Revolutionary Road

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Revolutionary Road is an exercise in alienation and atomisation. The story starts with April and Frank catching each other’s eye at a party, the upbeat jazz soundtrack reflects the original optimism.

April and Frank marry. At the start they are happy, discuss their dreams and aspirations. Seven years on, during the mid 1950s, April still aspires to be a actress, the play she stars in is an unmitigated failure. This creates more tension, stress, anger and frustration. Frank works in sales, catching the train everyday with the other drone like faceless anonymous people. There’s a scene where these workers are all walking down the stairs of the railway station in unison it really reminded me of Escher’s Ascending and Descending.

April, living an isolating existence, stays at home, takes out the rubbish, and does the rest of chores along with reminiscing what could have been. Frank is frustrated with his job. He’s frustrated with his empty loveless marriage so to fill that void he has sex with one of the secretaries in his workplace. When he starts to leaves her flat, the interaction between the two highlights the coldness and the perfunctoriness, the young secretary becoming embarrassed about her nakedness she covers herself quickly, Frank ending their brief tryst with, ‘That was swell’… pitched like a salesperson.

April has come to the conclusion that the only way their marriage is to survive is to move to France. They both wanted to be different and not capitulate to the nice house with nice picket fences. But it’s what they have done. They make plans and organise the move. Their neighbours are shocked. The husband makes no secret of his disgust that it will be April supporting Frank in France.

The idea of leaving this existence invigorates a spark of passion in their life. Frank thinks of his father who worked for the same firm for 30-odd years, doing the same job. His father used to take him out to lunch once a year. Frank tells the secretary he is having the affair with that he never ever wanted to be like his father…and yet here he is. Unfulfilled potential and lack of recognition dominate Frank, on a contradictorily level he wants to persue his dreams, to buck the trend but he wants the big house, the money, the status. And this dynamic creates further tension and alienation between April and Frank. And to stymie April’s dream of moving away he attacks her mental health and undermines her by threatening to send her to a shrink.

Frank’s further capitulation to the American dream, pushes April into further distress. Their rows escalate even more so when she discovers she is pregnant. She can’t handle another pregnancy. They spiral downwards into the mire and tragedy.

One of the most interesting characters in the film is John Givings (a neighbour) who has been an in-patient in the local psychiatric hospital. I was concerned how this character would be depicted but Michael Shannon (who is up for best supporting actor Oscar) delivers a nuanced and sympathetic portrayal. John holds up a mirror and reflects the hypocrisy, contradictions, misery and alienation that are inherent in  the heterosexual nuclear family (Hopeless emptiness. Now you’ve said it. Plenty of people are onto the emptiness, but it takes real guts to see the hopelessness). He too has had his dreams and aspirations dashed as a Mathematician  (37 times I had electric shock treatment and the mathematics gone) so he lives in hope for April and Frank to escape suburban drugedgy. This confrontational style unnerves and upsets John’s mother especially as she desires the perfect family while Frank and April like John. As they point it is the ‘crazy’ who understands them the best.

Overall, Sam Mendes creates a well crafted film that explores dreams and aspiration along with the tug of conformity, alienation and isolation. There were parts I found too stagey and theatrical (including parts of the dialogue!). Leonardo Di Caprio and Kate Winslet deliver fine performances but I think it is the more peripheral characters that give the film weight, the repressed neighbour played by Kathy Bates with her screwed-up son, John. The young couple next door who are the antithesis of Frank and April yet their conformity and capitulation doesn’t drive them apart. The cinematography by Roger Deakins is superb and brings further dramatic tension.

There’s a scene where April shouts, It takes backbone to lead the life you want, Frank, kind of encapsulates the film. The desperation of April especially exposes the sexism and double-standards women were expected to conform to (the neighbour who expresses his shock and disgust that it will be April supporting Frank in France).

As Betty Friedan (though she emphasised specifically middle class women and left working class women out of the equation) in her book, The Feminine Mystique, argued that women were expected to identify through their husband and kids therefore their own individual identity is lost. Lack of choices, expectations, sexual division of labour and unequal power relationships dictated the norm in a straitjacketed 1950s patriarchal capitalist society.

