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Elephant
Written and Directed by Gus Van Sant
Performances by Alex Frost, Eric Deulen, John Robinson, Elias McConnell,
Jordan Taylor, Carrie Finklea, Nicole George Brittany Mountain, Alicia
Miles, Kristen Hicks, Bennie Dixon, Nathan Tyson, Timothy Bottoms, Matt
Malloy, Ellis Williams
CinemaShrink Says
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- "Why would two seemingly normal teenage boys load themselves up
with assault rifles, walk into their own high school in broad daylight
and pick off classmates as if they were ducks in a shooting gallery? If
that could be answered in a sentence, a film like Elephant wouldn't need
to be made."
Elephant attempts to delve beneath the surface of an evil happening,
an event so close to the tragedy that happened in Columbine that it touches
off a familiar dread and far enough removed that it sets off profound
questions about what could possibly account for such bizarre behavior.
Although the murderous acts committed by two teenage boys at Columbine
may have stemmed from a deep emotional disturbance, random killing has
become too commonplace for insanity to be its only explanation. Elephant
invites a systemic look at the problem, taking an activist stance and
demanding social responsibility.
One of the most provocative aspects of Elephant is its portrayal of abnormal
as completely normal. The teenage killers in Elephant seem like
normal boys, at least as normal as other students in their high school.
Elephant opens with a teen taking over the wheel of the family
car because his dad is too drunk to drive properly - at 11 am! The son
treats the whole thing like it's par for the course; he's obviously used
to taking over his father's responsibilities and covering up for his father's
failings. He does it with a straight, quiet face. That's how the film
gets its name. When there's an alcoholic in a family and everyone covers
it up, AA calls it 'the elephant in the room' syndrome. Everyone looks
with a blank face. Harboring an alcoholic family member distorts how everyone
thinks, feels and behaves but the source is a secret. Such a protected
secret is like an invisible elephant, trampling childhoods, families and
communities with an insidious mind-bending effect that flattens feelings.
Elephant points its finger at a couple hidden elephants as it probes
for the source of a deadly teenage shooting spree. Elephant points
first in the direction of teenage alienation, a state of quiet insecurity
marked by sarcasm, scapegoating and an air of indifference. Gus Van Sant
creates the presence of this elephant of estrangement by following teens
around, mostly from the back, as if they were avatars in a computer game.
After they're made familiar, their first names come up on the screen.
Only their first names. They are anonymous in their familiarity. The elephant
stalks teens hanging out in the halls of a high school campus draining
feeling from their personal interactions. Not even the most popular teen
feels secure. Each exists more or less in their own bubble, feeling alone
and worrying that they aren't measuring up.
There's the shy boy who uses photography to get people to pay attention
to him. He shoots photos of a symbiotically dressed Goth couple who think
he's a bit of a freak but lets him take their picture anyway. His favorite
photo of them is an anti-romantic shot of them looking completely away
from one another. Then there's the frumpy overweight girl who's too embarrassed
to put on shorts for gym class and never takes showers. There's the stereotypic
popular couple; the guy who wants to impress his guy friends by being
with the cutest girl in the school and his girlfriend who is so jealous
that she's ready to beat up any other girl who even looks at her guy.
And there's the hot girl clique in tight jeans and mini-tees, longing
to replace the popular guy's girlfriend; they all keep their tiny figures
tiny by throwing up after they eat lunch. To complete this picture, there's
a hanger-on girl who wants to be in but she's out. So, when a boy who
plays classical piano is visited by a friend who plays endless computer
games while he practices, who's thinking "this doesn't seem very normal"?
All these teens have problems and it all seems pretty normal -- just the
ordinary, everyday wallpaper of modern adolescence. Then, the friend boots
up his computer to a website that sells military guns and everything changes.
