I have written about
John Carpenter's Halloween (1978) on several occasions.
In The Films of John Carpenter (2000); in Horror
Films of the 1970s (2002), and here on this blog. And yet despite this fact, I am drawn to
revisit the film again and again, across the years, to further detect new and
intriguing aspects of the masterpiece.
So the question becomes: what is it, precisely, about John Carpenter's Halloween that stands up to --- and actually encourages -- continued, intense scrutiny?
And hell, it isn't just
my scrutiny either, it's the scrutiny of other scholars, authors, bloggers,
list-makers and admirers the globe around. Over thirty years after the film's
release, Halloween's reputation only continues to grow.
But the answer to the question about the Tao of Halloween, The Tao of Michael Myers, is deceptively simple, and it very much concerns my favorite cinematic conceit: visual form echoing narrative content.
Specifically, as percipients of Halloween, we gaze intently at that blank, white, featureless mask of "The Shape," Michael Myers, and then immediately recognize, at least subconsciously, that we are missing some crucial aspect of understanding.
Michael's true motives --
just like his concealing, ivory face-mask -- are not entirely filled in; not
fully circumscribed. His personality and purpose seems oddly incomplete, and
thus the shadowy, featureless mask fully and trenchantly reflects our inability
to conceptualize or understand the thing that he represents. From this lack of
understanding grows the seeds of terror. Why does Michael kill? Is he
the Boogeyman? What drives him? How does he survive point-blank
bullet strikes? As in life, Halloween provides
no easily digestible answer to myriad questions about mortality and murder,
destiny, choice, and chance.
Yet Halloween does
brilliantly provide the attentive viewers some intriguing clues about Michael
Myers and the things he signifies. Some of these hints actually seem to
conflict with one another; and some are just barely enunciated. But again, this
very facet of ambiguity makes the film (and the iconic character himself)
resonate more powerfully in our minds. In other words, Halloween lets
our imagination fill in the narrative, explanatory gaps, and again, a sense of
terror takes hold. We see reflected in that blank, chilling mask all the things
we fear -- all the things we don't understand -- about our
lives in this mortal coil.
Basically -- to boil it
down -- I believe that Halloween provides us at least
four important "leads" about Michael Myers true and highly unusual
nature (and it is important to remember that all of these clues don't take into
account the "Laurie is his sister"-revisionism of
the sequels. and the remake). These clues are, in no specific order:
This is the Freudian-interpretation of John Carpenter's Halloween. As you may be aware, the Id is a component of Freud's so-called "psychic apparatus" or "structural model for the human psyche." Basically, the Id houses our unconscious, our basic drives, our instincts. It controls our desire for sex and our other appetites too. It is amoral, chaotic and egocentric.
Consider now the
buttoned-down, Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis), both a good student and a
responsible babysitter. She clearly symbolizes the rationalist Ego, the part of
us that holds the reigns of control over our lives and seeks to
"please" the Id in a socially and culturally acceptable fashion. The
Ego represents common sense; even consciousness itself. This is the Freudian
"borrowed face," the veneer of appropriateness we all put on over our
Ids.
Accordingly, underneath
the mask, Michael represents Laurie's Id, unfettered and on-the-loose, lashing
out at those around her who more "honestly" contend with their drives
and libidos (Annie and Linda) than do the Ego. Laurie even seems to
"activate" Michael Myers, at least in a sense, by singing
aloud a modern magical incantation (a ballad) on the day he stalks her. The
lyrics to that ballad go: "I wish I had you all alone, just the two of
us," and set up, rather nicely, the thrust of Michael's murderous
mission on October 31st. He systematically kills all of Laurie's friends and
acquaintances until it is, indeed, just the two of them. They have sex (or hope
to have sex), and he destroys them because they express what Laurie cannot.
Now, of course, some
readers may rightly remind me that Michael cannot possibly be a product of
Laurie's Id, since Michael was alive and killing before she was even born (back
in 1963). That's right...but do we know for certain that Laurie's mission of
murder isn't the very thing imprinted upon that mentally-deranged mind behind
the blank-white mask?
