Revolutionary Socialism in the 21st Century
 
Revolutionary
Socialism in the
21st Century
captain-fantastic-1021x580

Captain Fantastic (dir. Matt Ross/Bleecker Street)

Review: Captain Fantastic – beyond convention and conformity

Mark Winter

Mark Winter looks back at his favourite film of the year, the counter-cultural Captain Fantastic.

From the very first shot of this movie, we enter a world outside the city, beyond convention and conformity.

A deer moves timidly through a clearing in the forest. The camera pans to reveal an eye, then another, and then a knife which flashes from the undergrowth. George Mackay’s character claims a life, and his father, Viggo Mortensen, declares him a man.

Ben Cash has moved with his wife Leslie and their six children deep into the wilderness. The aim? To escape a toxic consumerism which would be all too familiar to the Frankfurt School, and to carve a life from the natural world, in the forest of the Pacific Northwest.

The six children have been trained to survive against all odds. Cash’s character explains to their grandparents that they have the bodies of elite athletes; their minds are trained to question and challenge the status quo. We witness them scaling a sheer cliff-face in torrential rain, and relaxing in the evening with a selection of books from the canon. They read the classics, and avoid the distractions of TV and the internet. They debate Nabokov and Marxism, hunt for their own food, and make their own music.

A plot device sees the family take a road trip through the heart of America, and we see TV ads, computer games and shopping malls through their critical lens. There are laugh-out-loud scenes when the bus they travel on stops so that they can celebrate Chomsky Day (Cash is virulently opposed to organised religion), and raid a supermarket. To them, Nike is the Greek goddess of victory, not a sportswear brand.

This is a film which revels in the counter-culture, and pokes a sharp stick at common sense, taken-for-granted everyday life. It then moves onto deeper terrain to examine and question Cash’s life choices. Is Cash a dangerous and manipulative God-figure who has created freaks out of his offspring, or a charismatic, eccentric rebel with the courage to live out his convictions? What does it cost us to escape capital and alienation, religion and shopping, when we do so in isolation from humanity?

This is indie anarchy, and a tonic for the soul. As a footnote, the director is a product of the communes of northern California. And it turns out that Viggo Mortensen is a critic of corporate America, and has sported a T-shirt with the slogan, “No more blood for oil”. Mortensen is quoted as stating that George Bush will go down in history as the “Sauron of Presidents”. So Aragorn from Lord of the Rings is a Commie? Who knew?

SHARE

0 comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

GET UPDATES FROM RS21

RELATED ARTICLES

A violet coloured image collage of a photo of Sylvia Townshend Warner and a painting depicting the burning of King Louis Philippe's throne in 1848. Sylvia is a white woman has short dark brown hair and wears glasses. She wears a short sleeved shirt and in the original image wears trousers. Below her is the painting, and it almost looks as if she is looking down on the symbol of the monarchy being burned by revolutionaries.

Lavender Solstice: Revolution in Summer Will Show

Benjamin Hargeaves looks to the novel Summer Will Show for its lessons on revolution

The image shows actors on a stage in front of a theatre audience. They are playing people affected by war, clotehd in rags and with dirty faces. They are pulling Mother Courage's sales wagon.

Review | Mother Courage and Her Children

War is a guzzling money‑making machine

coer of the book revolutiionary forgiveness by david renton on blue background

Review | Revolutionary Forgiveness

Creating the conditions for forgiveness is socialist practice