Article
In 1920, prominent psychoanalyst Sigmund
Freud published
Beyond the Pleasure
Principle
. It contained a radical rewrite of many of his previous theories,
and culminated with the introduction of a principle known as the death drive.
This relentless unconscious desire to experience our own deaths often manifests
itself through the wilful commission of seemingly incomprehensible acts of
self-destruction, as well as the desire to repeat and re-live past experiences
of trauma (Freud, 2003). Fifty-four years after Freud published his theory of
the death drive, Italian filmmaker Liliana Cavani made a film which shocked the
world.
Il Portiere Di Notte
(The
Night Porter) (1974) tells the story of ex-Nazi officer Max and his former
prisoner Lucia, a pair destined to repeat in the present the sadomasochistic
relationship which they had begun in the past amidst the violence and
degradation of the concentration camps. The film was met with controversy and
confusion upon its initial release, with some outraged critics seeing it as
nothing more than fascist pornography, whilst others hailed it as a brilliantly
complex work of self-reflection (Marrone, 2004). Through a brave combination of
controversial subjects, Cavani brilliantly captured the dynamics of the death
drive, placing the attraction for death against the backdrop of deathly
decadence which characterized the Nazi era.
Freud first formulated his ideas regarding
the death drive after his experiences as a physician during the First World
War. If dreams are an expression of repressed desires, why did shell-shocked
soldiers continually have nightmares in which they relived the trauma of the
trenches? (Freud, 2003). The unconscious desire of the soldiers to repeat their
traumas through their dreams seemed to hint at a latent desire buried deep
within their psyches – a desire for death. Operating subconsciously and erasing
all traces of itself from conscious life, the death drive works in opposition
to the life instinct, subconsciously driving us towards the destruction we
crave (Quinodoz, 2005). Experiences of trauma are often re-lived due to their
extreme proximity to death – it is during traumatic times that we are closest
to achieving the elusive fulfilment of our latent desire. This desire for death
may override the pleasure principle (that which attempts to avoid unpleasure
and seek pleasure), causing the repetition of experiences which seem to offer
no pleasure (such as experiences of trauma) (Quinodoz, 2005). This would appear
to place the death drive in the hidden realms of the psyche which lie beyond
the pleasure principle (Freud, 2003; Lacan, 1979).
In order to understand how the
sadomasochistic relationship enjoyed by the protagonists of The Night Porter
relates to the death drive, it is necessary to understand the role of the
masochist and the sadist in relation to their joint desire for death. Due to
her passivity during acts of violence, it is the masochist who experiences the
majority of the trauma (pain) and consequently comes closest to achieving her
desire (death) (Quinodoz, 2005). The sadist may only come close to the
realization of his desire (death) through experiencing by proxy the pain he
inflicts upon the masochist – the sadist therefore becomes enthralled, not with
his capacity for cruelty, but with the recognition and identification with the
pain he is inflicting – (Torlasco, 2008).
The voyeurism which results in Max’s
fascination with filming the acts of violence to which he subjects Lucia during
her time in the concentration camp is symptomatic of his wish to identify with
her pain. Just as the audience of a film identifies with the characters on the
screen, so Max’s desire to look at Lucia through his camera is suggestive of
his wish to identify with her – to live out his fantasy of trauma through the
reality of her trauma. Although it is tempting to inflexibly assign the role of
sadist to Max and masochist to Lucia, their relationship is often considerably
more complex, characterized by frequent role reversal and their reciprocally
interchangeable desire to be both sadistically cruel and masochistically abused
(Torlasco 2008).
This reversal of roles is particularly
evident during a scene which takes place in Max’s apartment after Lucia has
left her husband. In an unusually aggressive action which seems to contradict
Lucia’s passivity, she locks Max out of his bathroom and smashes a glass bottle
on the floor; she then unlocks the door and retreats to the far end of the
room. Max, who is indignantly attempting to force his way into the bathroom,
unexpectedly finds the door has been unlocked, bursts into the room, and
predictably cuts his feet on the shards of glass (The Night Porter, 1974). He
takes visible pleasure in the sensation of pain which follows, whilst Lucia
appears to be satisfied with her role as the inflictor. Curiously, Lucia then
slips her hand under Max’s bleeding foot; he grinds her fingers into the shards
of glass, allowing for the mutual intermingling of pain. This incident
demonstrates the exchangeable positions of the masochist and the sadist, as Max
and Lucia interchangeably occupy both passive and active roles during this
performance, enabling a shared experience of the trauma which brings them
closer to their desire for death.
The above sequence demonstrates Max and
Lucia’s creation of an elaborate, repetitive performance centred around the
masochistically exciting motif of the death drive. Max and Lucia’s obsessive
replication of their past relationship may be reasonably compared to the
compulsion to repeat felt by the traumatised subject; although their respective
conscious egos attempt to dissuade the pair from rekindling their
sadomasochistic relationship, the subconscious pull of the death drive proves
too much to resist, returning them unavoidably to the self-destructive spiral
which coloured their original relationship.