Horror scholar and
professor Vera Dika wrote that "Carpenter openly represents Michael as
Laurie's "id." This reading is supported by the inclusion of footage
from Forbidden Planet (1956)...The earlier film had portrayed
a situation in which the unconscious desires, or the id, of the main character
became manifest and threatened to destroy him and his world. Similarly, Laurie
is almost destroyed by the strength of her repressed unconscious impulses. Her
battle with Michael is a substitute for the sexual act." (Vera Dika, Games
of Terror: Halloween, Friday the 13th and the Films of the Stalker Cycle.
Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1990, page 51).
John Carpenter himself
lends some credence to this Freudian interpretation of Halloween by
noting that Laurie, "The one girl who is the most sexually uptight
just keeps stabbing this guy with a long knife...Not because she's a virgin but
because all that repressed sexual energy starts coming out. She uses all those
phallic symbols on the guy...she doesn't have a boyfriend, and she finds
someone -- him." (Danny Peary, Cult Movies. Delacorte
Press, 1981, page 126).
This theory won't
exactly find popularity with feminists or "Final Girl" proponents,
since it positions Laurie as the repressed "creator" of the monster
in Halloween, not a Girl-Powered heroine. Her suppressed
sexual appetite and longing is the drive that brings Michael to life and even
selects his victims. In this way, the noble Laurie somehow becomes responsible
for Michael; or at the very least, connected to him in a very
intimate, very personal way.
2. Michael Myers is Just a Developmentally Arrested Child Playing Halloween Tricks.
There's a such a thing as "psychological neoteny," the retention by adults of what are generally considered juvenile traits. In Halloween, Michael Myers seems "arrested" n an early point of childhood, acting out instances of so-called play but, because of his delayed maturity, failing to understand the true consequences of his actions.
A hallmark of childhood
is the total and immersive interface with a world of make-believe play. In
theory, make-believe play should teach a child to self-regulate and even learn
self-discipline; a quality known as "executive function." But in
Michael's specific case, nothing positive results from the fact that his mind
is "frozen," essentially, in childhood. It's as though he's an
overgrown kid, playing an elaborate trick-or-treat game without any
acknowledgment of the harm that very game is causing to others outside himself.
It is impossible to deny
the "game"-like aspects of Myers' behavior in the original Halloween. He
sets a "stage" or "show "for Laurie in Lindsey's house a
prank involving the corpses of her friends and a stolen grave
marking/head-stone. Also, at least to some extent, it seems that Michael
strongly identifies with young Tommy Doyle...since he follows the boy home from
school too. Halloween II and later films seem to forget
that Michael actually stalked two people on October 31st,
1978: Laurie and Tommy. I suggest that this is because Michael
is essentially delayed at Tommy's age and somehow sees Doyle as a contemporary;
or surrogate; someone his own age.
Michael evidences some
interesting physical reactions after he kills the teenagers on Halloween night
that also, if interpreted in a certain way, bolster this theory. He just stares
and looks at them, tilting his head to one side. You must wonder if this is
because the dead are -- counter to his expectations -- not getting up and
continuing to play. Michael has killed them, but doesn't really
understand the finality of death. He is thus quizzical and curious over the
corpses, wondering why the teens don't want to play anymore. We can also judge
that Michael is developmentally arrested at/or around 1963, the time when he
committed his first murder (an action that no doubt also slowed down his formal
education, another characteristic of many with delayed maturity.)
Early in Halloween,
there is a fascinating if brief scene set in a high school English class.
Laurie is in attendance, listening only sporadically as an off-screen teacher
drones on endlessly about the concept of fate in literature.
The unseen instructor
then asks Laurie about her reading assignment, and Laurie answers by making a
distinction between two authors, Samuels and Costaine. She notes that "Costaine
wrote that fate was only somehow related to religion, where Samuels felt that
fate was like a natural element; like Earth, Air, Fire and Water." The
teacher further notes that Lauriie is correct, that Samuels definitely "personified" fate.
