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Gothic: The Dark Heart of Film

Davina Quinlivan considers the monster as a figure of loss and sadness as the BFI begins a season of ghoulish thrills

Published on
October 31, 2013
Last updated
May 22, 2015

Gothic: The Dark Heart of Film
British Film Institute
21 October 2013 until 31 January 2014

There is a room cloaked in darkness. A聽face emerges, ashen and mask-like, colourless. Spidery fingers clasp an unfurling document: a laboured gesture of movement. Then, eyes like hollowed pools, expressive of a kind of solemnity and dignity unexpected of such a聽strange and frightful creature. Here, we are intimately connected to聽this strange being, no longer a monster but a聽stranger whose loneliness has pierced our hearts.

Werner Herzog鈥檚 Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979) differs dramatically from previous incarnations of Dracula, Bram Stoker鈥檚 literary聽icon, precisely because it dwells so much on the monster鈥檚 pain and grief. While F.鈥塛.聽Murnau鈥檚 Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror (1922), where the vampire is famously portrayed as a creeping, impish voyeur, may have hinted at the complexity of Dracula鈥檚 terrible anguish, Herzog fleshes out the exquisite melancholia of the original text. His聽eerie close-ups of the creature, almost motionless, withdrawn and even afraid, remain in our minds long after the film has ended. Furthermore, Nosferatu the Vampyre鈥檚 infamous opening titles, which use documentary footage depicting the real-life mummies of聽Guanajuato in Mexico, announce from the outset the director鈥檚 fascination with Stoker鈥檚 configuration of pathos, despair and, most of all, an indelible sense of the loneliness that encompasses the realm of the monster.

Indeed, Herzog鈥檚 masterpiece is the vampire film par excellence that offers up sympathy to the monster 鈥 a sentiment echoed throughout the British Film Institute鈥檚 longest-ever season, titled Gothic: The Dark Heart of Film. This emphasis on the 鈥渄ark heart of film鈥 reminds us of the emotional complexity of films such as聽Nosferatu the Vampyre and their invariably intertwined themes of loneliness and redemption. Dark hearts, indeed.

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In addition to special screenings and events centred on Herzog鈥檚 classic, the BFI season is also accompanied by re-releases of Murnau鈥檚 Nosferatu (in selected cinemas from 31 October) and Stanley Kubrick鈥檚 1980 film 罢丑别听厂丑颈苍颈苍驳 (on general release nationwide from 2聽November). There will also be a chance to see seminal gothic films such as 罢丑别听滨苍苍辞肠别苍迟蝉 (accompanied by聽an exhibition of objects from the film), The聽Curse of the Cat People, The Elephant Man and The Wicker Man.

According to Heather Stewart, the season鈥檚聽creative director, the BFI intends聽to revisit the genre in light of recent popular successes such as the Twilight and Harry Potter films. But while there is a certain proliferation of vampires and witchcraft, there is a much more striking narrative running through Gothic: The Dark Heart of Film. Herzog鈥檚 Nosferatu unmasks the monster as a聽figure of loss and sadness, and Stewart鈥檚 programming is dominated by some of cinema鈥檚 most lonely creatures (albeit perverse and twisted with pain): a season in which the lonely stranger reigns.聽

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While in Herzog鈥檚 classic retelling, Dracula鈥檚 existence is entirely defined by pathos and the horror of alienation, bereft of human contact and love, the BFI鈥檚 forthcoming DVD re-release of Jack Clayton鈥檚 The Innocents (1961) shores up a different dimension of loneliness set against the backdrop of a gothic mansion. Based on The Turn of the Screw by Henry James (1898), The Innocents tells the story of a governess, Miss Giddens, and her relationship with Flora and Miles, two troubled and neglected children.

The most chilling moments of Clayton鈥檚 film play with our perception of reality and the tall stories children tend to tell: they claim to hear voices and blame their bad behaviour on absent people. Yet Flora and Miles are ambivalently attached to and, ultimately, possessed by such invisible 鈥渇riends鈥, spectres whose presence serves as a substitute for real contact with living loved ones.

