New Yorker 10月08日 09:25
《又一场战斗》:观看的乐趣在于重温
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《又一场战斗》是一部信息量大、节奏紧凑的影片,初次观看时可能难以跟上其复杂的动作场面和精妙的对话。影片剪辑快速,场景、事件和人物众多,初次观影时,观众可能会感到被信息洪流淹没,缺乏对角色动机的深入理解。然而,在重温时,随着情节的熟悉,观众得以更充分地欣赏影片的细节,体验其行为的曲折转折如同情节本身一样引人入胜。导演保罗·托马斯·安德森在影片中压抑了心理的复杂性,创造出象征意义大于具体人物的角色。影片通过层层叠叠、相互映衬却不完全融合的多个层面,在不一致、缺失、不和谐与矛盾中,最终呈现出一种宏观的连贯性。影片探讨了左翼革命者、政府的镇压以及动荡后的社会与个人创伤,深刻洞察了权力颠覆的本质,并描绘了动荡时期可能存在的希望。

🎬 影片结构与观影体验:初次观看《又一场战斗》可能因其信息量大、节奏快而感到难以招架,但重温时,熟悉情节能让观众更专注于细节和人物行为的精妙之处,获得更纯粹的审美愉悦。导演安德森有意压制了人物的心理复杂性,使得影片更像一个充满象征意义的宏大设计,不同层面相互映照,在看似矛盾中形成整体的连贯性。

⚖️ 政治背景与社会反思:影片设定在一个虚构的美国,描绘了左翼革命者、政府的镇压及其深远影响。尽管影片有时会轻描淡写革命者的炽热情怀,但对破碎的生活、关系以及被动摇的美国社会却有着深刻的刻画。它探讨了权力颠覆的激进本质,以及在动荡时期可能闪现的、哪怕是带有感伤色彩的启示性光芒。

💥 革命行动与性/种族叙事:影片开篇即展现了革命行动,包括武装袭击和爆炸事件,并巧妙地将性与革命联系起来,塑造了大胆激进的女革命者形象。影片还通过角色间的互动,探讨了性与种族的主题,尤其是在怀孕和父子关系的模糊性上,为后续的追捕与逃亡埋下伏笔,增加了戏剧张力。

A first viewing of Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another” mainly sets up the pleasure of seeing it again. The movie, which runs two hours and forty-one minutes, is stuffed with fast-moving, complicated action and intricate dialogue, and the editing intercuts quickly among its teeming array of places, events, and characters. The first time I saw it, I found myself struggling to keep up with what was going on—but that feeling of being behind was intensified by a lack of psychological grasp, a sense that the characters were being put into motion because the script called for it rather than because of any dramatic logic or internal urgency. On second viewing, I stopped worrying: knowing what was going to happen, I savored the details all the more. The way that the story moves along proved as exciting as the story itself, the twists and turns of behavior as thrilling as those of plot. The sense of arbitrariness that had previously bewildered and frustrated me was drowned out by excitement and sheer aesthetic pleasure.

Anderson, who both wrote and directed the film, suppresses psychological complexity, creating characters who are little more than abstractions. The result is a film that, despite all its intensely realistic and viscerally physical action, is a work of grand symbolic design. The movie is strangely, unusually dialectical within itself—composed of many layers that don’t coalesce or connect but reflect off one another and generate tension. Through all these inconsistencies, absences, dissonances, and contradictions, an overarching coherence emerges.

Were the subject banal or frivolous, the approach would offer no more than one caper after another. But this is a story of high political stakes. Set in an alternate version of the United States, it involves leftist revolutionaries, the government’s largely successful efforts to take them down, and the long aftermath—both intimate and societal—of the rebellion. At times, Anderson trivializes the righteous ardor that goes into active, violent resistance, but there is nothing trivial in his portrait of shattered lives and relationships and of an American society shaken to its core. Furthermore, in dramatizing the mighty lurches of his imagined history, including of its alternative present day, he looks profoundly beyond the immediate terms of his fiction to reach powerful insights regarding the horrors of the moment. The film depicts the radical derangements of power, and the kinds of enlightenment that may hold out hope (however sentimental that notion may be), even if somewhere in the distance.

