2024/08/15

Viewing Notes: Terrorism Considered as One of the Fine Arts

 

Vienna Vertigo: Peter Whitehead / Michael Schlieman waiting for Lenoir

In 2010, while working with Peter Whitehead, I was dispatched to that year’s Bradford Film Festival. The year before, the festival had honoured Whitehead with their Fellowship Award while screening the highly acclaimed retrospective programme put together by Paul Cronin at Sticking Place Films. The success of that programme, particularly at the 2006 Viennale, had spurred Whitehead onto another large-scale project, a full-length feature film based on his novel Terrorism Considered as One of the Fine Arts (2007). I’ve written about this project previously, as I went onto develop a screenplay volume based on the significant amount of material Whitehead amassed during its production. The film, Terrorism Considered as One of the Fine Arts had its premiere at the 2009 Viennale, and Whitehead asked me to go to Vienna to introduce it – a good but deeply weird trip that deserves a lengthy essay of its own. Bradford was essentially the same occasion. Organised by the brilliant Mark Goodall, it was an evening screening that functioned as Terrorism’s UK premiere.

After making such as splash with the retrospective, news of this new Whitehead film caused a certain degree of anticipation among those previewing the Bradford’s 2010 edition. As Mike Everleth, writing in the Underground Film Journal put it:

[…] the most thrilling screening of the entire 10-day affair is the new film by British filmmaker Peter Whitehead, Terrorism Considered as One of the Fine Arts. In the U.S., Whitehead is a “lost” filmmaker from the underground’s heyday in the ’60s, being left out of most histories of the underground movement. Whitehead directed several influential films, including Wholly Communion and The Fall, before dropping out of filmmaking in the mid-’70s.

Whitehead as ‘lost’ film-maker was something the retrospective and a lot of the activities that came after – edited volumes, essays, archive consolidation – tried to redress. Admittedly, though, the idea did help confer a certain aura upon Whitehead’s work, the sense that when watching his films you were seeing something long hidden that could change how you understand the 1960s and documentary film. Terrorism, when it arrived, reiterated this sensibility. It was along, frequently digressive but nonetheless fascinating film account of Whitehead’s movement through Vienna’s geographic and artistic zones. It was not quite the triumphant ‘return’ to narrative cinema Whitehead touted it as and, admittedly, there is much about it that doesn’t really work as a film. Seen, though, as a personal, involuted and quixotic video journal, and it becomes a lot more rewarding.

The notes below represent the introduction speech I gave before the screening at Bradford. Whitehead was very keen to attend retrospective screenings during this period, less so individual events. He did attend a later Terrorism screening in Paris at the La Cinémathèque française. Sending me in his place, though, did not suggest he was in some way uninterested. Quite the opposite. He was extremely interested to hear of audience reactions. In both Vienna and Bradford, he was always on the phone - giving instructions, asking questions - before and after each screening. As was his wont, Whitehead was also interested to hear of any synchronicities observed or experienced. During the Bradford trip he was delighted to hear that my hotel had put me in their ‘Whitehead Room’ for the night.

For a while after its premiere, Terrorism was viewable only via selected screenings and Whitehead’s own self-produced DVDs. Since then, it has appeared online. One posting via Plagiarisme.Inc, a You Tube channel established by Whitehead in 2014, has the film in three separate chapters. This should be considered Whitehead’s preferred mode of viewing. Another more recent – and most likely unauthorised – posting courtesy of Celluloid Monk, presents the film as a single video.  


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Whitehead as Schlieman, Schlieman as Whitehead. 


You are about to see Terrorism Considered as One of the Fine Arts, which represents Peter Whitehead’s return to feature-length film after a sizable hiatus.

When placed alongside his other work, particularly the documentaries he made in the 1960s such as Wholly Communion (1965) and The Fall (1969), Terrorism initially seems to mark a significant departure. In its degree of formal experimentation and concern with aspects of media technology there is an overlap with the likes of The Fall but, overall, Terrorism moves closer to the realm of fiction than documentary. But of course, that distinction is not entirely stable which is one of the film’s many interesting features.

Where Terrorism does establish continuity with Whitehead’s previous projects is in the case of his work as a novelist. Whitehead has been writing throughout his career and Terrorism is, in fact, an adaptation of the novel of the same name. Terrorism, the novel, first published in 2007, is part of Whitehead’s ‘Nohzone Trilogy’, a sequence of strange espionage texts that continues with Nature’s Child (2001) and concludes with Girl on the Train (2003). These hugely intertextual novels were originally published online via Whitehead’s website Nohzone.com. At the level of content and form they are very much indebted to the specificity of this medium. In terms of plot, the outline the attempt of an unnamed narrator to track down one Michael Schlieman, a missing MI6 agent who has disappeared during a counter-terrorism operation. The narrator tracks Schlieman by retrieving, reviewing and reconstructing the various memoirs Schlieman has written about his time in the intelligence services. Uploaded onto a series of tumbleweed websites, these screeds contain letters, e-mails, journal entries and metaphysical rants. As a reading experience it’s not unlike William Burroughs’ The Last Words of Dutch Schultz (1970) meets Peter Wright’s Spycatcher (1987). This material gradually reveals that the dying Schlieman, possibly in the thralls of an intense opium high, had become obsessed with and gone in pursuit of Maria Lenoir, the head of a eco-terrorist cell and the intended object of his surveillance.