The director鈥檚 use of sound, in particular, creates an ethereal resonance, connoting the children鈥檚 fear and isolation, as well as embodying their loneliness and heartache as they come to terms with the tragic suicide of their previous governess. Indeed, Philip Brophy beautifully sums up Clayton鈥檚 striking use of sound in his 2004 book, 100 Modern Soundtracks: 鈥渄eep hums, wind draughts, flapping pigeons and temperate breaths鈥enerate a cinesonic horripilation鈥.

Beneath the veneer of its haunted house setting, The Innocents is about the corruption of innocence as we come to learn of the children鈥檚 witnessing of the sexual exploits of their former governess, Miss Jessel, and reckon with the knowledge of her abuse. The film鈥檚 ghostly subject matter is thus a pretext for a very troubling and real exploration of childhood, morality and the unloved: the loneliness of children adrift in a very adult world.

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Similarly, Guillermo del Toro鈥檚 Pan鈥檚 Labyrinth (2006) is, on the surface, a macabre and fantastic film, mythic and surreal, yet anchored in the reality of the Spanish Civil War during the early Francoist period. The stark enmeshing of the phantasmagorical and the blunt reality of the militarist regime bleeding into much of del Toro鈥檚 imagery creates a style of gothic not to be found in any other film of the season. Its narrative, like 罢丑别听滨苍苍辞肠别苍迟蝉 and Nosferatu the Vampyre, thrives on the notion of loneliness, in this case a little girl鈥檚 retreat from the conflict that surrounds her.

Through Ofelia鈥檚 diminutive perspective, viewers enter her world via the golden branches of an autumnal Spain at war. As the film progresses, faeries and enchanted creatures begin to emerge from the trees and subsume the landscape. Ofelia鈥檚 loneliness engenders a torrent of 鈥渕onsters鈥 and a Pan-like faun, but instead of spiriting her away from the multiple horrors of war, it submerges her deep within a different kind of threatening universe.

David Lynch鈥檚 The Elephant Man (1980), rooted in social realism, has a certain tonal similarity to del Toro鈥檚 film. Here, the lonely protagonist, John Merrick, is a monster to all but his saviour, Frederick Treves. Although momentarily transformed by Treves鈥 kindness and friendship, he fails to evade the monstrous gaze of all Victorian society. Merrick鈥檚 laboured gasps, wheezing and distorted breaths characterise his screen presence, reminding us of his physical deformity and how聽infinitely alone he is in his suffering.

The themes of enchantment and loneliness are also dramatically transfigured in Jean Cocteau鈥檚 far less realist La Belle et la B锚te (1946). An arrogant prince is cursed, damned to live out the rest of his years as a beast, all alone except for enchanted objects, spirited reincarnations of his fleet of staff. The film is well known for its use of chiaroscuro lighting and minimalist sets in which candelabra dance against heavy velvet backdrops, at once anonymous and sublime. Belle enters the beast鈥檚 world and transforms it, bringing salvation and, indeed, a lesson in humility and聽grace.

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In sum, the films of Lynch, Cocteau, del Toro, Clayton and Herzog are all highly emotive and driven by differently realised themes of loss and loneliness. Gothic: The Dark Heart of Film concentrates on familiar themes and iconography: castles and vampires, hauntings and the occult, all of which feature prominently in the accompanying publication of the聽same name (with excellent essays by gothic aficionados such as Mark Gatiss, Mark聽Kermode and Kim Newman). But it seems rewarding to take a more questioning approach to what gothic means and to foreground the nuances of films such as Herzog鈥檚 Nosferatu. What is most interesting about the season is its implied focus on some of cinema鈥檚 most unloved, lonely and vengeful lost souls, envisaged in mythic proportions; it is the heart of the monster that is celebrated here and the intensity of emotion that anchors all the best horror films.

From Halloween until the new year, the BFI season promises to deliver ghoulish thrills and melancholic monsters. What better time to offer sympathy for the Devil?

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