Uncut UK – October 2019

(Wang) #1

OCTOBER 2019 • UNCUT• 111


The starting point is the formation of The
Satanic Temple, a “nontheistic” religious
group co-founded in 2013 by Lucien Greaves.
With his scarred right eye and sardonic
smile, Greaves seems every inch the hipster
satanist, but as Hail Satan? goes on to show



  • because that question mark really is very
    important – Greaves’ project is much more
    serious than it might seem, and the Temple’s
    bid to erect a statue to the demon Baphomet
    in Little Rock, Arkansas, is a Trojan horse to
    smuggle in some truly subversive ideas.
    Rather than blind iconoclasm, The Satanic
    Temple are fighting fire with fire when it
    comes to Christian propaganda, and after
    a bumpy start depicting the Temple as
    bumbling, directionless pranksters, Lane’s
    film reveals itself as a provocative dig at the
    fragile façade of America’s evangelicals.
    Among many surprising reveals, we learn
    that the US government’s religious motto “In
    God We Trust” was a mid-1950s invention,
    coined (literally) in reaction to the godless
    communist countries of the cold war. This is
    just one of the many disturbing ties between
    church and state that the Temple is trying to
    sever, and their commitment to their cause, if
    not always their fashion sense, is admirable.


MEMORY: THE ORIGINS OF ALIEN
Ridley Scott’s Alien will turn 40 next year,
and like many milestones in sci-fi and
horror, it retains a primal fascination that
has endured through the passing decades.
This documentary is a deep dive, sometimes
straying a little into the hinterlands of
esoterica but never less than compelling in
its bold fusion of traditional Making Of with
an attempt rationalise its enduring appeal.
Very few of the cast and crew appear here;
there’s no Ridley, and the two actors that
pop up don’t have a great many behind-the-


scenes scoops to add to the saga. Instead,
director Alexandre O Philippe wants to
dwell on the themes and subtexts of the film,
focusing on how the film was first conceived
(by writer Dan O’Bannon) and how its world
was designed (by Swiss artist HR Giger). This
creative pairing proved to be the film’s big
bang, and though Scott’s masterful direction
served their ideas well, it’s telling that his
more recent excursions into that world
haven’t been anywhere as exciting as the first.
The most likely reason for this is that later
Alien movies became almost existential,
whereas the first, and best, was visceral;
when John Hurt is literally impregnated with
a chest-busting creature, it births the body-
horror genre mastered by Cronenberg et al in
the ’80s. But there are also more unexpected
readings too, such as a brief digression into
the politics of the film, drawing intriguing
parallels with The Deer Hunter in its depiction
of the class structure on board the Nostromo.
Not everything lands, and not all the talking
heads have a point worth making, but this is
far more than just an extended DVD extra.

THE SOUVENIR The Souvenir proved
divisive to say the least at this year’s
Sundance film festival, still eminently the
most “woke” event on the cinematic calendar.
The walkouts were revealing – mostly
under-30s, equal split male and female of
all ethnicities – since there was nothing
contentious or explicit on show on screen. The
deal with Joanna Hogg’s latest is its seemingly
militant display of white privilege, telling a
coming-of-age story from the point of view of
a young woman who lives in a Knightsbridge
flat just a stone’s throw from Harrods.
The setting is the early ’80s, where
20-something film student Julie (Honor
Swinton Byrne, daughter of Tilda) is trying
to strike out on her own. Rebelling against
her posh Norfolk parents, in a bookishly
middle-class way, Julie is working on a black-
and-white documentary about working-
class communities in the north-east. Like
everything else in her life, Julie is unsure
how to proceed with this project, and it’s
during this sprawling period of uncertainty
that a cocky stranger, Tom Burke’s Anthony,
a smooth-talking lower-down in the Foreign
Office, sweeps in and starts to dominate her
life in disturbing ways.
Since rich white people’s problems are
something of a no-no in this new diversity
era, it’s easy to see why audiences found
Hogg’s understated film a turn-off. But
The Souvenir uses these privileges to its
advantage: a grubby tale of addiction
starts to unfold that belies the respectable
surface of Julie’s life, one that inevitably
turns to the subject of toxic masculinity
when Anthony reveals his true inner self.
It’s a creeping tale of dependence made all
the more uncomfortable by its plausibility.
Interesting, too, is a deftly deployed post-
punk soundtrack (The Fall’s “Totally Wired”
pops up at a student party), which deftly
helps to define Julie and her fellow travellers:
smart, culturedpeoplewhodabble in drugs
but never believethatdrugswill come to
define them. DAMON WISE

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