{"id":600,"date":"2007-09-20T10:24:21","date_gmt":"2007-09-20T15:24:21","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.shaviro.com\/Blog\/?p=600"},"modified":"2007-09-20T10:24:22","modified_gmt":"2007-09-20T15:24:22","slug":"zodiac","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.shaviro.com\/Blog\/?p=600","title":{"rendered":"Zodiac"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>I found David Fincher&#8217;s <a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/exec\/obidos\/ASIN\/B000QUCNOU\/dhalgrenstevensh\"><em>Zodiac<\/em><\/a> to be compelling and absorbing. Though, interestingly, the reasons I liked the movie are not far from the reasons <a href=\"http:\/\/kdotdammit.livejournal.com\/943081.html\">Kim hated it<\/a>. <em>Zodiac<\/em> is so cool and detached as to be almost hysterical, as well as creepy, in its insistence upon objectivity (both in terms of its point of view, and in terms of its excessive care in making supposedly &#8220;authentic&#8221; re-creations of 1970s decors). <\/p>\n<p>How does the film work? Despite what I might have expected from the director of <em>Seven<\/em>, <em>Zodiac<\/em> is not interested at all in the inner motivations of the serial killer, nor even in the spectacle of gore that his acts created. Even the murders we see on-screen are oblique and deadpan; we have little sympathy for the victims, but also no sense of identification or complicity with the masked killer &#8212; the Zodiac killer is no Michael Myers. The movie has no shock effects, and no unplumbed depths. What you see is what you get, without any residue of mystery or suggestiveness or (even) danger. This is a world that is cooly and carefully visualized, and that doesn&#8217;t seem to have anything lurking in the shadows, anything beyond the literal givenness of what is visualized. This makes <em>Zodiac<\/em> almost the exact polar opposite of, say, Dario Argento&#8217;s films, with their baroque flourishes and arcane visual conceptions.<\/p>\n<p>In part, this is because the focus of <em>Zodiac<\/em> is upon the investigation of the crimes, rather than upon the crimes themselves. It belongs, more or less, to the genre of the &#8220;police procedural.&#8221; This genre is a popular one in American culture today, as witness the success of TV shows like <em>Lae and Order<\/em> and (in a more specialized sense) <em>CSI<\/em>. The focus is on the investigators, rather than the perpetrator, and we see the effects of the investigation upon the investigators&#8217; personal lives. Yet even this formula is skewed in Fincher&#8217;s treatment &#8212; since the (real-life) case is never neatly wound up in the way it is on TV. We end with the identification of the probable killer, but he is never brought to justice, and even this identification remains twisted up in the maze of false inferences and ambiguous clues and mistaken identifications out of which it emerges.<\/p>\n<p>The narrative of <em>Zodiac<\/em> is quite literally linear, since it starts with the first Zodiac murder, and then moves doggedly forward in time, without any flashbacks or interludes from subjective POVs or pauses to contemplate the significance of one event or another. One scene follows another, with no blackouts or other ways of emphasizing the cuts; we are only informed of time passing by small titles that appear at the bottom of the screen. The exact same transition marks &#8220;an hour later&#8221; and &#8220;eight months later&#8221;; the passage of time is thereby weirdly homogenized. The unsettling result is that sequence (the order in which things happen) seems to have nothing to do with duration and time passing (how long it takes for an event to happen, and how long we have to wait between one event and the next). <\/p>\n<p>Of course, this skewing of &#8216;real time&#8217; in order to construct a more exciting or engaging &#8216;narrative time&#8217; is a feature of the overwhelming majority of narrative films; but Fincher pushes it so far, and does it so understatedly, and at such great length (the film is something like 2 hours 40 minutes long), that the effect is entirely uncanny. The movie seems affected with a time disorder malady, a sort of <a href=\"http:\/\/k-punk.abstractdynamics.org\/archives\/008780.html\">dyschronia<\/a>. This is all the more the case in that, for the first two thirds of the film at least, the movie switches its focus among characters almost as capriciously as it jumps forward at irregular intervals. In terms of both temporality and point of view, the movie at once revels in absolute disjunctions and disparities, and yet at the same time smooths these all out into a stylistic uniformity. The result, for the viewer, is a kind of stupefied absorption, but one that cannot crystallize or coalesce into any sort of &#8220;identification.