We said last seminar that Rose Hobart would probably stick with us throughout the course. So far it has. Here's why Cornell’s film has been quietly lingering around all of the films I’ve seen since, to the point where the most interesting thing about watching Piccadilly was its comforting blue hue...
Cornell apparently had an artistic fetish for boxes. But boxes are boring - an axiom ingrained in a number of derogatory metaphors (you're a square, think outside the box, etc etc). What interests me more here are circles, especially the mandala (Sanskrit for -- *drum roll* -- 'circle').
According to Jung, the mandala symbolises the unified wholeness of the self. It is one of the recurring cultural motifs he points to as evidence of a collective unconscious of archetypal memories/emotions shared across humanity. Reconciling this with the individual conscious leads to individuation, or self-harmony.
The ripple caused by the object dropped into the water in Rose is Cornell's mandala.
I was first reminded of Jung by Hobart's monkey friend. When I think 'monkey' I think of primal humanity, especially in the jungle. We all share ancestry with primates, and according to Jung we all share a primitive unconscious with humanity. The monkey is Cornell’s anima, Hobart’s animus.
Hobart's silent discussion with the monkey further reflects Freud's vision of a constant dialogue between the id, the ego and the superego. Cornell (and according to Freud, everyone) is thereby obsessed with 'sex and aggression'. The sex part is obvious. The aggression is shown when tribespeople - the primal subconscious - attack the clothed, 'civilised' foreigner, or the ego. Cornell documents the universal attempt to become 'whole' in both the Freudian and Jungian sense by seeking to reconcile the collective unconscious, subconscious and conscious mind.
A film is a conscious construct, but still permeated by subconscious messages and raw natural impulses - manifest in Cornell’s candle, volcano and eclipse, for example - that mammoth, submerged chunk of the personality iceberg often found in our dreams. Rose is both a projection of Cornell’s subconscious, and a conscious reflection upon it through psychoanalytic/analytical psychology tropes.

Frye’s article mentioned that no one "made films even remotely similar to Cornell's for almost thirty years". Since Inception seems to come up a lot it's worth looking at a film Nolan was supposed to have ripped off: L'Année dernière à Marienbad, a French new wave film released 30+ years after Rose.

Space and time are distorted and repetitions abound to replicate dream logic, which is at once universal and unique. Rose was an abstraction of an uninspired but nonetheless inspiring movie (East of Borneo) that would influence the French hybrid of more conventional narration and dream, and finally back to the more literal narratology of Inception. Cinema uses these techniques like no other medium, and it is thus married to the universally shared experience of the dream.
Rose Hobart haunts moviegoers simply because we all dream and watch movies, two things bound in a unique relationship that is symbolised by Cornell’s uncanny fan film.
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An exerpt from last year at the Marienbad and a blur filmclip homage:
A really interesting blog entry! A neat reading of Rose Hobart as dream state, with a lot of intriguing links to other films and ideas. I like the Donald Duck Inception frame.
ReplyDeleteNow that you've said it, all of the psychoanalytic stuff explains a lot about Rose Hobart. I hadn't even thought of that before now. I think you might be right about why it's 'haunting' the class. Even though I found it deeply frustrating to watch at the beginning of semester, there is something about it that sticks with you - like a dream, I suppose. It's a little like crawling into Cornell's mind and spying on his dreams; something you're just not supposed to be able to do. Perhaps that's why it's uncomfortable to watch.
ReplyDeleteThe line you trace between Rose Hobart, Inception, L'Année dernière à Marienbad (and Donald Duck) is really interesting - it is a circle in itself! That you talk about the similarity between film and dreams seems so pertinent to all of these connections between texts because in a dream disparate images are tied to one another against the logic of causality. This is exactly what happens when we watch a film - the film invites connections between other films and other images. We make these connections almost unconsciously at times. I think you articulate this phenomenon really nicely, by tracing one such associative thread yourself.
ReplyDeleteReally enjoyed this post! I wrote about the same sort of Freudian analysis of the film, but associated much more with feminism. Love the parallel you drew with the mandala and the idea of cycles. A few years ago, a Buddhist Monk came to my University in the states and spent 3 weeks creating a mandala made of sand. After he finished, he through it into a nearby river, saying there are no endings, only transitions. Cool stuff.
ReplyDeletei agree very cool stuff, i like how you draw all these outside examples and form a coherent arguement i thought this was great
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