No wonder Valium was ‘mother’s little helper’ (for both middle class and working class women..my own mother was hooked on that drug for 20-odd years)… and no wonder April spirals downwards watching her marriage die, trapped, along with her husband selling out to the American dream. A living death for her.

The Wheelers wanted to be different, revolutionary and pursue their dreams while their friends and neighbours are unnerved and scared of this kick against the traces. The Wheelers washed their trauma out in public as opposed, like their friends and neighbours, to repressing it neatly, smoothing out the creases, then storing it at the back of their collective lobotomised minds.

And as April says:

I wanted IN. I just wanted us to live again. For years I thought we’ve shared this secret that we would be wonderful in the world. I don’t know exactly how, but just the possibility kept me hoping. How pathetic is that? So stupid. To put all your hopes in a promise that was never made. Frank knows what he wants, he found his place, he’s just fine. Married, two kids, it should be enough. It is for him. And he’s right; we were never special or destined for anything at all.
 
To quote Peggy Lee, is that all there is…?
 
 
 

 

British jobs for British workers…?

When I saw the above slogan regarding the oil refinery strikes it unnerved and deeply troubled me.  The political implications of these strikes especially based on a reactionary racist slogan: ‘British Jobs for British Workers’.

There are laudable demands at the heart of the strike but it is overshadowed by the appalling slogan. And the political meaning of that slogan and who it attracts. The strikers may have good intentions about who they are venting their anger against but it has the potential to backfire. And why aren’t Unite arguing against the slogan?

Do Unite actually approve of building a campaign of strike action based on a divisive slogan? But it does also expose the weakness of the trade union movement and sums up a spineless bureaucracy who have done little about the attacks the working class are facing with credit crisis. Indeed, Simpson/Woodley have literally handed a blank cheque to New Labour with ‘no strings attached’…something like £11m.

It is about international solidarity, and that’s why it is utterly politically wrong, wrong, wrong to have a slogan that while supposedly encapsulates the aims of the strike and the demands, it is instead appallingly divisive. And a recruiting ground for fascists.

And divide and rule is the oldest trick in the book…. which fans the flame of racism. And people cannot and should not fall for it!! Especially at the time of an economic crisis, scapegoating and blaming the powerless for the economic woes (from the unemployed to migrant workers to asylum seekers). It distracts from the real enemy, the ruling class.

And we cannot afford to give ground to this reactionary ideology, we need to work together and show international solidarity.

We also need to discuss and debate this within the trade union movement as a whole because these issues aren’t just confined to construction.

Madam Miaow raises some very good pertinent points and I also sympathise with this as well.

More on welfare reform and what you can do….

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As things are getting grimmer with the economy. Undeterred with this James Purnell is pushing through further welfare reforms. The latest being the publication, based on Professor Gregg’s proposals,  of Realising Potential: developing personalised conditionality and support – a discussion paper. The paper is about getting the usual suspects back into work. Purnell argues:

We want to test the full model proposed by Professor Gregg of higher support and expectations…. The current Welfare Reform Bill aims to create the necessary legislation for this approach, initially through a series of pathfinders, subject to parliamentary approval. These pathfinders will cover around a fifth of new and existing ESA claimants and a similar proportion of parents with younger children. Parents with a youngest child aged between one and two will be expected to engage with an adviser and agree an action plan, but undertaking work preparation activities will be voluntary.

Fortunately, there is the start of a campaign to fight these draconian proposals. Lynne Jones MP has tabled a EDM 543 – TUC campaign to increase Jobseeker’s Allowance. Please contact your MP and persuade them to support this EDM. Sign up to the campaign initiated by the PCS along with this useful campaign guide. The Labour Representation Committee (LRC) is also campaigning alongside with various other organisations as well.

BBC: a reply to my complaint

The BBC replied to my email complaint regarding the Gaza appeal. A nondescript crap standard response from the top brass at the BBC that exposes cowardice along with no backbone or integrity. Shame on the BBC!

Btw: I didn’t see the email response as it ended up in my spam box. Says it all….!!

Thank you for your e-mail.

We note your disappointment at our decision not to broadcast an appeal by the Disasters Emergency Committee to raise funds for Gaza.

