortal terror or huge joke.
But,
but, but — Silence of the Lambs gave me a framework to think about myself
before I knew who I was in the way it treated Clarice Starling, a woman cast
adrift in an ocean of men. It treated Buffalo Bill like a human being, even if
the many copycat killers in films and TV and books (including a J.K. Rowling
novel just last year) were disastrously bad for trans representation. It
featured gorgeous and humane filmmaking from director Jonathan Demme and
sumptuous cinematography that blended light with shadow from director of
photography Tak Fujimoto. Also! Jodie Foster and Anthony Hopkins, giving two
great film performances! A terrific script! “American Girl” by Tom Petty and
the Heartbreakers!
Silence
of the Lambs is a perfect movie — except it’s also a movie that helped
perpetuate one of the worst, most transphobic stereotypes of all. I can hold
these two ideas in my head, but when it comes time to talk about the movie,
especially on social media platforms, it’s far easier to simply dig in my heels
and argue either “I love this movie!” or “This movie is transphobic!” without
leaving room for nuance.
There
has to be a better way.
How to
do a movie content warning
One
approach to talking about problematic elements of older movies while still
leaving room for those movies to be widely viewed is to precede them with a
content warning. Most of these content warnings take the form of a short card
before the film or show, in the manner of what Disney+ offered to precede 18
episodes of The Muppet Show. These cards are easy to produce, but necessarily
vague. The warnings on The Muppet Show say any given episode with offensive
elements “includes negative depictions and/or mistreatment of people or
cultures.”
Far
better, I thought, was the introduction HBO Max added to Gone With the Wind,
featuring Turner Classic Movies host Jacqueline Stewart, a film scholar who is
the chief artistic and programming officer for the Academy Museum of Motion
Pictures. (TCM and HBO Max are both owned by WarnerMedia.) The introduction was
added after the service briefly pulled the movie last summer for racist
depictions of Black people and the film’s celebration of the Confederacy.
Stewart’s
intro places the film within the context of American history and explains why
the movie is so important to film history specifically. It also explains why so
many people objected to the film even when it was being made — NAACP president
Walter White shared the group’s concerns about the film when producer David O.
Selznick purchased the rights to Margaret Mitchell’s book in 1937 — much less
today, when viewers are even more aware of the problematic elements that are
core to the film.
Adding
this disclaimer prompted accusations that the streaming service was trying to
cancel or censor the movie. Too often, we love the things we love so much that
we interpret any criticism of them as criticism of ourselves. The flip side can
also be true: When we see the problematic elements in something, others still
liking the film can feel like tacit support for those problems. Stewart’s
introduction neatly finds a way to assuage concerns on both sides.
“Some
people really need to understand why it’s important to recognize the challenges
of Hattie McDaniel [a Black actor who plays Mammy in Gone With the Wind], with
the racism she experienced in making the film and even when she received an
Oscar for it. That is an aspect of Gone With the Wind that we cannot ignore,”
Stewart told me. “For people who would like to just hate it or erase it, we
can’t deny that this is the highest-grossing film of all time. This is a film
that elevated film to the status it has in American cultural life. Its set
design and costuming and cinematography are all masterful. It’s a film you have
to look at if you’re well-versed in classic film.”
On its
TV channel, TCM has gone even beyond the Gone With the Wind disclaimer. For the
month of March, its Thursday night programming will feature classic movies that
contain racist, sexist, homophobic, and transphobic elements. But those movies
will be preceded and followed by discussions among the network’s hosts meant to
explore what is good and what is troubling about these films, a series the
channel is calling Classics Reframed. Sample titles that will feature these
conversations include Gone With the Wind, but also Breakfast at Tiffany’s
(which features Mickey Rooney playing a Japanese man in a broad, over-the-top
performance that leans on stereotypes), Psycho (which features yet another man
in a dress killing people), and eight others. (TCM will also present a handful
of other older movies with difficult elements in them on Thursdays, without the
introductions.)
I’ve
seen a several of these segments, and they are thoughtful without being
hectoring, offering a take on these films that allows them to retain their
importance to film history while also calling them out for the elements that
need to be called out. They reminded Stewart of one of her favorite elements of
going to the movies.
“One of
the things that’s so powerful about movies is that they’re a social medium, if
you think about the ways we’ve normally watched them,” Stewart said. “I loved
it when, back in the day, you’d go to a movie theater, and sometimes people
would start having a conversation about the movie in the lobby. We need more
spaces for that kind of interactive dialogue.”