"It [fate[ stands" where a "man passes away."
Who else stands where a
man passes away? Michael, of course, a character who survives
stabbings and shootings and keeps on coming like a freight train. He is Fate
"Personified" (as Samuels dictated) and you can't kill something like
Earth, Air, Fire or Water, can you?
This revelation of
Michael as Agent of Fate opens up the whole "Boogeyman" Argument;
that perhaps there is actually a fifth natural element, Earth, Air, Fire,
Water...And Evil. And that Michael as a representative of this
natural force is thus unstoppable; in kiddie slang, The Boogeyman.
The film's discussion of
fate contextualizes Michael not as a supernatural avenger, but
as a heightened, natural one. He is not magical, but rather a force as natural
(and as essential?) as Air or Water. So there is an order to the
universe, it's not just what we had in mind...
4. Michael Myers is an Indictment of Contemporary, Rational Society: The Undiagnosable Amok in The Scientific World
Finally, I believe Halloween suggests
(or at least implies...) that Michael Myers represents some kind of modern-day
"dragon" in a society that no longer recognizes dragons as real
monsters.
As I wrote in The
Films of John Carpenter, Halloween willfully
"deconstructs" our technological, contemporary world so that (as
viewers experiencing the film) we actually appear have more in common with
ancient proto-humans huddling in caves than with our rational, 21st century
brethren. In particularly, nothing in Halloween works
the way it is supposed to work by our "rationalist,"
"daylight" brand of thinking.
To wit: Dr. Loomis
(Donald Pleasance) is a total and complete failure as a psychologist, unable
not only to heal Michael Myers, but to understand what drives him. Loomis's
role in Halloween is not that of a doctor, nor of a
psychiatrist, but explicitly that of St. George: hunting down and
slaying the dragon. But specifically, Michael Myers suffers from no diagnosable
or treatable psychological disorder. He is "purely and simply Evil."
If you look in the DSM-IV, you won't find "Evil" listed as a malady.
It is utterly unacceptable that
rational, middle-class teenagers in Haddonfield should die at the knife of
Michael Myers on the eve of the 21st century. That's just not supposed
to happen in modern-day America. For one thing, there is the blanket of
parental protection and love, which should shield children, right? Yet in Halloween,
the parents (and most adults for that matter...) are mostly an afterthought. We
see Laurie's father only briefly, never see the school
teacher, and never get to meet the parents of Lynda, Annie, or
even Tommy Doyle. Adults do not represent a positive, let alone helpful force
in this horror vision.
Well, okay, if parents
can't help save the children (representing our tomorrows...), then there's
modern medicine and cutting-edge science, which should not only diagnose
Michael, but keep him behind bars. Right? Not surprisingly, it fails too. The
"system" fails, and Michael escapes.
All right, what about
another important societal construct then: the law? Well, kindly Sheriff
Brackett can't even protect his own daughter, let alone capture a mad-dog
killer! Not a single cop on patrol even notices Michael's car parked on the
street!
In other words, all of
our carefully-constructed traditional bureaucracies and cherished codes of
justice, belief and conduct ultimately offer Annie, Lynda and Bob zero
protection. These kids are on their own. They are prey.
In fact, these teens
have it much worse than our cave-men ancestors in pre-history. At least the
cave-men knew to be afraid, knew to fear the forces in the dark that
they could not comprehend. The characters in Halloween are
thoroughly unprepared and unable to conceive of a reality that includes Michael
Myers, and that's why they are such easy pickings. The movie thus indicts
modern society rather fully: it is woefully unprepared to combat what may be a
"natural force," Evil Itself.
