turning back
by Douglas Messerli
Robin Swicord (screenplay, based on
a screenplay story by Eric Roth and Robin Swicord suggested by the story by F.
Scott Fitzgerald), David Fincher (director) The Curious Case of Benjamin Button / 2008
The tragedy of this tale, however, is that before long Benjamin is
doomed to grow too young to care for the child at the very moment when Daisy is
becoming too old to care for them both. Accordingly, he leaves her, and she
marries another man who is a good father to her young daughter. Benjamin
disappears into youth, meeting Daisy only once for a brief sexual encounter,
and reenters her life again as a young boy for whom she cares as he descends
into infancy and, finally, as a baby, dies.
Fortunately, this film is saved by another, more subtle theme, which I
believe gives it an epic weight that justifies its length. While Benjamin moves
solidly through the film backwards in time, the other characters moving forward
are forced in their encounters with him to rethink their lives and face up to
their failures in the past. This results in a kind of "turning back,"
a decision to change the errors of their past, and in that sense, leads for a
kind of redeeming of life for each of them.
Benjamin's father, Thomas, faced with the horrific specter of an eighty-year-old
infant, a child moreover that has ended in his wife's death, has cruelly
abandoned the child on the steps of boarding house over which a black woman,
Queenie presides. Upon discovering the child, Queenie readily adopts it,
allowing it to grow up old in a house of old people. Yet Thomas, upon
encountering the child years later, at a time when Benjamin is closer to 50,
invites him to dinner and further encounters, ending, as the father grows old,
in his revelation to Benjamin that he is his son. At first, Benjamin is
outraged by the fact of the abandonment as opposed to the continued kindnesses
of his Black mother. But Benjamin, in some senses, is presented as a blank
slate, and ultimately a reunion between the two, however shaky, is
accomplished, and he nurses his father into death.
Similarly,
the older woman, Elizabeth Abbott (wonderfully played by Tilda Swinton) with
whom Benjamin has an affair in Minsk, is encouraged in his gentle love to look
back upon her failed marriage and her own lack of initiative. Once a great
swimmer who attempted, unsuccessfully, to swim the English Channel, she has
done little since except suffer the empty relationship of her marriage. By
film's end, and at the unlikely age of 62, she successfully achieves the goal
she had previously abandoned.
So too does the heavy-drinking captain Mike of a New Orleans-based
tugboat shift, upon encountering Benjamin, from braggadocio and whoring to
heroic accomplishments as his small craft rams a German U-boat that has
destroyed a large Allied warship.
Daisy, intrigued throughout the story by Benjamin, rejects his proffered
love simply because he will not go bed with her the one night she is in town.
Later, upon his visit to her in New York, she resists his love because of an
affair with another dancer; and finally, suffering from an automobile accident
that has robbed her of the possibility of ever again being able to dance, she
demands he leave her bedside. Months later, however, she too "turns back,"
returning to him in New Orleans where they have their intense if brief love
affair.
Despite her anger over Benjamin's
decision to leave her and their daughter, she gradually recognizes that it has
been for the better, and as he descends into boyhood and, ultimately, infancy,
she takes over the role of his mother, nursing him back into the metaphorical
womb.
Her own daughter, Caroline, has clearly
been distanced from her mother, but in the framework of the narrative, has
returned to New Orleans to her hospital deathbed during the advance of
Hurricane Katrina. She too, accordingly, has turned back, coming to the aide of
her mother, as her mother, turning back one more time, insists Caroline read
the autobiography of Benjamin Button which reveals the girl's own parentage.
In short, each of the major figures,
faced with a being moving in the opposite direction of the flow of life, are
encouraged to reexamine their own forward rush into death. The result is a
redemption far deeper than the easy lessons on the surface of Fincher's
interesting but deeply flawed film.
Los Angeles, January 5, 2009
Reprinted from Nth Position [England] (January 2009).
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