&#8221; <\/p>\n<p>Towards the end of the film, there is in fact one &#8220;time-passing&#8221; montage of the sort that usually orients us in other narrative films. But even this has no subjective center: rather, we see a rapid animation of the San Francisco skyline changing as the Transamerica Pyramid goes up. And, in the last third of the film, the splitting among multiple investigative subjects is reduced, as most of the concerned parties just give up on the case, and Jake Gyllenhaal is the only one who continues obsessively searching for the identity of the killer. But even here, the results are far from straightforward. Just as, in the earlier portions of the film, the various cops and newspapermen investigating the Zodiac killings never coalesces into a group the way they do in the TV procedurals, so, in the latter portion, the actions of the single protagonist to remain active do not fuse into any stable point of reference. The narrative is simply too choppy and gap-ridden for this to happen. <\/p>\n<p>For instance, Gyllenhaal has a blind date with Chloe Sevigny: it is awkward and embarrassing, as the two don&#8217;t hit it off at all, there is no chemistry between them, etc.; and even this devoles into a even worse date from hell when Gyllenhaal drags Sevigny off into his Zodiac investigations. The next time we see Sevigny, however, she is married to Gyllenhaal and they have had a baby. The time after that, she is worried by his continuing obsession with Zodiac &#8212; it is both potentially dangerous, and somethng that gets in the way of family life. So she eventually takes the kids and walks out on him (all this conveyed off-screen). Everything here is off-kilter, and by design: the point being, that Gyllenhaal doesn&#8217;t <em>have<\/em> any sort of intelligible private life, but has been completely consumed by his obsession.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps I am exaggerating this, because of my general bafflement and incomprehension with regard to the younger generation of actors. But here both Gyllenhaall as the newspaper-cartoonist-turned-investigator, and Mark Ruffalo as the San Francisco detective who does most of the work on the case, appear to me like &#8220;men without qualities&#8221; &#8212; to my jaded senses, there is simply nothing distinguishable or charismatic or even interesting about them, so I don&#8217;t quite understand how they became movie stars. (The same is true for me of other actors of their generation, like Ed Norton, for instance, or Keanu Reeves. The brilliance of Norton&#8217;s role in <em>Fight Club<\/em> consists precisely in the contrast between his blankness and the floridity of Brad Pitt). Here, in <em>Zodiac<\/em>, both Gyllenhaal and Ruffalo seem utterly bland to me even when they become a bit crazed or obsessive &#8212; but they are set off against the floridity of (of course) Robert Downey, Jr. as the crime reporter who falls into a spiral of bitter cynicism and alcoholic self-destruction, and (in a more minor, character-actor sort of role) Brian Cox, who does a wonderful, utterly bizarre turn as famous defense attorney Melvin Belli.<\/p>\n<p>In any case, the acting in <em>Zodiac<\/em> is overwhelmed by Fincher&#8217;s cinematography, with its dull colors, relative flatness, ceaselessly panning camera, and exploration of bureaucratic spaces (most notably, the newspaper offices, and various police headquarters). Nothing ever feels quite right, and so even the creepiest and strangest sequences (like one in which the cops search the trailer of their prime suspect, and find it overrun with squirrels, cavorting amidst the assault rifles and porno magazines) don&#8217;t seem out of place, but of a piece with the scense set in (always slightly inhuman) &#8220;ordinary&#8221; spaces. All in all, Fincher&#8217;s treatment of space is as expansive as his treatment of time is clipped and understated. But the effect is roughly the same: the exploration, almost as if it were being done by an alien, of a world of surfaces that connect and ramify, but also block one another; yet without anything that we could call a hidden dimesion of depth. (The expectation of depth is even parodied at one point, when Gyllenhaal visits the home of an informant, perhaps a suspect or the friend of a suspect, who runs a movie theater that shows old silent films, and whose archives &#8212; one of the rare basements in California &#8212; have a kind of Gothic creepiness to them. Gyllenhaal gets paranoid and flees, but it becomes clear to us that the creepy movie man isn&#8217;t the Zodiac killer).