By Edward Curtin
March 17, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - In his new, six-part,
seven hours plus documentary –
“Can’t Get You Out of My Head: An Emotional History
of the Modern World” – the celebrated English
documentary filmmaker, Adam Curtis, who has worked
for the BBC for decades, tells us that nothing makes
sense anymore and it is “pointless to try to
understand the meaning of why things happen.” A
profound shift in our understanding has occurred, he
tells us early on, and he then proceeds to replicate
this fragmented, unknowing modern mind by showing us
an endless stream of video images from the BBC
archives that jump from one seemingly disconnected
subject to another to reinforce his point.
As the reviewer Lucy Mangan of
The Guardian approvingly writes, the
film is “a dazzling, overwhelming experience.” This
is true, but not in the way she thinks with her
five-star rating. The film does dazzle, and
fascinate, but in the sense of bewildering or
casting a spell. But to what end?
For Curtis maintains that there is no meaning
anywhere (not even in a review); we are all living
as if we are on “an acid trip”; and we will never
know what the hell is going on in the world
because…well, because there is no logic to anything
and our brains are scrambled with fragmented
memories, fleeting images, and paranoid thoughts
just like the movie Curtis narrates in his
unemotional, matter-of-fact voice. He doesn’t have
to say that he’s cool and everyone else is nuts. The
style is the man when the authoritative voice calmly
speaks above the din. Quite BBCish.
“Everything is relative,” is the underlying
message, except that Curtis fails to spell out the
contradiction in this post-modern meme: Everything
is relative but the statement that
everything is relative. It is absolute. Some people
know and others don’t. Next video clip please.
After watching his pastiche film that is filled
with his compulsively fragmented skepticism about “a
world where anything could be anything because there
was no meaning anywhere,” I was reminded of what a
famous philosopher once wrote in his “Critique of
Pure Dread”:
No Advertising - No Government
Grants - This Is Independent Media
In formulating any philosophy, the first
consideration must always be: What can we know?
That is, what can we be sure we know, or sure
that we know we knew it, if indeed it is at all
knowable. Or have we simply forgotten it and
are too embarrassed to say anything? Descartes
hinted at the problem when he wrote, ‘My mind
can never know my body, although it has become
quite friendly with my legs.’ By ‘knowable,’
incidentally, I do not mean that which can be
known by perception of the senses, or that which
can be grasped by the mind, but more that which
can be said to be Known or to possess a
Knownness or Knowability, or at least something
you can mention to a friend.
Like Curtis’s title, I have never been able to
get those profound words out of my head because they
have always seemed in their own way to have captured
the underlying zeitgeist of the past half-century
and more – the unspoken message that has come to
inform the neurotic skepticism of our times. And
unlike Curtis’s solemnity, at least Woody Allen
makes me laugh.
Curtis is a serious man, and when he very
seriously tells us in Part 1 that Jim Garrison, the
New Orleans district attorney, who was the only
person to ever bring a trial in the assassination of
President John Kennedy, was a man devoid of logic
who once wrote a memo to his staff urging them to
think illogically and just look for patterns based
on “time and propinquity,” he wishes us to consider
Garrison a crazy conspiratorial thinker who saw
strange patterns when there were none. To see
Garrison as a deranged man who used a pastiche
method of cutting and pasting disparate unconnected
facts to form a conspiracy theory to convince you
that there were hidden forces operating behind the
façade of American society.
Echoing the CIA’s famous memo to its agents and
accomplices in the media to use the phrase
conspiracy theory/theorist to ridicule its critics,
Curtis so solemnly tells the viewer that such crazy
conspiracy theories and the method for arriving at
them and their claims that there were hidden forces
operating behind the scenes are paranoid nonsense
and that they would come to infect the modern mind.
Most of Garrison’s thinking, he says, was pure
fantasy and he could produce no evidence for his
claims. In other words, Lee Harvey Oswald killed
Kennedy, not the CIA.
This claim is factually false, but it becomes the
basis for the next five parts of the documentary.
And perversely, the entire documentary is
constructed using the same method of
cutting-and-pasting, “time and propinquity,”
pastiche/collage so beloved of postmodernists, that
Curtis accuses Garrison of using, a method devoid of
logic or meaning.
This is not a Woody Allen joke.
There is no doubt that Curtis has found and
presents very interesting historical film footage
that ranges back and forth across the world and
time. He knows how to engage an audience and to
draw them into emotive and dreamy experiences of
fear and paranoia. As one watches, one feels the
walls closing in and terrible disasters lurking in
the shadows because no one is in control, for
control is an illusion. You’ll never know. You’ll
never know. Everything is relative.
Yet there is much to learn and consider from his
footage. But context is all, and the hours one
spends watching lead to part six when Curtis circles
back to part one to tie the knot on his “emotional
history” within what the writer George Trow once
called “the context of no context.” We learn about
chaos and complexity theories, artificial
intelligence, multiple selves, drugs, how
neuroscientists and psychiatrists have claimed that
consciousness does not exist, and that even though
people think they are individuals in the age of
individualism, they are deluded. In the digital age
people are now doing exactly what Garrison did fifty
years ago; now they are creating conspiracy theories
from patterns of data on the internet and it’s all a
form of madness.
Thrown in as an aside, Curtis says of the attacks
of September 11, 2001, that “no one had seen them
coming.” This, of course, is blatantly false, since
the U.S. government was not surprised, as is very
well known and confirmed, but Curtis’s claim
reinforces the idea no one knew or knows what’s
going to happen, that incompetence is the norm, that
“nothing makes sense anymore,” and that the official
narrative on 9/11 is correct, just as it is
regarding the assassination of JFK, for Jim
Garrison, the man who bravely and brilliantly
explored the case early on, was just a nut case who
believed in strange coincidences. And his crazy way
of connecting the dots has infected our world
today. We can’t get him out of our heads.
When he finally brings us into the present,
Curtis tells us that COVID-19 “was a force that came
from completely outside the systems of power.” Of
course! Despite abundant evidence to the contrary,
we are living in a world where the ruling elites are
at the mercy of chance and we think they are in
control. No, that is our illusion. Shit happens.
After spending hours showing us how the world’s
elites are corrupt and do all kinds of devious
things to maintain their power – conspire to do so –
we are also told there are no conspiracies. There
are and there aren’t. We are trapped in an insane
world of double-binds, “a world where anything could
be anything because there was no meaning anywhere.”
I suppose this might apply to this film. But no,
it is very meaningful – in the way exquisite
propaganda is.
Woody Allen can be hilarious, but Curtis is quite
funny himself. After seven plus hours of telling us
we live in the world of nightmares where we are
trapped and this sense of imprisonment is something
we can’t get out of our heads and we’re all going
bonkers, he ends by repeating his opening caption,
which are the words of the anthropologist David
Graeber:
The ultimate hidden truth of the world is
that it is something we make. And could just as
easily make differently.
Really? I never knew that. Did you?
Edward Curtin is an
independent writer whose work has appeared
widely over many years. His website is
edwardcurtin.com
and his new book is
Seeking Truth in a Country of
Lies
Registration is necessary to post comments.
We ask only that you do not use obscene or offensive
language. Please be respectful of others.