CAPTAIN FANTASTIC C+
USA (118 mi) 2016
‘Scope d: Matt Ross Official
site
You never change
things by fighting the existing reality.
To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model
obsolete.
—Buckminster Fuller
—Buckminster Fuller
Welcome to the 60’s counterculture, or at least the leftover
remnants of what was once a thriving cultural phenomena, an anti-establishment
movement of young idealists that thought they could change the world by making
better decisions in their generation by challenging existing norms, broadening
their base to include women and minorities, reestablishing new priorities that
included ending the war in Vietnam and breaking the stranglehold on power that
led to an elite and privileged white class that made all the important
decisions of the country. People
actually thought education would be the key, as given a differing set of
narratives, stay the course or embark anew, it would be in everyone’s best
interest to establish a new criteria of success, where the societal divisions
that wealth and privilege produced were no longer the desired dream, but
personal happiness, which would include holding the nation to higher
standards. To that end, there was an
extreme amount of social progress made in that decade and beyond, but rather
than continue on an agenda of social change, the country instead skidded to an
abrupt stop with the accumulated effects of the assassinations of notable
leaders that included President Kennedy, followed in short order by Malcolm X,
Martin Luther King, and Bobby Kennedy, the last of which led to the bloodied
demonstrators at the hands of the Chicago police during the 1968 Democratic Convention,
which ultimately split the party and doomed their chances, leading to the
election of Richard Nixon, the law and order, status quo candidate who all but
guaranteed an end to any hope of progress.
All that was half a century ago and is considered yesterday’s
dreams. New generations have come and
gone, while the real splash in generating societal changes has been the advent
of the computer and the Internet, where in the palm of your hand you now have
24-hour instant access to just about anything you can think of, where all you
have to do is click on a few links and you’re free to pursue any interest under
the sun. While it’s still questionable
whether this has actually increased personal happiness or made people’s lives
better, there is no question that being connected is more convenient, as it has
certainly made people’s lives easier.
Perhaps the bigger question is whether it has added to the overall
tension and anxiety that exists in the world, which certainly appears more
divided than ever before, less tolerant, less open to discussion, where the
Internet seems to have contributed to the formation of communities of
like-minded followers, “where a man hears what he wants to hear and disregards
the rest.” Rather than bring people
together, the lines of division have never been stronger. To that end, this film is not likely to open
anyone’s minds to the ideas being offered, as most of it is lost in a satirical
attempt to poke fun at the participants.
Those that dare to be different are, in fact, mocked in this film, where
there’s not much sympathy when there’s so little effort to actually understand
what they’re trying to do, instead it’s easy to exclude those that were always
outsiders anyway, which is a troubling aspect of the film, as if these kids
deserve to be scorned because they are obviously different, labeled freaks or
outcasts, where to many the word “cult” might come to mind, sending a
resoundingly negative message about those who are different, so by the end it
all feels so mournfully short-sighted, like the empty feeling that develops in
the pit of your stomach following a funeral.
The film surprisingly won the Best Directing prize of Un
Certain Regard at Cannes 2016, probably thinking it had more to say about
addressing superficialities in American culture, chosen by a largely European
jury headed by Swiss actress Marthe Keller, but also including Swedish director
Ruben Östlund, French actress Céline Sallette, Austrian director Jessica
Hausner, and Mexican actor Diego Luna. Set
in the wilderness of the Pacific Northwest, Viggo Mortensen as Ben Cash is the
Dad and spiritual leader of his family of six kids ranging from 8 to 18, each
one smart, athletic, and highly individualistic, while encouraged to be so. The mom has been away at a hospital for
several months, yet life goes on without her, as Ben rallies the troops each
and every day, waking them to a reveille by bagpipes before leading them in
group activities that includes calisthenics, running up mountain trails,
performing vigorous outdoor activities like rock or mountain climbing, while
also including moments of serenity, like yoga exercises overlooking a mountain
overlook. The family is also involved in
hunting their own food, including killing animals by bow and arrow or a sharp
knife, and then skinning them, while also preparing daily meals, much of which
is organically home grown. Each one is
challenged to read and think critically, facing a series of probing questions
about how it makes them feel and what they find most significant. While they enjoy playing musical instruments
and singing songs together, there seems to be a balance of group time and
individual time, existing in the wild without technology, making the most of
their primitive situation of communing with nature. While Ben makes occasional trips to town to
restock necessary items, where the kids are more starstruck than engaged with
the regular population, their social skills may resemble that of the Amish, as
they’ve remained isolated and kept away from towns by choice, where the kid’s
interactions that take place are like visitors from another planet, often
generating plenty of stares by other kids in town. The kid’s personalities, however, once you
spend time with them, couldn’t be more charming and adorable, as their unique
views and activities include Black Panther slogans from the 60’s, like “Stick
it to the man” or “Power to the people.”
