OnScenes
  • OnScenes
  • News
  • Art
    • Music >
      • Album Review
    • Poetry
    • Film >
      • Filmmakers >
        • Movies
    • Theater >
      • TheaterMakers
  • Philosophy
  • PhiloFiction
  • Science&Technology
  • Economy
  • Media
    • Video
    • Audio
  • About
  • Contact
    • Location

Existenzialism and Inhumanism

10/24/2017

0 Comments

 
by Mark Fisher
Picture
Pikul: I don't want to be here. We're stumbling around in the unformed world, not knowing what the rules are, or if there are any rules. We're under attack from forces that want to destroy us but that we don't understand.'
​
Watching Cronenberg's Existenz while teaching existentialism recently, I found myself finally persuaded of the director's claim that the film is 'existentialist propaganda'.

Existenz has worn well, and repays re-viewing now. In retrospect, it is possible to position the movie as part of a rash of late 90s and early 00's films that can be seen as symptomatic expressions of the traumatic transition from the 'irrational exuberance' of the bubble economy to WoTerror. Along with Vanilla Sky, Mulholland Drive and The Matrix, Existenz' 'reality bleeds' anticipated the crashing into the US's simulated interiority of 'the desert of the real' on 9/11.
​In a wonderful Zizekian shift, Existenz's Real is precisely not the empirical reality defended by the film's Realists (those committed to the destruction of the gamepods and the ontological contamination they threaten), but the Real of the cosmos as ongoing ateleological event: 'purposiveness without purpose' (Kant). The realists, by contrast, are those who treat whatever consensual hallucination they find themselves thrown into - and the random rules and protocols which make it liveable - as the only authorized reality.

Cronenberg: 'I'm talking about the existentialists, i.e. the game players, versus the realists. The deforming of reality is a criticism that has been levelled against all art, even religious icons, which has to do with man being made in God's image, so you can't make images of either. Art is a scary thing to a lot of people because it shakes your understanding of reality, or shapes it in ways that are socially unacceptable. As a card-carrying existentialist I think all reality is virtual. It's all invented. It's collaborative, so you need friends to help you create a reality. But it's not about what is real and what isn't.' (Sight and Sound interview).
Cronenberg's is a kind of ontological existentialism, then, in which the very nature of reality itself, not only the individual choices of subjects, is radically open. The Existenzialists precisely refuse what Nick Land in ''Meltdown'' called 'the dominator ur-myth that the nature of reality has already been decided.' Jude Law's Ted Pikul confronts the existential horror of abandonment, anguish and despair when he complains to Jennifer Jason Leigh's Allegra Geller (who at this time seems to be the designer of the very game, Existenz , that they are playing) that the game is without final purpose, that they are forever being accosted by malevolent forces intent upon their destruction. It's a game that would be hard to market, Pikul moans. And yet, as Geller tartly rejoins, it's the game that everyone is already playing.
The realists believe - or rather want to protect the self-delusion - that the particular world (=consensual hallucination) in which they find themselves is fixed and determined. What guarantees such fixity is of course the functioning of a transcendent designer - the game programmer, whose role is inevitably paralleled with what God does - or did - in/ for 'our' particular consensual hallucination. What Existenz demonstrates with admirable lucidity is that reality can only be authorized if it is authored - if, that is to say, its nature is controlled by an additional, allegedly 'more real' plane of reality, one level up from in which we find ourselves.
​Thus Existenz turns on the Sartrean opposition between the in-itself and the for-itself. The players (Pikul and Geller) are for-itself, capable, or seemingly capable, of making choices, albeit within set parameters. (Unlike in the ludicrous Matrix, the players are constrained by the rules of the world into which they are thrown). The game characters are the in-itself, pre-programmed drones who can only respond to particular cues.
​
These in-itself pre-programmed game characters are one of the greatest sources of uncanny humour in Existenz. That's partly because their strange fugues and inability to act unless triggered by exactly the right stim are immediately reminiscent of so many interactions with 'real' human beings in late Kapitalism. In late Kapitalism, the experience of listening to a cheerful more-human-than-human robovoice announce, inevitably incorrectly, the arrivals and departures at a railway station and the experience of talking to a 'real live' call centre employee or ultra-trained estate agent, are all but indistinguishable. Professionalization = becoming as much like a bureaucratically controlled robozombie as is humanly possible. In none of these cases are there any signs of autonomy or ability to sensitively engage with either the situation or people around them. In the 'age of artificial stupidity' (Iain Hamilton Grant) , the tendency is for everyone and everything to be encouraged to act as if pre-programmed.
Taken from:
hyperstition.abstractdynamics
0 Comments



Leave a Reply.