We decided not to broadcast the DEC’s public appeal because we wished to avoid any risk of compromising public confidence in the BBC’s impartiality in the context of covering a continuing news story where issues of responsibility for civilian suffering and distress are intrinsic to the story and remain highly contentious. We also could not be confident that the aid resulting from audience donations could reach those it was intended for at a time of a fragile ceasefire and sporadic border access. We will of course continue to report the humanitarian story in Gaza.

The BBC’s director-general Mark Thompson has therefore explained the decision in more detail in a number of television and radio broadcasts and online at our Editors’ blog. Please follow the link to read his explanation in full:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/theeditors/2009/01/bbc_and_the_gaza_appeal.html

Please be assured that we have registered your comments on our audience log.  This is the internal report of audience feedback which we compile daily for all programme makers and commissioning executives within the BBC, and also their senior management.  It ensures that your points, and all other comments we receive, are circulated and considered across the BBC.

Once again, thank you for taking the time to contact us.

Regards

BBC Complaints
____________________________
www.bbc.co.uk/complaints

Letter to BBC over Gaza appeal

Letter to Mark Thompson, Director-General of the BBC from the NUJ and Bectu over Gaza appeal:

Mark Thomspon
Director General
BBC
London

26 January 2009

Dear Mark

We are writing to express our concern at the decision of the BBC to refuse free airtime to the DEC for its national humanitarian appeal for Gaza.

The BBC’s stance will seriously hinder the DEC in getting its message across to the British public. The humanitarian crisis, in which innocent children are suffering, is likely to be prolonged as a result of the Corporation’s decision.

The justifications given for the decision – - ‘question marks about the delivery of aid in a volatile situation’ and risks of compromising its ‘impartiality in the context of an ongoing news story’ – appear to us cowardly and in danger of being seen as politically motivated and biased in favour of Israel.

We, above all, understand the BBC’s need to maintain editorial impartiality and we also understand the pressure journalists and the BBC comes under from those who accuse the BBC of bias in reporting the Middle East.

That said we agree with those senior BBC journalists who say this is a decision taken as a result of timidity by BBC management in the face of such pressures – Tim Llewellyn described this as ‘institutional cowardice’.

Far from avoiding the compromise of the BBC’s impartiality, this move has breached those same BBC rules by showing a bias in favour of Israel at the expense of 1. 5 million Palestinian civilians suffering an acute humanitarian crisis. The Myanmar cyclone appeal was broadcast in May 2008 in spite of ‘an ongoing news story’ involving the government of Burma. Why should Israel be treated differently?

Our members feel this makes the BBC appear pro-Israeli and indifferent to the plight of the victims of this conflict.

As a result of the three year blockade and the three week bombing campaign Gaza is enduring immense suffering. Launching the DEC appeal Brendan Gormley said: “Over 1, 300 Palestinians have been killed in the conflict, and many thousands have been injured, overwhelming local hospitals. The destruction has left people without homes and many children without schooling; power, food and water supplies are insufficient to cover the population’s needs…Agencies are already providing food, drugs and blankets as well as delivering clean water…. but we will soon reach the limit of what we can do, without more money. For Gazans struggling to survive, receiving urgent humanitarian aid will help them take the first step to recovery.”

How can airing such an appeal risk compromising the BBC’s impartiality?

We believe the BBC’s decision not to show the appeal is wrong and we urge you to reconsider.

Yours sincerely

Gerry Morrissey, General Secretary, BECTU
Jeremy Dear, General Secretary, NUJ

Ceasefire? What ceasefire…

The Israel Air Force attacked smuggling tunnels under Gaza’s  border with Egypt. The Israeli State say it is in retaliation to a bomb being detonated that killed an IDF tracker.

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert warned of a “further response” to the attack.

What the IDF did today was not a response but a preliminary action,” he said at a meeting of ministry directors general. A further response to this serious incident will be forthcoming.

The security cabinet is to meet Wednesday to discuss security projects, but the situation in Gaza might also be discussed.

Olmert, noting that he had termed the cease-fire “fragile,” also said: “We don’t even call it a cease-fire but a holding of fire in the face of Hamas infractions, so that we can retain the IDF’s freedom of action.”

Defense Minister Ehud Barak decided to strike Hamas targets in response to the death of the tracker.