<\/p>\n<p>The world so described is also a world permeated by media. The murders themselves have less presence in the movie than do the letters that the killer sends to the newspapers. We see the letters themselves, and the ciphers that the killer also sends, in extreme-close up on the screen, or superimposed over other images; much is made in the plot of handwriting analysis, though that turns out to be another dead end. The presence of media is epitomized in a scene where Gyllenhaal and Ruffalo meet at a screening of <em>Dirty Harry<\/em> (released in 1971, and in fact a fictionalization of the very Zodiac murders that the present film is about). <em>Zodiac<\/em> is so filled with false or misleading clues, with data that seems significant and turns out not to be, and so on, that from a logical-deduction point of view it can only be frustrating. But the <em>sense<\/em> that all this welter of evidence makes, is that it is all <em>mediated<\/em> in some fashion. The killer wants, most of all, to be in the papers; reporters bypass the cops with evidence they have found, and go straight to TV; Gyllenhaal wants to solve the case so that he can write a book about it, which is the only way he sees of justifying his existence; and so on. A particularly apt (and &#8220;postmodern&#8221;) touch is that Fincher deals not just with the media of Spectacle, but also with little media and dispersed media &#8212; records in police archives, TV seen on small screens, etc. &#8212; which makes for a link between the time depicted (30 to 40 years ago) and the present moment, of ever more widely dispersed media, in which the film was made.<\/p>\n<p>In all these ways, <em>Zodiac<\/em> creates a overwhelming, but distanced, sense of flatness, mobility, and creepiness: a kind of low-key affectivity that is as much an expression of our general mediascape as it is of the mind of a serial killer. Gyllenhaal, no less than the killer, is consumed by a cold obsession, one that drives him utterly yet seems altogether dispassionate. And Gyllenhaal&#8217;s obsession doesn&#8217;t even really seem unique to him, since it emerges out of the &#8220;noise&#8221; and jumpiness of the multiple POVs of the first two thirds of the movie. In any case, when asked why he is interested, Gyllenhaal can say little more than that he enjoys solving puzzles; he has as litle interest in, or understanding of, his own motivations as does George W. Bush. And Fincher seems to suggest that this shallowness and disinterest is symptomatic of &#8220;postmodern&#8221; American society in general; it is in this sense that our situation today has its roots, not in the 1960s but in the 1970s, or in that aspect of the 70s that this movie depicts. And, to his credit, Fincher doesn&#8217;t portray this situation as one of deprivation or lack; there is no mourning here for lost subjective depths. It is rather the case that Fincher has mapped the stylistics, or the geography if you will, of our contemporary form of subjectivity. This is the situation in which we live right now, the field in which we have to operate. And it&#8217;s up to us to do what we can with it.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>I found David Fincher&#8217;s Zodiac to be compelling and absorbing. Though, interestingly, the reasons I liked the movie are not far from the reasons Kim hated it. Zodiac is so cool and detached as to be almost hysterical, as well as creepy, in its insistence upon objectivity (both in terms of its point of view, &hellip; <a href=\"http:\/\/www.shaviro.com\/Blog\/?p=600\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Zodiac&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[3],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-600","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-film"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.shaviro.com\/Blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/600","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.shaviro.com\/Blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.shaviro.com\/Blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.shaviro.com\/Blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.shaviro.com\/Blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=600"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"http:\/\/www.shaviro.com\/Blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/600\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.shaviro.com\/Blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=600"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.shaviro.com\/Blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=600"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.shaviro.com\/Blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=600"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}