One of the better animated features to come out of
Pixar (parent company: Disney) in 2015 was Inside
Out, now available on Netflix and DVD.
Plot: Young Riley tries to adjust to her new life
when her parents, who have their own reasons to be stressed, move from
Minnesota to San Francisco. We see personifications of five emotions (Joy,
Fear, Anger, Disgust and Sadness) vying for control of the console in her
brain. The part of her that is Joy struggles to dominate the controls, and in
particular to sequester Sadness, but Sadness cannot be controlled so easily.
Sadness starts touching core memories. When Joy tries to intervene, both get
lost in the inner structure of Riley’s mind. In their absence from the command center, control is handed
over Fear, Anger, and Disgust. Riley becomes surly and erratic, and her
personality is damaged. Can Joy and Sadness find their way back?
The message, of course, is that we cannot repress
any natural human feeling without consequences. We have to learn to integrate
them all into our personalities. Accordingly, Inside Out is more thoughtful than most animated films, but since
it is aimed primarily at kids – and be warned that it most definitely is aimed
at kids – it is a simplified and sanitized version of the real internal war
inside each of us.
Moving beyond Disney for a moment, it is a curious
development that perceptions of the human psyche among so-called intellectuals
are more apt to be shallower today than they were a century ago. They tend
today to be thoroughly politicized, and there are few better ways to drain a
subject of real significance. The insights of Nietzsche and Freud are tossed
aside whenever they offend political correctness, which they do at every turn.
(Camille Paglia adds the Marquis de Sade to those two as another key
philosopher; having read the bulk of his surviving work, I see her point, but
I’m not quite ready to pay homage to a practicing… well… sadist.) Lately we
even have re-invented thoughtcrime, from which Fred and Sig had done so much to
free us by acknowledging both the arbitrary origins of morality and the
predatory aspects of our underlying natures. There are no thoughtcrimes, only
crimes of action. Nietzsche: “I laugh at those who think themselves good
because they have no claws.” The fact that we can be predatory (and are aware
of the fun in it) doesn’t mean we have to be; the capacity is what makes
refraining from using it noble. In Civilization
and Its Discontents Freud explicitly argued that thwarting the death
instinct’s destructiveness was necessarily a cause of individual unhappiness
but was the worthwhile price of civilization.
A version of Inside
Out that featured a Freudian struggle between the libido (Eros) and the
death instinct (Thanatos), among other motivations, might make an interesting
flick, though it surely would not be for kids. Strangely, one film series that
does include primary characters with complex personal motivations is Star Wars despite the simplistic
Manichaean universe which they inhabit, but that is a matter for another blog:
perhaps a matter for someone else’s blog.
So, given the age range for which it is intended,
I’m still giving Inside Out a Thumbs
Up.
Theory of a Deadman – World War Me
I haven't seen Inside Out yet though it's in the queue. I watched Aladdin for the first time the other day. I think I was a bit turned off by Robin William's manic performance, as it can wear me down a bit. However, it was a pretty fun film and I enjoyed it. Some films strike me that way though, I sometimes have to be in the mood for them to work properly.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of Eros/Thanatos, I saw an episode on the ID channel about a woman with a high IQ killing her husband, and trying to pull off the perfect crime by seducing the next door neighbor's boy into the plot hoping to blame it on him, and then killing him as well to make it look like a suicide. It didn't work, though could have come close if it weren't for such good forensic science these days.
Criminal detectives know all too well that not just outright psychopaths commit murder and other heinous crimes: apparently normal people can “go a little mad sometimes” (to steal a line from Norman Bates) with the right motivation, though unlike psychopaths they don’t make it a hobby. It surprises me that there isn’t more discussion of the psychosexual roots of violent political and religious extremism as well; there was a lot of such analysis during the rise of fascism, and appropriately so.
DeleteI really liked "Inside Out" too. Amazing visuals and so creatively executed. I especially enjoyed the scene at the dinner table where we got to see the emotional aspects of the mother, father and Riley and how they all impacted the approach to the conversation.
ReplyDeleteIt was pretty interesting to watch the film with my wife (who was once told she didn't smile nearly enough at her retail job). She was getting really mad at Joy's constant suppression of Sadness. When Joy failed in her attempt to get back to headquarters and lost another island my wife cheered and yelled, "Suck it JOY!" This cracked me up, because my wife has always had little time for overly cheerful people.
Meanwhile I have to admit that fear is probably my primary emotion running in my mind. Oh joy hangs out quite a bit, but even now fear is telling me that I'm writing too much and should just stop before I say too much. :)
And yeah Michael Giacchino provided a fun score to the movie. I love that his jazzy score went all experimental when they entered the Abstract Thought zone.
Ernest Becker ("Denial of Death") credited fear of death (often disguised as other fears) as the prime human motivator. I guess we know who was at the console in his brain.
DeleteMaybe the Joker should have gone into retail. He missed his calling.