By Liz Ferguson
http://blogs.montrealgazette.com/2013/03/08/cinematheque-offers-another-chance-to-see-the-perverts-guide-to-ideology-featuring-slavoj-zizek/
[…]
On the web site Truthout.org,
Yosef Brody writes: “(Zizek’s) main thesis is that ideology in
its most powerful form is hidden from the view of the person who submits to it.
Once it can be clearly perceived it effectively loses its power of social
control; obversely, to believe oneself to be non-ideological is actually
equivalent to being driven primarily by ideology.”
“No matter which orthodoxy we may live under, Zizek
explains, we usually enjoy our ideology, and that is part of its function.
Paradoxically, it hurts to step outside of it and examine it critically; by
default we tend to resist seeing the world from any angle other than the one
fed to us.”
(Hence the presentation of the scene from John Carpenter’s
film They Live, in which the hero and his best friend have a
knock-down-drag-out fight because the friend is unwilling to try on the
truth-revealing sunglasses for even a moment.)
James Wilson, producer of The Pervert’s Guide to
Ideology, told Screen Daily: “The film is undercut by a witty
and obscene sense of humour which is his alchemy. He isn’t a mad professor, he
is compelling. When he does his analysis he is thinking as he does it. Sophie
has an idea of what she wants him to talk about but it is quite ad hoc. He was
inspired by things on set sometimes.”
“He is constructing ideas as he talks. He builds to
incredible observations which become like a dramatic performance. It’s not
pre-planned but has intellectual drama which he ties together in a brilliant
way. From the Bible, to Donald Rumsfeld, to the London riots, to A Clockwork
Orange, it all comes together like a speech in a great play.”
“This is a film about thinking. The film essay is a really
exciting and underexplored form. This should be like a workout for your brain,
a mind-gym. This is a film about the excitement of thinking, like the best
lecture you ever went to.”
In a Skype interview with Scott Macaulay of Filmmaker
Magazine, director Sophie Fiennes said: “Cinema is a great tool to explore
ideology, because what [Zizek] calls ideology goes much further than the
assumption of ideology as being some sort of explicit text, like a religious or
political text that you’re meant to follow. It’s more, as Zizek says in the
Taxi Driver sequence, that ideology is how we fill in the gaps where things
can’t be explained, where we’re trying to make something feel like it has
meaning in our lives. Fantasy obviously connects to dream, [and the film is
about] how that holds together the ways in which we reason our place in
society. . .”
“It’s all about belief, and so there are crossovers between
[cultural theory] and cinema, which is also the art of suspending disbelief and
believing in society. . .”
“Ideologies are kind of dreams, even at the most extreme,
explicit, crude levels, like Nazism, which is a dream of a cohesive Germany
without this disturbing element.”
BTW: Don’t be in a rush to leave before the credits are
over, or you’ll miss something funny.
[…]
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