J.P. Telotte wrote that
"What Carpenter seems intent on demonstrating is how consistently our
perceptions and our understandings of the world around us fall short...We are
conditioned by our experience and culture to see less...to dismiss from our
image contents those visions for which we might not be able to account..."(American
Horrors: Essays on the Modern American Horror Film: "Through a
Pumpkin's Eye: The Reflexive Nature of Horror." University of Illinois
Press, 1987, page 122).
Now, I am not suggesting
that any one of these four interpretations is absolutely the
"right one" to come to a perfect understanding of Carpenter's film only
that Halloween retains such power because the truth of
Michael Myers seems to dwell in all these interpretations.
Ultimately, Halloween preserves
the Shape's mystery and thus lets you decide about the
important things like meaning. Many of the sequels and indeed the Rob Zombie
2007 remake fail so egregiously to live up to the original Carpenter film
because they work diligently towards an opposite (and inferior) end; because
they seek to diagram in details the answers about Michael for
the audience's consumption and peace of mind. Yet peace of mind -- closure
itself -- runs counter to what good horror ought to be, at least by my
personal barometer. Who wants to leave a horror movie content that you
understand everything you saw; that it all fits into a neat little box? As I've
said before, I want my slumber troubled; I wantmy mind bothered by the things
only the genre can show me and tell me. If I desire peace of mind or resolution
from ambiguity, I'll watch network television.
As a direct result of
all the well-meaning but psychologically facile explanations of the sequels and
the remake, the magic of Michael Myers is somehow bled away. When we understand
Michael is simply hunting his biological sister down, he becomes nothing but a
garden variety wacko with a tough hide. When he is infused with supernatural
powers and becomes a genetically-engineered Druid observing Samhain, he's just
another easily explainable Devil, only one with an alternate religious belief
system.
And finally, the magic of Michael Myers is totally squandered when we bear witness to the peculiarities of his abusive childhood; when we come to understand that he was raised in a violent, redneck household and is merely carrying on in the family tradition. Thus the later movies, and especially the re-imaginations nullify The Shape's Power; the Shape's Tao. They turn it to ashes.
When considering "The Shape," I submit that it is better to ponder and speculate about Evil's True Nature than to know it all. Oscar Wilde once wrote that the greatest mystery in life is actually "one's self," and Halloween remains such an indelible viewing experience because -- in addition to technical expertise and canny imagery -- it leaves more than abundant psychic space for our imaginations to ponder it.
Some of these interpretive possibilities dovetail with my thesis that "The Shape" is best understood as a modern expression of ancient near eastern chaos monsters. As I argued in my essay in Butcher Knives & Body Counts, we retain the same fears as the ancients in being overcome by chaos, which rises, wreaks its horror, and is only temporarily "killed" until it rises again. Given the long cross-cultural expression of this mythic archetype so well tapped into by Carpenter, I feel that Rob Zombie's version of Halloween which delved into a version of explanation number 2 above was a mistake, and which then took much of the horror out of Myers, making him not so much "The Shape" as "The Clearly Identifiable and Dismissed Form."
ReplyDeleteKeep up the good work.
I subscribe to the 'arrested development' theory. He's simply a little boy, perhaps autistic, who thinks stabbing people is a Halloween game. You pointed out his stalking of Danny, as if he instinctively senses a kinship with the boy. They would have been friends if it was 1963. And his quizzical 'why aren't you playing anymore' tilting of the head. Great read!
ReplyDeleteIt's hard to exclude 34 years of known Myers mythology and go back to his introduction into the American landscape. But let's put aside the indestructibility, the childhood abuse, the white-trash family. Myers is just an escaped psychopath and murderer, 21 years old, 6‘1”, and 205 lbs, bent on murdering teens and adults (gas-station attendant). Being stabbed in the shoulder, shot 5 times, a two-story fall onto his back, does it necessitate supernatural or demonic involvement? It can, but it could be that Myers has congenital analgesia as well as being a psychopath. The thing is, we don't know anything about him or his motivations, so it can be all of the above or nothing at all.