“One Battle After Another” cold-opens with two revolutionaries—Perfidia Beverly Hills (Teyana Taylor) and Pat Calhoun (Leonardo DiCaprio), who’s nicknamed Ghetto Pat and Rocket Man—joining members of their dissident group, the French 75, for an armed raid on an immigration detention center near the U.S.-Mexico border. While managing to release about half the detainees, the group also advertises its presence and its intentions: this turns out to be just the first in a series of attacks. The French 75 blows up a campaign office of a senator who voted for an abortion ban; it blows up a bank; it blows up a transmission tower. (Anderson shows, with an impersonal sense of wonder, the lights going out all across the city it serves.) Its revolution is also sexual, or sexualized: when Perfidia bursts into the tent of the detention center’s commanding officer, Captain Steven J. Lockjaw (Sean Penn), she orders him to give himself an erection, and, with that tentpole in view beneath his pajamas, marches him out. In the car on the way back from the raid, Perfidia and Pat make out; while Pat is teaching Perfidia the fine points of bomb-making, she straddles him and initiates sex; as they dash away from the transmission tower where they’ve planted explosives, she wants them to have sex in the wild just before it blows up. Wielding an automatic weapon for target practice, she tells a female comrade, “Pussy ain’t for fun. This is the fun. The guns is the fucking fun.”

The sex is also racialized: early in the film Perfidia, who’s Black, asks Pat, who’s white, if he likes Black women. When she orders Lockjaw, also white, to get himself erect, he’s just called her “sweet thang.” And, in a critical moment, Lockjaw captures Perfidia but promises to let her go if she’ll meet him in a motel room. She goes through with it, keeping the tryst secret from Pat, and becomes pregnant, not knowing which man is the father. She and Pat name the baby, a girl, Charlene, and Pat ends up bringing her up alone, after Perfidia gets caught, informs on the group, and enters witness protection. Pat and Charlene are given false identities and go on the run. Sixteen years later, they’re living together in a sanctuary city called Baktan Cross; Charlene, now called Willa (and played by an extraordinary young actress named Chase Infiniti), is in high school, and Pat, now called Bob, is doing nothing but drugs and drinking and hanging out. Suddenly, Lockjaw, now a colonel, is motivated to capture Willa and hunt down Bob, and the rest of the film involves the motives for his pursuit, the efforts of Bob and Willa to evade capture, their resulting separation, and their daring struggle to reunite.

One of the best aspects of classic movies of radical action at a time when it was actually happening—such as Michelangelo Antonioni’s “Zabriskie Point” and Robert Kramer’s “Ice”—is debate. What it takes, both ideologically and practically, to organize a group that undertakes violent action is fascinating, because it’s inseparable from the underlying energy that gives the drama its emotional charge—the transformation of passion into action. There’s nothing of the sort in “One Battle After Another.” Factionalism, doctrine, ground rules, justifications are, in Anderson’s film, irrelevant, meaning that French 75’s actions take place in an intellectual void. Revolution comes off as a given rather than as an achievement, closer to a club than to an army. The political situation that Anderson illustrates, in the earlier events of the movie, is essentially one of vibes. Yet the movie’s vibes aren’t entirely trivial, because they resonate agonizingly closely with the current mood. Despite the lack of political specifics, the analogies are unambiguous: Anderson depicts police and military combining to hold nonwhite people in what are effectively concentration camps, and a repressive and normative authority allows an official to gratify his kink by abusing power.

While watching the first part of “One Battle After Another,” I was reminded of a scene from another great film about leftist radicals and their plans for revolutionary violence: Jean-Luc Godard’s “La Chinoise.” There, a woman named Véronique (Anne Wiazemsky), a member of a Paris-based cell, happens to meet a philosophy professor (the real-life philosopher Francis Jeanson, playing himself). She tells him of her group’s plans to shut down their university with bombs; he tells her that she and her cohort will be caught long before they manage to do it. She reminds him that, during the Algerian War, he had been pursued by the police—Jeanson did indeed work with pro-Algerian activists in France—and managed to get away. Jeanson explains, “Because there were many sympathizers among the French population. Because even those not quite in favor of Algerian independence didn’t denounce us.” He goes on: “Your action will lead to nothing if it can’t be taken up by a community, by a class.”

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又一场战斗 Paul Thomas Anderson 革命 社会 政治 One Battle After Another Revolution Society Politics
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