    "A Love of UIQ": Félix Gutattari's Unfilmed Script
    Alejandro Jodorowsky - Dune 'The Movie You Will Never See'
    Barrage (2017)
    Before the Rain (1994)
    Blade Runner - A Camera on Violence: Reality and Fiction
    BLADE RUNNER 2049 AND ARRIVAL: a pedagogical cinema
    Brakes (2017) - Talks with Mercedes Gower
    COLUMBUS’ REVIEW: THE BEAUTY OF THIS MOTION PICTURE IS THE PICTUREn Text
    Darren Aronofsky - Mother! (2017)
    David Lynch - Night Town (Part 1)
    David Lynch - Night Town (Part 2)
    David Lynch - NIGHT TOWN (Part 3)
    David Lynch- NIGHT TOWN (Part 4)
    David Lynch -Head Like A House On Fire (Part 1)
    David Lynch - Head Like A House On Fire ( Part 2)
    David Lynch - Head Like a House on Fire (Part 3)
    David Lynch - Our SchoolGirl Of The Sorrows (Part 1)
    David Lynch - Our Schoolgirl Of The sorrows (Part 2)
    David Lynch - OUR SCHOOLGIRL OF THE SORROWS (Part 3)
    David Lynch - OUR SCHOOLGIRL OF THE SORROWS (Part 4)
    Dziga Vertov - The Man with the Movie Camera (1929)
    'Dune' (1984)
    Gabriel Range - Death of a President
    Germaine Dulac & Antonin Artaud - The Seashell and the Clergyman
    Inland Empire (2006)
    Ingmar Bergman - Hour of the Wolf/Vargtimmen (1968)
    Jean-Luc Godard - Alphaville (1965) (full movie)
    Jean Luc - Godard - Weekend
    Jean - Luc Godard - My Life to Live
    Jean-Luc Godard - Numero Deux ( Part 2)
    Jean -Luc - Godard - Numero Deux (Part 1)
    Jean-Luc Godard - Numero deux (Part 3)
    Jean-Luc Godard - Numero Deux (Part 4)
    Jean-Luc Godard - Breathless
    Mark Fisher - Existenzialism and Inhumanism
    Mark Fisher - eXistenZ and noncognitive labour
    McKenzie Wark - Edge of Tomorrow: Cinema of the Anthropocene
    MOTHERS (2010) by Milcho Manchevski
    DOMINICK SUZANNE-MAYER - No Country for Old Men and the Unavoidable Cycle of Greed and Violence
    No Country For Old Man - Cinephilosophy dialogue with Gabriele Guerra
    On the Milky Road (2016)
    PI (1998)
    Pier Paolo Pasolini - Salò (120 Days of Sodom)
    REWEIRDING ARCADIA
    Saltwater(2014)
    Silence (2016)
    Song To Song (2017)
    TERENCE BLAKE - ANAMNESIS AND ESTRANGEMENT (2): Jodorowsky’s DUNE
    The Death of a President interview with Gabriel Range
    The Dead Man 2 : Return Of The Dead Man (1994)
    The Dinner (2017)
    The Hours (2002)
    THE SPACE IN BETWEEN(2016)
    T2 Trainspotting (2017)
    The Daughter (2015)
    The Handmaiden ( Ah-Ga-SSI), (2016)
    The Other Side of Hope (2017)
    The Salesman (2016)
    The Young Karl Marx (2017)

    Archives

    December 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.
  • OnScenes
  • News
  • Art
    • Music >
      • Album Review
    • Poetry
    • Film >
      • Filmmakers >
        • Movies
    • Theater >
      • TheaterMakers
  • Philosophy
  • PhiloFiction
  • Science&Technology
  • Economy
  • Media
    • Video
    • Audio
  • About
  • Contact
    • Location