Translate

Friday, January 3, 2025

Abandon All Hope: Beau Wasserman in Hell

 

I recently stumbled upon Ari Aster’s recent Beau is Afraid while perusing Netflix in the increasingly difficult search for something entertaining. In it, Joaquin Phoenix brilliantly brings the titular hero, Beau, into vivid relief within a story-telling structure that never admits any of its action could take place in the same world as any viewer. This approach passes for surrealism while nodding to hyperrealism. Nothing in the film offers a handle, and anything that might offer hope of a way into the drama sets up failure. The viewer can trust nothing, not a scene, not a character, not a mood, not a spoken word. The movie simply happens, and that comes in at 3 hours. Lasciate ogne Speranza. Nonetheless, Beau is Afraid remarkably entertains, exasperates, abuses expectations and certainly challenges. Among other things, this film is Aster’s presentation of hell, a time-honored theme, and the last of the four last things that grates in the Catholic imagination (death, judgement, heaven, hell). The final scene, in which Beau traverses his Acheron and then faces his trial, judgement and sentence, certainly tempts the viewer into a theological arena of thought.

Beau’s hell is knit together with incessant assaults, both physical and mental. The perennial victim, nothing neutral happens to him. A neighbor blames him for blasting music while Beau himself tries to get some sleep before he must catch an early flight back home, where his mother awaits his return so that they might share in his father’s Jahrzeit, the one-year anniversary of his death. As he attempts to leave for the airport, his luggage and housekeys disappear from the entrance to his apartment while he briefly abandons them to retrieve a forgotten item. Even in a therapy session, his therapist assaults him with the idea that he might wish his mother dead. No safe place for Beau, ever, anywhere. He becomes a victim of violence when a serial killer stabs him, and a truck hits him as he flees. Rather than calling an ambulance or taking him to the hospital, the occupants of the truck take Beau instead to their home, where they care for him during a convalescence that continues when he leaves their house, which apparently doubles as an asylum.

He learns of his mother’s death by a horrific accident—a chandelier crushes her head into an indecipherable mess. Of course, dear old mom has faked her death, paying her loyal housekeeper to die in her place. I could go on, but the relentless sequences of misery must land in a viewer’s lap, where they can enter the experience of those beyond the fourth wall, a place made distinctly unsafe by the film’s treacherous landscapes. Nonetheless, mom's death heightens the imperative to return home, as Jewish observance, with its attendant ritual rooted in the Torah, requires a prompt burial, which mom has stated cannot take place in Beau's absence. These elements of Jewish practice open Beau's world to a strange theology, a godless one for sure, but a driver of the action. 

Without further piecemealing of the plot, why “hell” and not simply cinematic effect? Aster has created a very aggressive world, one the film itself cannot contain. Every laugh (and there are laughs) indicts the laugher. Everything that promotes the comic implicates the viewer, who must own every response. This interesting effect underscores a key feature of hell, ownership. The viewer knows she emerges from Beau is Afraid intact and unscathed, precisely because she owns the emotions passing through this roller-coaster ride. Beau remains in hell because he owns nothing, never has and never will. He refuses complicity in anything, and he lives his life as sponge that soaks up phenomena, content to experience only soaking. His shallow emotional constitution has a short menu of responses: outraged, yes; enraged, not so much (except for that one time with mom, and even that was castrating).

And that, I think, is what the brown recluse spider thing is all about. A sign on a wall in Beau’s apartment building informs the tenants that the creature lurks somewhere in the structure. We never really know just where Beau lives, where he travels. Does the spider live in its natural range, or did someone bring him into a region outside it? The fairly famous arachnid gets an awful lot of blame for lots of injuries to people for which it is actually blameless; how like the Oedipal thing Aster tries to pawn off on the unwary viewer! Anyone coming away from Beau is Afraid with a smug Freudian solution to the hero’s dilemma, has not paid enough attention during a taxing 3 hours. Just too easy to blame the spider. Anyone confident that she has actually met Beau’s mother needs to check again, as the cinematic ravings of the film have lulled her into poor judgement. The fault, dear Beau, lies not in our mothers but in ourselves that we have let life pass us by, even as we have allowed it to bludgeon us at every opportunity.

A life untouched by ownership of self can plunge us to the gates of hell, and all who enter there must abandon all hope. The human person seeks authenticity or stays mired in the adolescence of irresponsibility. Dante, not to mention Heidegger, was right, and so, too, Aster. Could there be any doubt we travel guideless through hell after the grin on the therapist’s face makes its appearance in Patti LuPone’s house, a grin that Mephistopheles himself would die for? Man, did Stephen Mckinley Henderson earn his paycheck for that or what? But that’s another piece…