Eternal
Sunshine of the Poffyless Mind
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"Eternal"
shines then dims.
by
Jon Dunmore © 3 Jun 2006.
Darkness
piled upon darkness, steeped in disturbing dissonance; a glutting,
suffocating despair; a stultifying of the spirit and a crippling
of the ego. No way out, no way out
no, not the movie
- my last relationship.
Eternal
Sunshine of the Spotless Mind opens with a disoriented
Joel Barish (Jim Carrey) wondering how he sustained a giant
gash along the side of his car. From there, through flashbacks
and flash-forwards, we gradually unveil the depressing reality
that is his life - and how his last relationship was a promise
of respite from despair, but ended up merely presaging a
different species of despair.
After
his relationship has acrimoniously soured with his girlfriend,
Clementine (Kate Winslet, even more irritating than she
was in Titanic - if that's possible), Joel discovers,
through mutual friends, that she has had a scientific procedure
performed that erases selective memories; while some may
contend that Kate Winslet has always been walking around
with a blank brain, in this case, she has just erased memories
of her relationship with Joel. In a fit of righteous wrath,
Joel enlists Dr. Mierzwiak (Tom Wilkinson - whose description
of this implausible procedure sounds oddly feasible) to
do the same for him: erase Clementine from his mind.
With
Mierzwiak's aides, Stan (Mark Ruffalo, sporting the Einstein
"bed-head" 'do) and the slimy Patrick (Elijah
Wood, with a panty-stealing penchant and a lunatic giggle,
seemingly intent on wiping the audience's memories
of his cutesy hobbit mien), Joel undergoes the erasure procedure,
but as his memories regress (with his body unconscious,
but his dream self somehow watching and participating in
this regression), his Clementine memories become less antagonistic,
veering towards enjoyable and then, he realizes too late,
downright "precious." His dream self fights against
the erasure, trying to hold onto the pleasant memories,
realizing that if every trace of Clementine were wiped,
somehow a piece of himself would disappear also.
Director
Michael Gondry has captured on film one of the most ineffable
human experiences - the dream state: the feeling that everything
you are experiencing is somehow sensible, yet not making
sense; that you are running mightily yet making no headway;
that feeling of underlying cohesion and overarching dread.
Using nothing but hand-held cameras and stark lighting in
some sequences (in others, utilizing disappearing sets and
suddenly-changing landscapes), Gondry evokes that desperate,
visceral fear that irrationally gluts our dreams. Add screenwriter
Charlie Kaufman (Being John Malkovich, Adaptation)
and the disturbing irrationality only escalates.
The
film's title is excerpted from a poem by Alexander Pope,
"Eloisa to Abelard," the same poem that puppeteer
John Cusack enacts in another of Charlie Kaufman's screenplays,
the beatifically bizarre, Being
John Malkovich.
One
cannot overstate Carrey's brilliance in this role. Watching
his unshaven, haggard, insecure paragon of introversion,
Joel, it is impossible to imagine an Ace Ventura careening
across the screen monopolizing every oxygen atom within
reach.
Carrey's
tastefully subdued performance is contrasted with that of
Winslet's gregarious Clementine, a talkative, intrusive
young woman who at first impression seems to have dropped
too much acid in the nineties. When Clementine insidiously,
yet forcefully seduces Joel on a train, we realize we have
seen this character in cinema before: the pushy young wench
who unlocks the heart of gold beneath the shy guy. But why
do screenwriters believe that a talkative and obtrusive
woman is somehow "attractive" or "spunky"?
There's another term for insecure, attention-seeking, irritatingly
extroverted women who suck all the energy out of a room
with their rattling bicuspids - high maintenance.
Joel
wants to retain the happy memories - but he's got it all
backwards. It is these memories that wrench you with unquenchable
longing, making you apt to do something stupid - like getting
back with her. It is the bad memories - those weak-chested
churnings of impotence and disrespect - that will keep you
sensible enough to never call the crazy bitch again. But
who wants to shoulder that unsavory burden? Just erase the
lot, and you'll never have to forget regret.
Before
their brain-wipe, each person is required to make a cassette
recording of all the aspects about their wipee they cannot
stand. Due to a subplot involving Mierzwiak's infatuated,
spurned secretary (Kirsten Dunst), both Joel and Clementine
unethically receive their partner's recordings to listen
to, and we realize that the present-time storyline is Joel's
and Clementine's second meeting, independent of
- and unaware of - their previous relationship.
And
what we thought was a unique exploration of despair, coupled
with repression and regression ramifications; a film which
alluded to god-complexes (the doctor's command of Joel's
brainwaves) and self-persecution paradoxes (Joel is a self-persecuting
personality, which is why he gravitates towards women like
Clementine) topples from its lofty aspirations to explore
the girly-man question of whether you would re-commit to
someone whom you have already discerned you cannot stand.
For
the sake of sating the expectations of young girls, Joel
and Clementine poignantly avow their love for one
another, despite the evidence of their damning testimonies
on tape. Couples Being Paired is the grand device that engines
95-percent of cinema seen in America. From Star Wars
to Gentleman's Agreement, from Crocodile
Dundee to Rock Star,
no matter the ostensible theme or subject matter of the
movie, it will always boil down to the point of view of
the paired couple, against all adversity. In this film,
the adversity is the couple itself.
Does
this say something about the fact that true love will triumph
even over mismatched personalities - or that people will
do anything to get into each other's pants?
So after scaring us with faceless dream-people and nightmare
corridors and potential brain damage and - the most horrible
ugliness of all - girlfriends who won't stop talking, Eternal
Sunshine ends up as just another quirky romance clothed
in a Real Movie's drama suit.
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