Monday 8 October 2012

Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind



Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind is a film that could be broadly classified as a sci-fi romance. Scripted by the legendary Jason Kaufman whose scripting credits include Being John Malkovich, Synedoche and Adaptation and helmed by Michael Gondry, it is certainly a film that is 'different' and very refreshingly so.

The movie is about the life and mind of one Joel Barish(Jim Carrey).He is shy, restrained and gentle. His girlfriend, Clementine(Kate Winslet) on the other hand is everything that he is not, vivacious, foul mouthed and brash. They break up and Joel learns that she has had the memory of him removed from her brain at 'Lacuna Inc' a firm/clinic that removes people's desired memories.  Shocked, he decides to do the same. All his memories of her are being wiped out, when he realizes he doesn't want it to happen. He takes the memory of her and hides in umpteen places such as his childhood, even so that her memory isn't lost to him.

The whole thing turns into a race through Joel's mind to try and protect his memories of Clem, as he calls her. The transitions from memory to memory are a bit lacking in production quality, but the subject matter is such that it simply does not matter. It is about a romance that is almost feral in its intensity.




While the film won an Oscar for Best Cinematography, technical perfection is simply not what this film is about. Jason Kaufman's script is probably the biggest star amidst a cast of actors such as Jim Carrey, Kate Winslet and Kirsten Dunst. The actors chip in with performances that are delightfully understated with their characterizations being secondary to the script's musing about love and separation.

The endearing thing here is its ability to make us think. We've all wished we could forget something from our lives. And so we begin to think, should we be grateful for our memories or get rid of them if they're too painful? It isn't an easy question to answer. Clementine does because she's impulsive, Joel wants to abort because he'd rather have all those memories of the one woman who actually did love him.



The movie is summed up when in his memory, he leaves a house simply because of Clem's brashness and now when it is his last memory, she asks him to make up a goodbye at least and instead of walking away, he comes close and tells her he loves her. The house she is in is crumbling as with the rest of that memory, but we want him to hold on. We want him to have a final goodbye. Maybe as much as he does. That is where this movie wins, in getting you to emote with Joel and Clem who love each other, but have differences simply on account of being so vastly different from each other.

Jim Carrey does a fantastic job as the shy, insecure man who has loved and lost. His face betrays the emotions of a despondent man, one with sadness etched into every line. The few moments he is happy we see the difference in his smile,  that tells how unfamiliar it is for him to smile. Kate Winslet, Kirsten Dunst and the rest of the cast are equally good and we can understand and appreciate each ones travails.
The quote that gives the film its title is oddly fitting and comes from Alexander Pope, poet extraordinaire, forever in the shadow of Tennyson, Hardy and the like

How happy is the blameless vestal's lot!
The world forgetting, by the world forgot.
Eternal sunshine of the spotless mind!
Each pray'r accepted, and each wish resign'd

While an article could be devoted to what it means, I’ll be brief. An innocent pure woman is happy only because she has prayed for and received the gift of forgetting everything she's been concerned about. Ignorance is bliss, and such is the case for this woman.

'Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind' refers to the fact that a mind unclouded or shrouded in memories is eternally bright, like sunshine.



This isn't a great movie; not even a very well made one but reaches far deeper than most blockbusters with all special effects and no heart. As I listen to the background score as Joel travels through his Clem-less memories, the twinge of the guitar may be the twinge of his own sadness. The film put simply, has this human element. It isn't just a script or a collection of actors, it's us, people we've known and choices we've made, lives we've led...it is about all of that. And heart-breakingly beautiful...

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