In the film, this scenario is transposed to Vienna, and we follow Schlieman – played by Whitehead himself – as he drifts around the city on the two circles of the Ringstrasse. As he moves clockwise and counter clockwise, he tries to locate and encircle Lenoir and the other women who make up her group. The central conceit relates to Lenoir’s planned act of terrorism, one performed as an act of retribution in response to the sinking of the Greenpeace ship Rainbow Warrior. This occurred in 1985 when the French intelligence agency, the DGSE, detonated two bombs in the hull of the berthed ship to prevent it protesting French nuclear testing in Moruroa. The incident led to the death of the Greenpeace photographer Fernando Pereira who was trapped on board when he tried to retrieve his camera. Pereira is one of the dedicatees of the film. In marshalling their response to this actual event, Whitehead presents his fictional terrorists as vengeful furies, symbolic manifestation of Gaia, the Earth Goddess. Much of this plot-structure is taken from the novel which is very much recommended. However, where the novel frames Schlieman’s experiences within a narrative of textual reconstruction, the film positions the viewer at the heart of this pursuit. Thanks to Whitehead’s often POV-style camerawork, we directly inhabit Schlieman’s perspective as the events unfold and, possibly, as his mind comes apart.

This interiority is key to what Whitehead was trying to achieve with Terrorism. He accumulated the project’s raw footage on the streets and trams of Vienna between 2006 and 2008 using lightweight digital video equipment that easily allowed the maintenance of a first-person viewpoint. These tapes were essentially a record of the period he spent in the city: it is footage of Peter Whitehead meeting people, travelling on the tram, talking about ideas, attending events. However, once this material is edited into his fictionalised frame the on-screen figures are rendered as both real and imaginary. Whitehead becomes Schlieman and the people he meets become terrorists. Here Whitehead is using the standard narrative of investigation, the basic approach of the spy and detective genres, to make a wider point about the transformative capabilities of individual consciousness. Through the figure of the psychologically deteriorating Schlieman, Whitehead explores the fluidity and productive potential inherent to the act of remembering and misremembering.

Within the film Whitehead-as-Schlieman acts as a sort of Tiresias figure, mirroring the way that this mythical character is represented in T.S. Eliot’s ‘The Waste Land’ (1922). He is the perpetual spectator. He remains somewhat detached from events, but it is also his presence which unites and motivates the narrative. The thrust of the film is that while Whitehead / Schlieman encounters a whole series of different people they are, essentially, all the same woman: they are the faces and voices of the eternally absent Lenoir that Schlieman projects onto all those around him.

This notion of an all-encompassing subject position also works as an oblique comment on Whitehead’s use of technology. The film makes self-conscious reference to online communications, mobile technology and digital video. One of the dominant formal features of the film is the extended use of captions and on-screen texts. These references to literature, philosophy and film are visual representations of Schlieman’s interception and interpretation of the e-mail communication between the members of the activist cell. They also provide a running textual commentary on the on-goings events of the film. Whitehead thus folds into the texture of the film, the operational traces of the digital economy, the tools that facilitate the contemporary ‘me’ culture: the endless live feed of self-absorbed blogs, tweets and chat rooms.

Incidentally, it’s on account of this technical specificity that Whitehead doesn’t want Terrorism to be seen as a ‘film’ per se, but as DVD, something that can be put onto the shelf alongside your books and consumed in the same way. It is intentionally split into three chapters in order to encourage repeated and extended viewing. You can watch one chapter, go away and think about it, come back and watch another, Maybe even watch them in a different order.

While stylistically very different, Terrorism could productively be placed alongside Nicholas Roeg’s Don’t Look Now (1973) and Alain Tanner’s In the White City (1983) insofar as they each use images of transit through urban terrain to highlight and exacerbate changes in the memory functions of the protagonists. However, where the thematic emphasis of these two examples is upon images of decay, in Whitehead’s film the hallucinatory journey is creative. As Schlieman’s idiosyncratic camera I/eye traverses the multiple circles of Vienna – the city of dreams the Freudian unconscious and The Third Man – it is as if he is making unexpected synaptic connections across different artistic, philosophical and historical zones.   