The juxtaposition of their innocence with some radical ideology feels
hilarious, like the scenes in ANNIE HALL (1977) where kids are staring at the
camera while telling the audience what they become when they grow up, Alvey's School Days and Ours
.. - YouTube (1:36), as there’s something totally incongruous about their
ages and the subject matter. One of the
most effective concerns the youngest child of eight, Charlie Shotwell as Nai,
either seen wearing a lynx fur over his head or a gas mask, who has created his
own private space in a treehouse, including photos of Cambodian mass murderer
Pol Pot along with an assemblage of animal skulls and skins, a dire warning of
the coming apocalypse. It’s all played
for laughs, including the celebration of Noam Chomsky Day instead of Christmas,
where there’s a leftist slant to the ideology the children have been
taught. When they learn their mother
died, and more significantly that she took her own life, suffering from a
mental disorder that included bipolar mood swings, Ben doesn’t sugar coat what
happened to the children, explaining honestly and openly, where the family
apparently holds no secrets, which includes a warning from her father to stay
away from the funeral, as he’ll have Ben arrested on sight.
Death doesn’t take a holiday in this film, as the spirit is
prominently featured throughout, where the dilemma becomes what to do about
seeing their mother one last time and giving her a proper farewell. Their ideas about what to do includes singing
and a life celebration, where she expressly wished to be cremated in accordance
with her Buddhist philosophy, while the rest of the family prefers a church
service followed by a burial in a casket.
While their initial inclination was that power prevails, as that’s the
message in a capitalistic society, and “you just have to accept it,” or, on
second thought, “Stick it to the man,” their rallying cry where they are
hellbent to see their mother. Driving
halfway across the country in an old school bus, the film resorts to sight gags
and pop references to make light of their situation, stopping at a diner were
they’ve never seen any of the items on the menu before, with Dad describing
coca cola as “poison water” before raiding a grocery store with Dad feigning a
heart attack as a diversion while the kids steal the store blind with needed
provisions. While it’s easy to make
light of this, as if it’s all in good fun, it’s clear humor takes precedence
over any of the actual ideas, which is the prevailing message throughout. While there are solemn moments, or sequences
of seriously staged drama, none of this has anything to do with living off the
land, as most of it is all window dressing for the comedy, turning this more
into a lighthearted romp than a film that expounds profound ideas. Of course there is a culture shock when this
unorthodox family intrudes into a suburban Arizona neighborhood to mingle with
a sister-in-law (Kathryn Hahn) and her husband (Steve Zahn), where the meeting
of the minds is a disaster, as child-rearing practices are decidedly
different. Of course, the same thing
occurs when they march into the funeral services, late, making something of a
spectacle of themselves in the entrance before Ben tries unsuccessfully to take
over the service but makes such a fuss that he’s kicked out of the church,
banned by his wife’s staunchly conservative father Jack (Frank Langella) who
threatens to have him arrested. “Grandpa
can’t oppress us!” Nai exclaims, but they don’t want to lose their father so
soon after losing their mother. What
follows is a mutiny by one of the children, Nicholas Hamilton as Rellian,
joining forces with the dark side, confessing all to his grandfather about his
supposed continual mistreatment at the hands of his father. Calls for abuse and neglect charges greet Ben
as he’s being shown the door, without his kids, reduced in a heap of utter
exasperation, feeling for the first time that perhaps he’s failed as a father,
getting a real comeuppance in this film, where many, depending on which side of
the political spectrum you come from, will believe he fully deserves it. For a while, Ben believes it, leaving his
brood behind in the hands of his arch nemesis, driving away as a solitary
figure in an empty bus where the world has lost all meaning. The director is not afraid of emotional
manipulation or overkill, where scenes are intentionally designed for tears,
yet there’s an unmistaken understanding that no one loves these kids more than
their father, who is forced to compromise his principles and acknowledge
perhaps he overdid it. It’s an unfortunate
turn, as some good ideas get lost in the debacle, where all parents wonder if
they’re doing the right thing, making this much less interesting than it could
have been.
Reviving the 60’s concept of getting “back to the garden,” a
return-to-nature mantra expressed in the Joni Mitchell counterculture anthem “Woodstock,”
Joni Mitchell ~ Woodstock
- YouTube (4:35), many took this philosophy to heart and literally dropped
out of society, where it’s particularly prevalent on the West Coast, but also
Vermont, where in 1970 hippies constituted one-third of the entire state
population, where there were as many as 75 communes thriving just in that one
state alone. Many still thrive decades
later, rejecting the consumer-oriented, traditional way of life that measures
success by material wealth, yet at the time, with Whole Earth Catalogs and Mother
Earth News magazines in hand, it was an opportunity for hundreds of
thousands of young idealists to change the American Dream and leave the
congestion of the urban areas and live a more peaceful and harmonious life
co-existing with nature. In many
respects, this led to the birth of the organic farming movement, as there was a
progressive movement that turned away from a reliance on industrial farming and
processed foods, railing against toxic pesticide use and the growing disconnect
between Americans and their food supply.
