It's been 5
years since the release
of Paul Thomas Anderson's auspicious, dazzlingly epic follow-up to Boogie
Nights and it's clearer than ever that it marked the arrival of a
great, if
not the great, modern director, whose films challenge us on an
emotional
and intellectual level, both in their narratives and the unique way
they
comment on the form of cinema. Magnolia opens with a
series of
carefully constructed lies presented as truth. They are of course
urban
legends used to give credence to the idea that chance and coincidence
is a part
every day life, but the fact that Anderson offers these up as true is
more
important to consider than the themes within them. What this
opening
sequence gives us is a warning that our (and the characters)
expectations will
be challenged as will the distinction between filmic reality and the
one we live
in. The setup is that we accept what is true only when it suits
us and
the rest of the time, create explanations, theories, and outright lies
to
comfort and protect us from the randomness and chaos that life throws
at us.
Set in Los
Angeles, a city equated with falseness and smoke
screens, it's not surprising to find the characters clinging to ideas
such as
coincidence, religion, tightly regimented schedules or refusing to
acknowledge
the past as a vital piece of who they are as long as it helps them get
to the
end of the day. In the first hour, Anderson
introduces us to the cast by interweaving the many stories and giving
us the
outlandish connections between all of them. Several people I've
talked to
become so caught up in recognizing these connections, that the larger
purpose
escapes them. It's easy to get caught up in the labyrinthine
structure of
the film, as the first time through, it's difficult just to follow the
various
storyline's and seemingly endless web of connections, let alone see the
gears
Anderson has in place to make this mammoth thing move. Late in
the film
as the narrative begins to unravel, the attempts to remind us we're
only
watching a film appear more frequently - the self-referential dialogue
with
Phillip Seymour Hoffman, the wonderfully clever "sing-along" to Aimee
Mann's Wise Up, etc. - and force us to see that the links and
coincidences used to form a non-existent order in the world and unreal
expectations that we place on life are simply bullshit. They are
the
things of movies, but when we expect the world to conform to the
conveniently
packaged, strictly ordered nature of films or the realities we
ourselves
create, they will eventually shatter as the cruelty and harshness of
life
catches up to us. That Anderson
examines this through a number of fascinating, emotionally devastating
stories
makes it all the more impressive.
The common
saying from the film,
"You may be through with the past, but the past isn't through with
you", is often noted as the major theme, but it is only an example of
how
many of these characters use denial as a way of avoiding their
troubles. Anderson
creates characters who are set in their ways, comfortable with the way
things
are, and unwilling to come to terms with the direction their lives have
taken. They are within their safety zones until he begins to
complicate
their situations with drugs, cancer, accidents and other real "things
that
happen" that cannot be explained away because they are inherently
unfair. They cannot be categorized, ordered, or explained by any
theories
nor expected by the characters limited paradigms that think everything
will
stay on track if they ignore the truth. Problems are not
magically
resolved like Hollywood makes you believe they
are.
The extent
of everyone's ignorance
is summed up in Hoffman's phone conversation where he states, "Now,
this
is the part of the movie where you help me." Anderson's
character's
not only begin acting as if they are in a movie (unknowingly, aside
from the
sing-along sequence and the to-the-camera smile immediately preceding
the final
fade to black), but use the themes that Anderson explores throughout
the film
to justify the state of their lives. The second half is as much a
dialogue between PTA and his audience as the sprawling, whirlwind of
fate,
chance, coincidence that it has become famous for. The absurdity
of the
ending - something that is often mentioned as its largest detriment and
often
accompanied by words like pretentious, bizarre, or pointless - reflects
the
absurdity of the character's expectations as well as our naivety in
accepting
the bogus explanations given to us throughout the film and expecting
(and
desiring) that everything turn out right in the end. The feverish
pace of
the final hour, where everyone is confronted with something that shakes
their
preconceived notions of the world they live in, is unsustainable
resulting in
the final narrative explosion, the rain of frogs. This ending,
which
contains the same amount of chance and coincidence as ten of the urban
legends
that begin the film, is Anderson's
final wake-up call to the viewer. If you think categorizing and
explaining all of life's twists and turns will save you or that you can
hide
from life in a cocoon of your own creation, you might as well be
waiting for a
rain of frogs. The character's in Magnolia get their
miracle happy
ending, but it's made abundantly clear that we cannot expect the
same. As
depressing as this revelation may seem, Anderson
meets this despair with a warm heart. While much in this film is
purposefully insincere, the loyalty, love, hope, and humanity is
real.
Although we must accept life as it is rather than as we feel it should
be, if
we greet it with compassion and understanding, we might just it make it
through
and sometimes, just maybe, get that happy ending.