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2024/08/14

Well Beings


My new book, Well Beings: How the Seventies Lost Its Mind and Taught Us to Find Ourselves is out now from Icon Books. It's a follow-up to The Bad Trip that in some ways carries on the story. It looks at some of the same figures and revisits them in the narcissistic seventies. That said, the book is also a stand-alone cultural history, one that charts the secret history of wellness, moving from its post-war origins to its emergence in the 1970s amid the human potential movement linked to the Esalen Institute and many others. It's been a great pleasure and a privilege to work on this project which such a talented and supportive team at Icon Books, Girton College, University of Cambridge and also at Watson, Little. Hats off, as always to Donald Winchester.  Anna Morrison has once again delivered with a superb cover. 

Well Beings has gained some great reviews thus far from the likes of the TLS, The Spectator and the FT. Extracts from these and the book's general blurb can be found below. Check out my Twitter/X (@EndOfSixties) for details of the promotional events I've been doing. Purchasing details can be found here. There will be a paperback edition out in 2025 and I'll be doing more events in support of it. 


James Riley, author of the cult hit The Bad Trip: Dark Omens, New Worlds and the End of the Sixties, returns with another incisive and thought-provoking cultural history, turning his trenchant eye to the wellness industry that emerged in the 1970s.

Concepts such as wellness and self-care may feel like distinctly twenty-first century ideas, but they first gained traction as part of the New Age health movements that began to flourish in the wake of the 1960s. Riley dives into this strange and hypnotic world of panoramic coastal retreats and darkened floatation tanks, blending a page-turning narrative with illuminating explorations of the era's music, film, art and literature.

Well Beings delves deep into the mind of the seventies – its popular culture, its radical philosophies, its approach to health and its sense of social crisis. It tells the story of what was sought, what was found and how these explorations helped the 'Me Decade' find itself. In so doing, it questions what good health means today and reveals what the seventies can teach us about the strange art of being well.

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As James Riley points out in Well Beings, if the 1960s were about changing the world, the 1970s were about changing yourself. From ashrams to the wellness industry, from primal screaming to neoliberalism, Riley's fresh take on the 1970s lays bare the rampant culture of narcissism that characterised this decade. Wide-ranging and written with flair, this is an eye-opening account of 1970s culture.
Douglas Field
Riley weaves an attractively readable story from hot tubs to high theory, via Hollywood movies and British sitcoms. And he urges us to continue taking the pursuit of well-being seriously despite the many disconcerting deviations along the way. Highly entertaining and enlightening.
Alastair J. Reid
Having navigated us through the late 1960s' Bad Trip, James Riley now explores how the 1970s sought to make us Well Beings. Diving deep into the rich cultural resources of a much derided decade, Riley uncovers a complex history chartered towards self-discovery and a cure for our collective ills.
Matthew Worley, Professor of Modern History, University of Reading
James Riley 's new book is a cogent and provocative overview of the growth of the wellness movement in the 1970s that not only provides a comprehensive account of the cultural and political context for "wellness" but also pinpoints the origins of many of the attitudes that inform thinking about health and lifestyle today. Riley charts the malaises and ennui of a pivotal decade in a clear and witty narrative with a mordant sense of humour that will evoke moments of perhaps painful recognition in anyone who has sampled any of the plethora of philosophies and therapies whose development he describes. From gurus and encounter groups to flotation tanks and rebirthing, Riley's account is informed by an impressive breadth of research and provides real insight and understanding.
Judith Noble, Professor of Film and the Occult, Arts University Plymouth
In this fantastically witty book, James Riley reminds us about the history and roots of wellbeing as a movement with its commercial appeal, absurdities and curiosities.
Thomas Roulet, Professor of Organisational Sociology & Leadership, University of Cambridge
An engrossing, thought-provoking and entertaining study of the search for who we are and what makes us 'well' in body and mind.
The Spectator
In his expansive study, Riley draws out the many historical roots and consequences of the 1970s inward turn … Well Beings is a highly readable, alternative history
Manchester Review of Books
roaming, eclectic tour of the 1970s via film, literature, and music … Riley deftly shows how far we have drifted from the socially grounded culture of wellness that was prominent in the '70s
The Camera
Riley is a well-read guide. The book deals with events, people, music and films from the 1970s, setting them in a longer-lived cultural context … Well Beings illuminates, in particular, the idea of 'spiritual privilege'.
The Times Literary Supplement
But what is wellness? And how can we understand its benefits while jettisoning the charlatans and pointless interventions? I found the answers – plus some fantastically weird anecdotes – in James Riley's engrossing and timely book … In Well Beings, he reanimates the mood of the 1970s with a range of contemporary cultural resources from books, philosophy, politics, even popular British sitcoms of the time.
Financial Times