{"id":1050,"date":"2016-08-11T10:20:08","date_gmt":"2016-08-11T09:20:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/blogs.bmj.com\/medical-humanities\/?p=1050"},"modified":"2016-08-11T10:20:08","modified_gmt":"2016-08-11T09:20:08","slug":"film-review-crying-with-laughter","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogs.bmj.com\/medical-humanities\/2016\/08\/11\/film-review-crying-with-laughter\/","title":{"rendered":"Film review: Crying with Laughter"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Crying with Laughter, UK 2009<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Written and directed by Justin Molotnikov, available on DVD <\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Trailer <\/strong><a href=\"https:\/\/mail.bsuh.nhs.uk\/owa\/redir.aspx?REF=u4lzJIPz8crFZ2GGozn4jS98U3xAJFD9V0wgnPJPpi6gqEIvAcHTCAFodHRwczovL3ZpbWVvLmNvbS9jaGFubmVscy93ZWxsaW5ndG9uLzE3MzczMjQ0\">https:\/\/vimeo.com\/channels\/wellington\/17373244<\/a><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><em>Reviewed by Professor Robert Abrams, Professor of Psychiatry, Weill Cornell University, New York<\/em><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>One can debate about what might be the central message of Crying With Laughter, the production with an oxymoronic title written and directed by Justin Malotnikov\u2014a film that is itself both dark and reassuring. In fact there must be several such messages, but to this reviewer, Crying With Laughter is mainly a stirring testament to the therapeutic power of reconstructive memory. However, this assertion requires quite a bit of explanation and reference to the film\u2019s story line. <strong>Warning: \u00a0massive spoiler alert<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p>Crying With Laughter opens with screenshots of a hapless failure of a man. Joey Frisk is a thirty-something-year-old Scottish stand-up comedian who is just about always drunk, profane and seemingly bent on self-destruction. He offends nearly everyone in his world, and while he\u2019s loud and brash, he\u2019s not even all that funny as a comedian. He owes money to his landlord, and he\u2019s estranged from his wife. He\u2019s the living embodiment of Freud\u2019s concept of a \u201cdeath instinct\u2019\u2014a man driven by a potent if unconscious current of self-defeat. He becomes human and grounded only in the moments when he lovingly and protectively embraces Amy, his sweet 6-year-old daughter.<\/p>\n<p>Soon he is in very serious trouble. As part of his comedy routine he threatens the landlord to whom he is in arrears. When the landlord is in fact assaulted within inches of his life, Joey, who has no alibi, is the prime suspect. The situation is so dire that the viewer is compelled to wonder: what is it that is driving Joey to drink, to promiscuity and to a succession of ever-greater blunders? Is he just immature, a perpetual adolescent, suffering from arrested development? If there is a particular underlying sorrow or trauma he is re-living, or a past transgression for which he is punishing himself, why does he not see it?<\/p>\n<p>A distinctly sinister former schoolmate whom Joey barely remembers, Frank, now befriends him, giving him and his daughter shelter. Frank then lures a reluctant Joey to a school \u201creunion\u201d. What Frank actually intends is to kidnap a former teacher and execute revenge for a traumatic past secret. Unfortunately the frail teacher now lives in the throes of dementia. Throughout this encounter, Joey remembers neither Frank nor the old schoolmaster with any clarity.<\/p>\n<p>One of the extraordinary and moving truths in the film emerges at this point: there can be no meaningful punishment of helpless and elderly demented individuals for the misdeeds of their past\u2014not only because the revenge is in itself cruel and an \u201cinjustice\u201d, but because its recipients cannot appreciate what is happening, and the whole enterprise has no possibility of providing \u201cclosure\u201d for the victim. An unforgettable cinematic moment is forged by the incompatibility between the imagined school-master of the past\u2014intimidating and manipulative\u2014and the present image of a helpless old man. By any measure, the window of opportunity for confrontation has closed, and the belated effort to avenge the wrong only results in a deeper misery for all.<\/p>\n<p>Without disclosing too many details of the secret that connects the three\u00a0doomed characters for the reader, the film skillfully reveals why Joey had no conscious memory of the troubling past. Justin Molotnikov (film writer and director) has a deeper understanding: the powerful repression of traumatic memory that led Joey to \u201cforget\u201d\u2014except for the fact that the willful sabotaging of his own life happened to have been his way of remembering. Even Joey\u2019s choice of career seemed derived from an effort to neutralize the events that took place years earlier in that school: \u201cI <em>had<\/em> to be funny\u201d, he suddenly realizes.<\/p>\n<p>Over the course of Frank\u2019s rageful but futile scheming, Joey begins to appreciate the \u201cinterior fatality\u201d of self-punishment that he has been living out; what had made Frank bitter had led Joey to become a self-created buffoon. Joey finds out that personal freedom can be gained whenever one\u2019s own truth is uncovered and squarely faced. It might even be said that he has undergone a <em>de facto<\/em> psychoanalysis, or perhaps only a successful purge of the inevitable residua of traumatic memory: misdirected anger and unwarranted guilt. Either way, Frank has unknowingly given him a gift of incalculable value.<\/p>\n<p>Much of what makes this film so satisfying to watch is attributable to the superb performances of the two principal actors, Stephen McCale as Joey Frisk, and Malcolm Shields as his counterpart in suffering, Frank Archer. Joey is wonderfully relatable, and even at his worst, he is also endearing, na\u00efve and innocent. And who cannot recognize in himself at least a kernel of that self-destructiveness and immaturity that Joey had in such abundance? Frank, whose features are distorted into a permanent grimace, is in his bleak obsession as paralyzed in life as Joey had been, and he stands proxy for the destructive force of unresolved grievance.<\/p>\n<p>However one chooses to characterize Joey\u2019s transformational healing process, by the end of the film he unquestionably emerges as a changed man. He is an adult, a reliable sober citizen, more devoted to his daughter than ever. Few closing scenes could be more beautifully, poetically hopeful: in this one Joey walks, buoyantly and confidently, between neatly ordered parallel rows of trees under the brightest sunshine of his life.<\/p>\n<p>Address for correspondence: <a href=\"mailto:rabrams@med.cornell.edu\">rabrams@med.cornell.edu<\/a><!--TrendMD v2.4.8--><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>&nbsp; Crying with Laughter, UK 2009 Written and directed by Justin Molotnikov, available on DVD Trailer https:\/\/vimeo.com\/channels\/wellington\/17373244 &nbsp; Reviewed by Professor Robert Abrams, Professor of Psychiatry, Weill Cornell University, New York &nbsp; One can debate about what might be the central message of Crying With Laughter, the production with an oxymoronic title written and directed [&#8230;]<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"btn btn-secondary understrap-read-more-link\" href=\"https:\/\/blogs.bmj.com\/medical-humanities\/2016\/08\/11\/film-review-crying-with-laughter\/\">Read More&#8230;<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":263,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[206],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1050","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-film"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.5 - 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