I have before me the newly published Gothic: The Dark Heart of Film (A BFI Compendium). It’s a remarkably handsome volume and, I’d have
thought, a must-have for enthusiasts and students in this ever more ardently studied
field. But then 'we are for the dark', as Shakespeare had the serving maid say to Cleopatra.
I contributed a chapter to the book (on Satanism and witchcraft,
naturally) but it’s really not for that reason that I consider the work overall
to be essential. I’m just a one-time gothic novelist, not truly a specialist in
the discipline; however, inter alia, fellow contributors such as Guillermo del
Toro, Marina Warner, Christopher Frayling, Kim Newman, Anne Billson, Mark
Gatiss and Ramsey Campbell most eminently are. The richness and variety of this
collection, expertly assembled by the BFI’s James Bell and superbly illustrated
to boot, are to be savoured, in more than one sitting.
The book marks a BFI season that begins shortly and will run
into 2014. A fine taster of what lies in store was offered at the end of August
with a 'Monster Weekend' of special screenings in the forecourt of the British Museum: I
went along to the first of these, the movie being Tourneur’s Night of the Demon, and thought it a really delighting occasion.
I notice that I’m using a lot of ‘pleasure-words’ in
relation to the gothic here, which, funnily enough, is the spirit in which I
wrote my chapter for the book. For a long time I more or less believed that the
whole origin of the horror genre was quite aptly encapsulated by the ‘celebrated’
line from the Catholic Office of the Dead, ‘Timor mortis conturbat me’ (‘The
fear of death disturbs me.’) Our mortality, and that of those whom we love, is
after all the best if not the only thing in this world to be afraid of.
However, horror consumed as a cultural experience clearly
has to offer pleasure of sorts too, even if a somewhat masochistic one. Horror might
be said to indulge a certain phantasy about the existence of wickedness and depravity
in the world: how it might indeed triumph over good, or how, at least, certain
souls (deserving or not) could succumb to it. In the process, wickedness and
depravity may be dressed up with certain superficially alluring aspects – and when
it comes to such costuming, cinema is supreme among the arts. But at such a
puppet show it’s easier to spot the strings.
There are many aspects of the gothic that have great powers
to haunt and disturb and unnerve us, and gothic works that invoke devils and
demons and necromancers (what I thumbnail in my essay for convenience as ‘the
gothic occult’) are by no means excluded from that. Their particular powers,
though, feel to me a tad reduced. The gothic occult is predicated on the
existence of evil
as a metaphysical force in the world: a thirsty evil, one that wants to keep
its infection spreading. A really bleak gothic occult will propose a black
pessimistic view of Man's Fate – that the material world belongs to Satan and goodness
is unattainable, on this plane at least, etc. That all sounds scary enough on
paper, and can be so on screen.
And yet this particular version (or explanation) of a
metaphysical evil seems to me to require – how can I put it? – a more than
usual bound into the suspension of disbelief. By contrast, the idea of a ‘ghost’
– where a ghost might come from, what it might look like, what its motives might
be – seems to me endlessly recyclable and potentially mysterious, fit (if the
mood is right) to inveigle itself even into our wide-awake rational thoughts. Ghosts
appear to me as the absolute lifeblood of the gothic. But then to speak of devils,
of Satan... of a personification of evil, an antagonist to some almighty king
of the heavens, a figure at the head of a large hierarchical structure
committed to humanity’s ultimate catastrophe – well, this is to confront the
reader or viewer with a heftier (and consequently less nimble and persuasive) proposition.
Having written a novel in the Faust mode I appreciate the size of the ask, and
accept that one’s first duty under these conditions is to entertain.
The best, most persuasive work of fiction that I know of to
imagine Satan’s immanence in our world is Norman Mailer’s The Castle in the Forest (which is also perhaps the most decidedly gothic title anyone could ever
append to a novel.) If I can’t immediately tempt you to read it, please try
this superb interview with Mailer about the novel, written up by Philip Weiss
for the New York Observer. And do keep your eye on #bfigothic.
A footnote: when I was readying my Gothic compendium chapter for the
presses with BFI editor James Bell I was not surprised and quite amused to hear
from him that I ought to try to trim back on a rather prolix attempt I’d made to
define exactly what constitutes the gothic in cinema. Apparently, more than one
of my fellow contributors had fallen down the same dark well... and the effort
is probably doomed, one has to say. There’s nothing exactly Gothic in cinema, but it’s
generally agreed that we seem to know it when we see it, or feel it. Gothic is a visual style and a
mood, an atmosphere, enhanced above all by production design – one of gloom, intrigue,
dread, a pervasive sense of evil, which may well (but need not) materialize in outright
horrors. In the case of the gothic occult, this production design tends to dark secret places where cabals gather and rituals occur, the solemn
black mass and the orgiastic walpurgisnacht. And there you may also see the goat’s
head and the horned man, the grimoire, the beckoning finger of Mephistopheles –
all that...
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