Two teenage boys order assault rifles over the Internet with the ease
of ordering a pizza. One minute the guns are on the computer screen, the
next they're in a cardboard box at their door. The boys sign for them,
try them out on a wood pile in their garage and, dressed in combat black
with the guns stashed in duffel bags, head out to school. They park. They
walk across the school's front yard at lunchtime. No one notices. Well,
not quite. The first teen, the one with the alcoholic dad notices. One
of them is a friend of his and he asks him, "what's happening". He's told
to get out here, some weird stuff is going to be happening. The two boys
walk into the school, wait for some pre-planted bombs to explode and when
they don't, one guy says to the other, "Whatever you do, dude, be sure
to have fun". As if they're walking through a computer game, they proceed
to shoot those rapid-fire rifles and wipe out a myriad of students and
teachers. It all happens so fast that one even calls 911. One student
even looks for them, searching the halls, as if he might be able to just
walk up and talk them out of it. He gets shot dead without a thought.
Unreality is reality.
The alienation that many, many teens feel, bear in their everyday lives
as they drive to school, take classes, pursue their hobbies and navigate
the social pressures of judgement may seem normal - but it's not. 'Cool'
is no longer 'cool'. Cool covers up a desperate anxiety about keeping
up, keeping on top and keeping on going that - like the young man's face
in the opening scenes of Elephant - is a complete façade. The world
is large now, overwhelming and certainly over the heads of many who have
only been on this earth a bare few teen years. Parents as well their children
often withdraw from the challenge, leaving teens even more vulnerable
to a pressing anxiety - angst. A parent acting 'cool' often simply doesn't
have the answers, the skills or the strength to take on the job. They
yield to their adolescent's withdrawal with their own, doing the best
they can but leaving the elephant loose in the house, the streets and
the school.
The other hidden secret lumbering in plain view through Gus Van Sant's
Elephant is a culture that idealizes macho images of gun-toting
soldiers and action-adventure actors as real men. For teenage boys struggling
with hormonal confusion and failing fathers, these role models not only
distort, they torture. Any desires for touch or comfort or sympathy may
be a sign of being soft, worse - gay. The culture dismisses gay as inferior
and an embarrassment, certainly not acceptable as a real man nor indicative
of what it's going to take to be successful. Unfortunately, idealizing
macho and demonizing gay elevates the threat of violence from boys. With
guns so easily available, the war on terror billed as a patriotic act
and boys eager to be men, picking up a gun can seem like an easy solution
to sexual certainty. And safety from humiliation.
The gay issue is such a known issue now that efforts are made to address
it. Students at the high school in Elephant meet to discuss whether
you can tell just by looking at someone whether they're gay. That's the
concern. Not what gay is but whether you can tell. What abnormality may
be lurking beneath a 'cool' exterior that sets a guy apart, makes him
weird and unacceptable. No matter how bright, how nice, how talented or
how good-looking a guy may be, being thought to be 'gay' is high on the
stigma list for derision and exclusion. All teens struggle with wanting
to fit in. The two boys who became killers had fooled around with each
other sexually and, presumably, chafing under the weight of their secret,
felt in danger on their own turf -- their home and their school. They
anticipated being ostracized, for sure, and could be hurt physically,
maybe even killed. Identifying with the military, men at war against a
legitimate enemy, double solves their problem. They are identified with
'real' men and they're on the right side. The fact that they could end
up dead is all part of a game they don't think they can win.
It would be easy to accuse computer games, computer access to guns and
computer anonymity as engendering a teen's alienated sensibility. But
computer games are not the culprit. They're the symptom. And symptoms
are clues. They can lead to the source of the dis-ease in our society
that makes killing seem like a solution to an adolescent challenge, the
one of becoming a man in today's society. Helping to free boys from the
narrow and harmful constraints that traditional expectations of masculinity
impose on them is critical. The film doesn't give guidelines, leaving
the quandary to its audience -- what "elephant" of artificial normalcy
were two teen-age boys seeking to overcome, shoot dead in the broad daylight
of an ordinary afternoon at their high school?
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