We do not intend to gloss over incidents like these,” Barak said. “We will not let Hamas and its outgrowths continue their hostile acts of terror. Anyone who hits us will have to absorb a serious blow in the future, too.

Confederacy of dunces….

workhouse3

The Welfare Reform Bill is coming up for its second reading. Tory Theresa May agrees with the Bill but believes it doesn’t go far enough tackling ‘culture of dependency’ and this is echoed by former head of CPAG, Frank Field, who believes:

Late as it is in the life of the government, the most important task now is to build up a system of workfare so that offers of a job can be made to claimants who are unable to find a job in the open market. The first duty of the community was not to provide doles for the able-bodied, but work.

He thinks that all single unemployed 16-24 year olds should work for their dole. And if they fail to find a job after a fixed amount of time then they should have their benefits stopped. Frank Field is a blinkered right-wing ideologue who accepts the reactionary ‘culture of dependency’ theory.

Instead of the usual attack dog style of politics on the poor, what about genuine training..? What about proper education..? What about real apprenticeships? Address these issues as opposed to condemning young people to workfare. A society that values young people by improving skills. A supportive society that creates rounded human beings as opposed to treating them like they are nobodies……especially working class young people.

Now that would be a positive start.

And talking about paying Peter to pay Paul or should that be juggling the poor? So with all the savings NL has made shafting the poor over benefits we now see Purnell using those ‘savings’ to fund 50,000 childcare places.

Reforming welfare not only depends on the availability and quality of childcare, it can also fund it. Active welfare and universal childcare are the interdependent foundations of Scandinavian social democracy, underpinning the public consensus around a generous but conditional welfare state.

So stealing benefits off the poor to fund initiatives to fight child poverty…….Go figure…!

Lotte Lenya

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Her name may be synonymous with a evil Bond commie baddie in From Russia With Love, the dastardly Rosa Klebb.

But Lotte Lenya was the original Jenny in Brecht/Weill’s The Threepenny Opera, which does seem to get forgotten along with her other stage performances.

Anyway, here she is singing Mack the Knife (in German) and September Song….

September Song

The politics of impartiality: part deux

“This is an important part of what it is to be a public service broadcaster. It is sometimes not a comfortable place to be, but we have a duty to ensure that nothing risks undermining our impartiality. It is to protect that impartiality that we have made this difficult decision.” (Mark Thompson, Director General BBC)

 Dictionary definition: Impartiality (adjective) Not partial or biased, treating or affecting all equally.

 The Today programme on Radio 4 ran a piece today questioning whether charities are indulging in political activity. Seems like the BBC are being indulgent by distracting people from the real argument of impartiality.

The ongoing saga concerning the BBC and the DEC Gaza appeal has thrown up questions about what precisely is impartiality. Firstly, if you look at the DEC website they have been involved in organising aid for other countries such as Burma, Bangladesh, Congo and Darfur. Why is airing an appeal for Gaza risking the BBC’s impartiality? It doesn’t.

The arguments Thompson is using are bogus, they pretend to be worried about how this looks to the public when indeed they are doing what they are condemning. They are politicising the issue. The arguments also question the validity and necessity of aid for the people of Gaza. There is a desperate and urgent need for aid, no question so why, again, does Thompson think this will jeopardise the impartiality of the BBC?

Thompson is also creating a pecking order of need, it is ok to air appeals for Darfur or Burma etc. but not for Gaza. Why are the people of Gaza so different in their need for aid as opposed to people in the Congo?

The arguments posed by Thompson are contradictory and actually make no sense. Instead looking beyond the arguments and examining the BBC’s role they have a track record of following the establishment’s line i.e. the biased and partial reporting during the Miners Strike (1984-1985).

But post-Hutton the BBC are running scared rather than agreeing to air the appeal they have backed themselves into a corner. And indeed they have capitulated to the pro-Zionist lobby.

 So much for impartiality and integrity. The BBC has exposed itself as a biased public service and will possibly have damaged itself for a long time to come.

But this does have future implications as the BBC has politicised aid appeals. A future government in the position of, for example Sudan, in relation to Darfur, to say that this form of medical aid is simply a political attack by the West.

 And this is a dangerous precendent set by the BBC….

NUJ and Bectu workers condemn BBC over Gaza appeal