52 Films by Women Vol 3. 14. LIFE GUIDANCE (Director: Ruth Mader)
Life Guidance is a foray
into near-future territory from Austrian co-writer-director Ruth Mader. In it,
citizens and families living in relative comfort are expected to strive to be
optimal. Performance rather than moral well-being is what counts. Perhaps it is
better described as being set in a parallel society, significantly one without
computers or social media or even advertising. It depicts a way of living that
might have been culled from George Orwell’s novel 1984, or dreamed up by Franz Kafka, though one where is there is
little talk of the outside world, religion or cultural difference. It is as if
Mader imagined a world in which Nazism or white supremacy had won and is no
longer a talking point or rallying cry. In so far as there is a sense of the
world outside, it is in commodities, whether investments should be embraced or
discouraged. In this alternative world, there is no police. If citizens or
families diverge from accepted performance or attitudinal levels, a private
agency known as ‘Life Guidance’ comes knocking at the door. The service is
staffed by middle-aged men in beige overcoats – regular urban professionals
wear dark blue – who ring the doorbell and present themselves as a service with
whom citizens must engage. The men smile and present themselves as formerly
damaged people who have seen the light. They have ways of encouraging
conformity, with gifts of robotic rabbits that announce they can see your
achievements and films that reflect your deepest fears that amazingly appear to
feature you and your family doing things that you wouldn’t believe.
Mader’s hero is Alexander Dworsky
(Fritz Karl), a divergent thinker who lives with his wife (Katharina Lorenz)
and son in a house that is like a mountain chalet in an urban setting (Austria
probably has more trees than people). When
colleagues think his company should invest in rice, he argues (successfully)
against. ‘Good call,’ he is later told. But Alexander isn’t happy. His father
is on his deathbed, cared for in a hospice. When he lies next to his wife and
says ‘Ich liebe dich’ (‘I love you’) there is almost a pregnant pause, as if
passion had been replaced by an imitation of life, to quote the title of a
Douglas Sirk movie.
Alexander’s indolence – he plays
football with his young son (the latter is in goal) joylessly and aggressively
– attracts the attention of Life Guidance in the form of an agent (Florian
Teichtmeister) who looks a lot like the British writer and comedian David
Walliams. I don’t know about you, but I wouldn’t like a ‘Britain’s Got Talent’
judge turning up at my door saying I need help. I’m perfectly happy doing
occasional stand-up comedy in New York City, danke schön. A shout out to all at
Performance Anxiety at the Broadway Comedy Club, 318 W 53rd Street;
I’m not sure if you’re still going. Alexander has no interest in this privately
employed bureaucrat telling him, not in so many words, how to live his life,
even if the sub-optimal are sent to the Fortresses of Sleep, which sounds like
a chain that Superman would visit to buy a mattress. In fact he visits one such
Fortress, in which the heavily sedated and – possibly – mentally ill wander
around. One man gives Alexander a leaflet advertising his church.
Mader’s film is a commentary on
materialism replacing spirituality as the primary goal of life. Of course we
can be optimal, but we should also be humble; share the world, don’t own it.
There is no organised ‘hippy’ opposition to the urban elite, whose satellite
navigation – Mader’s one concession to technology – tells them when they are
heading for the unsafe zone. They’ve been chemically suppressed, as oddly
sapped of will as Alexander’s conformist colleagues.
As in many films that depict an
alternate society, Life Guidance reaches a fork in the road. Mader could justify
the New World Order by showing what its architects are seeking to protect. Or
she could go down a film noir route, showing a man desperate to escape reality.
Mader goes for the latter, partly one suspects, because it is a plot choice within
budget. You might want to see thousands of Austrians fighting back against an
oppressive regime, but it adds an extra zero. The second half of the film has a
dream like quality as Alexander masquerades as a Life Guidance employee to
break into the building and finds himself befriending two women, one who lost
her company, the other, Eva, he meets in a noodle bar in which the customers
slurp hesitantly. (I salute Mader’s choice of food used for dramatic effect.)
Mader doesn’t develop Alexander’s
wife or even give her a back story. Her brief sub plot involves an accountant
colleague who made a mistake and faces being sent to the Fortresses of Sleep.
Even he doesn’t become part of the resistance. Rather he is fearful and
pathetic.
At one point, Alexander finds
himself in a hunter’s cross hairs. He is interrupting a shoot, attended by the
Board of Life Guidance who invite him to lunch. They are a happy, cigar
chomping lot who have given some people what they want and have done so unapologetically.
‘You help keep the system going,’ Alexander is told. His struggle against Life
Guidance leads to a moral descent. Admittedly, we’ve all been there when faced
with a smug face, but Alexander’s reaction is more extreme than most. Mader’s final
point is to discuss the connection between a moral descent and conformity, as
if for many life is a prison.
There is plenty to disagree with
in Mader’s world view. Kudos to her for attempting a genre that is for the most
part driven by technology. But for the satellite navigation, Life
Guidance could have been set in the 1930s. It even posits dinner with
friends as a private experience, in which a quartet of diners are fed by a
server without the need for a knife and fork, rather as if in Roman times. The
point that she makes has credence and the film noir plot bubbles along nicely.
One of the most human moments is when drugged-up noodle eating bank employee
Eva leaves Alexander a croissant for breakfast in a little dish. It is the
film’s one single moment of tender, loving care
Reviewed at the Austrian Cultural Centre, 28 Rutland Gate, London, Thursday 22 February 2018
Review originally published on Bitlanders.com
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