ReplyDeleteHonestly though, the Freudian-interpretation always seemed manufactured. The nuts and bolts is that Halloween was a gonzo film shoot, shot in 4 weeks, with a budget of 325K. Was the goal to make a Freudian message about the society at large? OR...to make a scary film on the cheap, get a positive box office return for Akkad, and name recognition for it's stars and director? I am betting on the latter.
For instance, the interpretation that JC was making a conservative statement about the perils of pre-marital sex as the young party-goers were slaughtered and the intrepid 'Final Girl' was of pure heart. It fits, it sounds good, it's a model that would become a tried and true staple of the then-nascent slasher film craze..... that is, until JC says that the reason why is that people who; are about to have sex; are having sex; or just finished having sex... are severely distracted people. Distracted people that do not hear the creak in the floorboard, the intruder in the house, or the friend that should have shown up an hour ago, who is now hanging in the closet. Nothing Freudian there, just a simple, but extremely effective plot point to dispose of people.
I think that the Zodiac killer and the Son of Sam had more to do with the creation of Myers in 1978, than a Freudian message about ID. Halloween could be called a "a movie straight from the headlines" reminiscent of 'Law & Orders' mantra of getting storylines from news events. The Son of Sam and the Zodiac Killer were real world Michael Myers' of the time. Total strangers being killed, motivations unknown and in the case of the Zodiac, eluded capture....almost as if he were, dare I say....of supernatural origin. Regardless, I think that 'The Shape', minus the sequels, is the scariest incarnation in film history.
OT, or not. You decide:
ReplyDeleteI'd love it if you could do a tao on The Abominable Dr. Phibes.
Halloween and "The Shape" always makes me think of Gestalt theories. Gestalt being concerned with the "essence or shape of an entity's complete form."
ReplyDeleteThough primarily concerned with visual groupings and relational understanding, I carry this theory a lot over to concepts as well, especially the visual concepts of the cinema.
Another way of looking at this film, the nature vs. nurture argument is one that always comes up when an individual strays outside of accepted societal norms. "Halloween" makes the argument that fate seems to be nature, unstoppable like a speeding train or an elemental disaster. "Seems" is the key word. The film actually then goes on to claim that the course of all our lives, our fate, is a product of the world and people around us giving us limited choices to choose from.
Laurie wants to be a certain type of person, but those around her define her and force her back into a box.
Laurie limits the knowledge she gives the kids removing their ability to make informed choices for themselves.
Michael is treated in the hospital like he's crazy, like he's evil by his doctor -- Is it suprising that once escaped he plays the only role he's been given?
A key piece for my understanding of this film comes in the comforting line delivered by Laurie to the effect that on Halloween, nothing is real, everything is made up.
Michael Meyers is a manifestation of different character's fears. He acts out Loomis's unfounded paranoid prophecy, he's the adult that catches kids in his house drinkining his beer and sexing his bed, he's an escape from the box for Laurie that's scared of who she'll become if she has to stay there, he's the worry of Marion Chambers realized. Gestalt theory tells us that through these fragments, we perceive a singular individual. If something is killing me, you, and him then the Law of Similarity allows the logical jump that we're all being killed by the same thing.
The Shape, as opposed to Michael Meyers the person, is a manifestation of fear on a day we're most susceptible to it. "Trick r Treat" plays the same way. Of course this is Halloween the holiday so everything has to go back to Samhain. We've lost touch with those traditions. We aren't making the proper sacrifices to keep the spirits at bay, nor are we purifying ourselves with fire. From Wikipedia: "Fairies were thought to steal humans on Samhain and fairy mounds were to be avoided. People took steps to allay or ward-off these harmful spirits and fairies. They stayed near to home or, if forced to walk in the darkness, turned their clothing inside-out or carried iron or salt to keep the fairies at bay." The Meyers house is just such a mound and everyone intrinsically knows to avoid it. Again what we've lost are the proper procedures to protect ourselves. Knives and guns aren't as powerful as iron or salt.