The repetitive dimension of their
association is emphasised in the film, as the majority of the narrative focuses
on the almost exact duplication of their past actions in the present, with the
most obvious direct transposition centring around Lucia’s nightdress. Although
Lucia later demonstrates conscious resistance, she has already subconsciously
submitted to the inevitable repetition of her performance with Max with the
purchase of the pink nightdress from the antique shop – a nightdress to which
she is attracted solely because of its resemblance to one given to her by Max
during their initial relationship. Later, when Lucia has given up even
conscious resistance and joined Max in his apartment, intercut flashbacks of
the original event act as representations of repressed memories determined to
return to the conscious mind. The repetitive element is further emphasized
through spatial and graphic matches, as the spatial positions occupied by Max
and Lucia in the diagetic past (shown through flashbacks) are directly mirrored
by their positions in the film’s diagetic present.
The Freudian formulation of the death drive
understands the desire for death only in terms of a desire for physical,
biological death. We have an innate desire to return to the organic
non-existence which would come with physical death, and it is primarily our
desire to reproduce which drives the life instinct (Frued, 2003). However,
French psychoanalyst and unorthodox follower of Freudian theory Jacques Lacan
added another dimension to the death drive – the desire for symbolic death.
According to Lacanian theory, the desire for symbolic death stems from the
realization that the world we experience is merely a fantastical construct of
the Symbolic Order (the Symbolic Order being the order joined by the growing
infant when he goes through the imaginary phase of the Mirror Stage and begins
to use and understand language). (Nobus, 1995). The Symbolic Order is
constructed to mask the eternally present terror of the real, which remains
unacknowledged and obscured by the conscious ego. Beyond the fantasy of the
Symbolic Order, there lies only the reality of death (Zizek, 1989).
The repetition of trauma occurs due to our
innate attraction to the lethal Other (death, both symbolic and physical) which
lies beyond the Symbolic Order. However, according to Lacan, it is possible to
reach symbolic death and depart from the Symbolic Order before achieving the
reality of biological death. This opens up the possibility of a space between
the two deaths – a ‘real’ place existing beyond fantasy, which may be entered
through the conscious rejection of existence as constructed by the Symbolic
Order (Zizek, 1989). As they are caught between the ever elusive fulfilment of
their desire for physical death, and the symbolic death they eventually achieve
via their departure from the constraints of the Symbolic Order, Max and Lucia
may be viewed as existing in this space between the deaths.
The couple do indeed depart from the
Symbolic Order in a number of ways. Their initial relationship in the concentration
camp may be seen as the original departure, but there is a much stronger
departure to be found later in the film, as both Max and Lucia choose to reject
their respective roles in the Symbolic Order: Lucia through her action of
leaving her socially acceptable husband, and Max through his refusal to
participate in the mock “trial” prescribed as therapy by his ex-Nazi comrades.
As the compulsion to repeat is seen as a symptom of neurosis by Freud, the
seemingly therapeutic process of Max undergoing the “trial” may clearly be
viewed as a parallel of the patient going through psychoanalytic therapy. The
group’s attempt to control Max’s compulsion to repeat through the elimination
of Lucia, as well as their emphasis on the cathartic nature of exploring past
crimes is remarkably similar to a therapist’s effort to cure his patient of
repetition compulsion through the exploration and elimination of repressed
traumas. Failure of therapeutic analysis at this stage often results in the
death drive and the compulsion to repeat becoming dominant (Quinodoz, 2005).
Max is well aware that his refusal to
participate in the trial – as well as his protection of Lucia – will lead to
his banishment from society (and ultimately to his death), and his acceptance
of this fact heralds his departure from the reality concealing fantasy of the
Symbolic Order and his entrance into the space between the two deaths. Lucia is
also fully aware that her relationship with Max will lead to her death, but
makes a conscious choice to stay with him even after she is given the
opportunity to re-join the Symbolic Order (Max’s suggestion that she go to the
police is met with nothing but an enigmatic smile). As it is the Symbolic Order
which attempts to conceal the certainty of death, this simple acceptance of the
reality of their own deaths places Max and Lucia firmly in Lacan’s realm
between the deaths.
The couple’s rejection of language signals
their final departure, as linguistic speech constitutes a large part of the
power of the Symbolic Order – “the wall of language” (Lacan, 1988, p. 224)
which is used to hide the real – (Libbrecht, 1999). During the closing section
of the film, Max and Lucia say little to nothing, choosing instead to rely
completely on the looks and actions which have already heavily defined their
relationship. In a performance which returns them to the origins of their
relationship, the couple who have already experienced symbolic death then
prepare for physical death. They have gone beyond the fantasy, accepted the eventuality
of death, and can never return to the construct of the Symbolic Order. Their
only option is to continue into the ultimate fulfilment of their desire –
death.
Their performance is over.
“My love is a fever longing still,
For that which longer nurseth the disease…
…and I desperate now approve
Desire is death, which physic did except.”
William Shakespeare
Sonnet CXLVII