As an
example, in one segment, TCM’s most senior host Ben Mankiewicz cites The
Searchers as one of his favorite movies ever made. The 1956 Western, directed
by John Ford and starring John Wayne, is explicitly about a virulent racist
whose hatred of Native Americans causes him to search out his young niece, who
was taken by Native Americans at a young age and has (he fears) become a part
of Native tribal culture. He doesn’t want to bring her back to her family; he
wants to kill her.
Mankiewicz
points out in the segment that even in 1956, the wrongness of the protagonist’s
point of view would be noted by an audience that was much more inured to racist
depictions of Native Americans on film. But the movie also features a white
person playing a Native American, and Mankiewicz connects these dots: White
American viewers in 1956 (and often also in 2021) wanted to think about the
evils of prejudice, but didn’t really want to think about whose land they were
living on.
Conversation
can keep movies with troubling elements alive, while providing necessary
context
In an
interview, Mankiewicz pointed out that though none of the conversations we’re
having around these movies are new — as mentioned, the NAACP was already
pushing back against Gone With the Wind when it was being made, and GLAAD
picketed the 1992 Oscars (where The Silence of the Lambs won several awards) to
protest the film’s depiction of Buffalo Bill — our cultural conversations
change all the time, while the movies remain what they’ve always been. Shifting
the way we talk about these movies is a vital aspect in keeping them as part of
our culture.
“I hope
that what we’re doing in these conversations enhances your enjoyment of the
movie. We’re still going to be talking about race and gender and sexual
orientation when my daughter is my age, but I very much hope that we’re still
going to be watching Psycho and The Searchers and Stagecoach, too. I want those
movies to remain part of the conversation,” Mankiewicz said.
What’s
also true of these films is that they were often cultural milestones in their
time. McDaniel became the first Black performer ever to win an Oscar for her
performance, and TCM host Dave Karger, also part of Reframed, points to the
1961 film The Children’s Hour as an early depiction of LGBTQ lives onscreen.
Yet what was daring in 1961 now seems held back by tropes that were new when it
came out and today feel constraining and out of touch.
“In
1961, here were Shirley MacLaine and Audrey Hepburn playing characters that may
or may not be lesbians, even though they couldn’t use the word lesbian at the
time. It was terrific that these two actresses at the top of the list played
these roles,” Karger said. “But you have this trope that we’ve seen so many
times in films with gay characters, where the character who was gay ends up
dead by the end of the movie. That’s unfortunate, but it doesn’t mean you have
to feel bad for ever loving the movie. It just means you have a little bit more
of an open eye.”
This is
a frequent point that came up again and again in my conversations about content
warnings: Loving a movie with problematic elements doesn’t mean you have to
feel bad. It just means you might have something more to consider when you
watch it. Yes, a defensive stance can be an understandable approach. But
getting past that defensiveness to a broader empathy is necessary for these
conversations.
“Roger
Ebert once said that movies are empathy machines. You can see movies from all
over the world, made by a variety of people, and begin to understand other
people’s stories and have more empathy for what they’re going through,” said
TCM host Alicia Malone. “I have to have a real self-investigation when I feel
defensive. What am I trying to hold on to? I’ve had a lot of realizations
around my own privilege and my own blind spots. For a time there, I was so
scared to talk about anything to do with racism in America because I’m a white
girl from Australia. What could I possibly have to contribute to this
conversation? But I realized how much of a privileged point of view that is.”
No,
having a conversation doesn’t give viewers carte blanche to just forgive
horrible elements in a movie, and there may be a small handful of historically
significant films that, nevertheless, might be so toxic that they are better
consigned to study by film scholars, rather than being widely rebroadcast.
(Multiple people I talked to for this story cited D.W. Griffith’s Birth of a
Nation — which sparked a resurgence in the Ku Klux Klan — as a film that might
fit that bill.) But having that conversation, even in a series of TV segments,
is at least a good start.
“My hope
is that this series will inspire people to have their own conversations about
these films. Whatever we’re talking about on air is just the starting point. I
hope it will then carry over into longer conversations,” Stewart said. “We’re
in a moment right now where we can’t come together in the same ways we are
accustomed to. People are isolated in our homes and consuming a lot of this
stuff in lockdown, but that makes it even more necessary to start from the inside
out and have these conversations with your family and friends.”
How do
you solve a problematic movie? How do you make a content warning work?
By Emily VanDerWerff. VOX, March 8, 2021.
No comments:
Post a Comment