Others headed into the forests and countrysides of Northern California
to become marijuana growers, developing unique horticultural techniques that
produced the most potent cannabis in the country, aided by an American
government decision in the late 70’s to spray toxic chemicals on the Mexican
marijuana crops which at the time accounted for 90 percent of the marijuana
smoked in the United States. This
provided an opening for a home-grown product that was actually superior in
every respect, as the trick was to remove male plants before pollination,
producing seedless female flowers known as sinsemilla that produce much more
resin, a sticky substance known for enhancing the potency, where now Humboldt
County in California has become America’s marijuana capital. But let’s not be naïve, as the Mexican narco
traffickers have also moved into similar regions, where marijuana patches
guarded by men with Uzis have also sprung up in the national parks and forests,
often viewed as trigger-happy competitors, where farming pot in the U.S. is
much more profitable than smuggling it across the border. Their methods are more toxic, however,
growing plants laced with illegal pesticides, leaving behind dead animals,
loads of trash, while polluting the natural water supplies, making the narco
traffickers the very antithesis of Thoreau’s utopian vision of Walden, which is largely seen as a quest
for spiritual transcendence through self-reliance. It’s curious that both sides cohabitate the
same space, as their aims are diametrically opposed to one another. This is similar, however, to the political
divisions of the 60’s, where there were radical elements that resorted to
violence and others that were strictly peace abiding. Both shared similar ideals but veered
dramatically in different directions when it came to achieving those
goals. This film attempts to raise
similar questions about unorthodox methods used to raise children, including
home-schooling methods that often include strict religious or philosophical
principles whose pre-determined dogmatic adherence resembles parental
brainwashing, suggesting it’s impossible to provide a perfect childhood
upbringing by overcontrolling their environment, that it’s more about
unconditional love and instilling moral values.
This is where Hollywood goes wrong, however, as even though
this is a smaller indie format with good intentions, claiming to be made in the
same likeable spirit as LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE (2006), a darling of independent
film festivals that comically straddled the line between the grotesque, the
tasteless, and the hilarious, they still fuck up the neighborhood, as despite a
cast of Viggo Mortensen surrounded by six adorable children, like the von Trapp
family living off the grid somewhere out in the middle of the Pacific Northwest
woods, the film takes great pains to show the rigor and discipline of their
subsistence living lifestyle, as they have a daily exercise regimen while
learning survival skills, with each child seriously brain-challenged by a
dedicated home-schooling program, where these kids are sharp as a tack. And that is where this film falls off the
rails, as Hollywood stereotypes always depict outsider groups as having to be
smarter than the norm, like Stanley Kramer’s unintentionally offensive GUESS
WHO’S COMING TO DINNER (1967), where Sidney Poitier as a black man had to be universally
recognized as having the same brains and moral values as whites, but in the
movies, it’s always exaggerated so they are also the smartest person in the
room, leaving no doubt, or so the film suggests, that blacks share the same
humanity as whites. Of course, in making
this message, they dumb down the message so that “all whites” will sympathize,
so while supposedly promoting racial equality, blacks actually have to be
“superior” to whites, so their humanity credentials simply can’t be
questioned. However, in promoting a
liberal cause, they actually made it harder for ordinary blacks to succeed in
similar situations as whites, as Hollywood rarely focuses on real personal struggles, but instead
promoted blacks as “supermen.” Another
example is the huge success of the documentary MARCH OF THE PENGUINS (2005),
making penguins cute and cuddly, giving them human characteristics of being
“lovable,” where the adoration of this film only made it that much harder for
other serious documentaries to offer a complex message, as in order to succeed,
or so the thinking goes in Hollywood, the product has to be wrapped in cute and
cuddly to succeed. Count the animated
penguin movies that have followed, starting with MADAGASCAR (2005) and the many
follow-ups, or cute ocean critters in FINDING NEMO (2003) and now FINDING DORY
(2016), or going back as far as the ICE AGE (2002), with its many sequels, as
theaters have been playing to this formula ever since, as it sends customers
through the turnstyles. The same thing happens
here in this movie, where if you see something that’s too good to be true, it’s
likely not real. As much as people like
this movie, and it’s perfectly enjoyable on the surface, there’s little doubt
that it follows the same business model for success. Why does Hollywood always have to mythologize
humanity in order to tell their stories, exaggerating beauty or intelligence in
order to make characters more interesting?
Because that’s the crowd pleasing business template for selling a
Hollywood product, where one need look no further than any decent commercial
advertisement that wants you to willingly buy their product. So do not be fooled, as this is sheer
fabrication, a glossy surface covering up damaged goods.