Why the politics of Derek Jarman’s late films are… | Little White Lies

In Praise Of

Why the pol­i­tics of Derek Jarman’s late films are so important

09 Jun 2019

Words by Sam Moore

Woman wearing white dress with veil, standing by shoreline with ship in background.
Woman wearing white dress with veil, standing by shoreline with ship in background.
In a time of polit­i­cal uncer­tain­ty, his bold rep­re­sen­ta­tions of queer­ness remain as vital and rel­e­vant as ever.

Derek Jarman’s films exist in a dia­logue with the past. From biopics of Car­avag­gio and Wittgen­stein in his ear­ly career, to the ways in which his lat­er films invoke the ideas and spir­i­tu­al­i­ty of the Bible, his work uses the past as a way to com­ment on the past, and look towards the future. This exists along­side Jar­man him­self pro­vid­ing nar­ra­tion to films like The Gar­den and Blue.

Bring­ing togeth­er these ideas of past and future, per­son­al and polit­i­cal, is what allows Jarman’s films to res­onate. They are at once a reck­on­ing to those who have been lost, and a warn­ing to those yet to be. This can be seen in the plot threads in 1990’s The Gar­den, where Jar­man uses Bib­li­cal images to explore themes rang­ing from homo­pho­bic vio­lence to the rise of paparazzi and celebri­ty cul­ture. The two lovers in the film exist out of step with the world around them; vic­tims of vio­lence and hate, their attempts to find sanc­tu­ary are frag­ment­ed and liminal.

The film explores the iso­la­tion that is often inher­ent in queer iden­ti­ty, reflect­ed in lines of nar­ra­tion like, I want to share this empti­ness with you.” The idea of queer love as being a shared empti­ness is a reflec­tion of this soli­tude, of an inabil­i­ty to be true to one­self and one’s love in the pub­lic eye, under fear of vio­lence. Along­side this sto­ry, the Madon­na (played by Jar­man reg­u­lar Til­da Swin­ton) unveils her child to the paparazzi.

The media cir­cus that sur­rounds this becomes a pow­er­ful pre­dic­tion of the ways in which celebri­ty cul­ture has changed in the decades since The Gar­den has been released, with a greater lev­el of fanat­i­cal obses­sion being lev­elled at celebri­ties and now their chil­dren. The use of the Bible doesn’t root Jarman’s films in the past; on the con­trary, it allows them to res­onate far beyond their own time.

A sequence in The Gar­den takes a Bible pas­sage about King Herod and the mur­der of babies in the wake of the birth of Christ, and sets that dia­logue against both the media fren­zy around the Madonna’s child, and the real­i­ties of homo­pho­bic vio­lence. This mar­riage of ideas cre­ates a sense of time­less­ness around the nature of evil, some­thing that must be learned from in order for it to stop. Jar­man uses images and ideas from the past through­out The Gar­den – the queer imagery feels lift­ed from the work of Ken­neth Anger, and the peak of the film’s vio­lence, with the two male lovers tak­en hostage, echoes The Texas Chain Saw Massacre.

Woman with long braided hair in green dress holding a baby wrapped in a white cloth.

The spec­tre of the past, the impor­tance of mem­o­ry and the dan­ger of for­get­ting are fore­ground­ed in 1987’s The Last of Eng­land. There are ref­er­ences to the boys who died in Flan­ders” in the film’s nar­ra­tion, and a renais­sance paint­ing lying in tat­ters on the ground, in what feels like an apoc­a­lyp­tic Eng­land. This is Jarman’s most explic­it response to Thatch­erism, bring­ing togeth­er a feel­ing of dread around a ris­ing nation­al­ism dressed up in the guise of main­stream politics.

A foot­ball chant-esque rep­e­ti­tion of Eng­land, Eng­land,” is played simul­ta­ne­ous­ly with the com­mon House of Com­mons refrain of Order, order.” On top of each oth­er, these ideas cre­ates only dis­or­der. Jar­man says that the world will nev­er for­get,” and both The Last of Eng­land and The Gar­den serve as cau­tion­ary tales to those who might try to do so.

All of these ideas come to a head in Blue, Jarman’s mas­ter­piece. Strip­ping back the elab­o­rate visu­al poet­ry of The Last of Eng­land and The Gar­den, Blue takes place against an unchang­ing back­ground that, like an Yves Klein mono­chrome or a Rothko paint­ing, forces you to con­sid­er its depth the more time you spend look­ing at it. Blue uses the same ellip­ti­cal nar­ra­tion of the films that pre­cede it, allow­ing Jar­man to direct­ly con­front his own life with AIDS, as well as the broad­er polit­i­cal cli­mate around queer­ness, dis­ease, and the price of forgetting.

Blue shows how impos­si­ble it is to take the polit­i­cal away from the per­son­al. Jar­man laments that in the water he can hear the voic­es of dead friends,” that he has no friends now who are not dead or dying.” The plague is every­where in Blue from the insti­tu­tions of the church, to polit­i­cal march­es, to the beach­es that were so utopi­an in The Gar­den. Jar­man lit­er­al­ly cre­ates a reflec­tion of the self in the depths of Blue, nar­ra­tion mov­ing like a mod­ernist mono­logue. He warns us that the world is dying, and we do not notice it,” a procla­ma­tion that feels all the more pre­scient as time goes on, and becomes impos­si­ble to ignore.

Even now, after strides have been made in equal­i­ties leg­is­la­tion and med­ical treat­ment to improve the lives and lot of queer peo­ple, the nature of Jarman’s polit­i­cal com­men­tary hasn’t lost its edge. The Bible is still used as a jus­ti­fi­ca­tion for big­otry; a celebri­ty obsessed media remains dif­fi­cult to con­trol; the world is still dying, and still we do not notice.

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