Kevin McMahon's documentary McLuhan's Wake(2002) shows a lot of good stuff pertaining to Marshall McLuhan, prophet of "pattern recognition" and visionary thinker. McLuhan mused long and hard about the effects of technological change on culture and society, and his ideas are powerful. The best parts of the film revolve around footage and audio of McLuhan himself. He has a great "old school" voice along the lines of Gore Vidal and Williams S. Burroughs, almost mesmerizing.
My only beef about this film? The music soundtrack. Maybe it was due to budget contraints, but its Muzak-like qualities are highly irritating. Narrated by Laurie Anderson, it would have come across more pleasantly if she'd also done the soundtrack; Kraftwerk also would have been effective. But I digress.
During the film, succinct observations are made about McLuhan. For example: "He saw the interrelationship of everything." And: "For him the environment was everything -- and its interaction with the mind." And this is exactly why I love McLuhan's ideas.
McLuhan says any number of memorable things, but I jotted down these. . . About technological change: "What are the ripple effects?" And: "You start out a consumer and you wind up consumed." He speaks of "total involvement" in media. "Quest for indentity is a central aspect of the eletronic age." The Global Village. The Global Theatre. "TV is . . . a new mythic form."
McLuhan also says: "Kierkegaard is a man of great relevance to this time." Indeed, he quotes him: "Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards." -- Søren Kierkegaard (1843).
I'm certainly glad to have watched McLuhan's Wake. It's one of those films that sticks with you after you've seen it more than during the initial experience. And it inspires me to go back to his books.
"The total life of any culture tends to be 'propaganda' . . . It blankets perception and supresses awareness, making the counter environments created by the artist indispensable to survival and freedom. (From Cliché to Archetype, 1970).
Today's Rune: Initiation.
P.S. Thanks again to revRecluse ("North Of 90, Canada"/ Radio Enigma) for posting great McLuhan clips last month. They inspired me to find this film.
Here's a link to one of them:
http://recluseshow.blogspot.com/2010/09/marshall-mcluhan-vs-norman-mailer-cbc.html
4 comments:
Funny how the wrong music can go from being irritating to making you turn something off. Just like a laugh track.
"...making the counter environments created by the artist indispensable to survival and freedom."
Unfortunately the cost of fame is too high. Freedom lost divorced itself from art as soon as free market capitalism got involved.
Thanks for the comments! Sound is as important as fury.
Mark- luckily, making counter (or alternative) cultural environments does not require one to become particularly famous, but I get your point.
Cheers~
I like that quote a lot about life being understood backwards. Very true.
Post a Comment