Nightcrawler: The Holiday Season’s Best Violent Movie

 

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Most people read or watch war stories not to peek into life but to get an intimate glimpse at death. The irony here is of course that the more anti-war a book or movie wants to be, the more likely it is that they it emphasize violence. It is almost as if a condition of a truly anti-war piece is that it provides voyeurs as much violence as they desire. So the honest war storywriter ends up creating excellent war porn for the would-be voyeur and directors as politically and aesthetically diverse as Stephen Spielberg, David Ayers and Clint Eastwood compete with each other to reveal war’s obscenity to an audience eager for the obscene.

Though not a war story, Nightcrawler, Dan Gilroy’s directorial debut, contemplates a problem central to war stories: namely, the cultural appeal of violence and the authorial exploitation of obscenity. And by subverting our expectations surrounding violence, art and success, Gilroy’s manages to successfully satirize both an audience that consumes violence and the people who orchestrate this consumption without – as is the case in some comparable projects – resorting to the same exploitation he decries. Would-be tellers of war stories could learn a lot from a movie like Nightcrawler.

The plot is simple enough: Louis Bloom – played by an emaciated and bug-eyed Jake Gyllenhaal – evolves from a Los Angeles bottom-feeder who steals copper to sell for a little money to a Los Angeles bottom-feeder who steals the last moments of people’s lives to sell for a little more money. It is a classic American success story, where a young man or woman harnesses a unique skill set to make friends and influence people. Except in this instance the hero succeeds by filming people in extremis, artfully recording hemorrhaging bodies and eventually arranging their deaths to keep up with the audience’s insatiable demand for such theater.

Many movies have explored the corrupting influence of money and violence and the way in which American culture uniquely intertwines the two (and not a few have used Los Angeles as their setting). The satire comes not in Bloom’s rise to prominence but in the very ridiculousness of his conquests. As opposed to movies like Wolf on Wall Street, where the rise and fall is dramatic enough to elicit envy in the audience, Gilroy scales Nightcrawler back to reflect the banality of Bloom’s efforts and achievements. Bloom counts himself a success because he owns a business with two trucks instead of one. He considers shaking hands with a third-rate newscaster tantamount to fame. He falls for a failed news producer twice as old as him who he has to blackmail into having sex with him. Bloom is a petite-bourgeois devil, one whose success is as pathetic as what he has to do to achieve it.

Neither does Bloom have any sense of having done wrong. Early on in the film Bloom sits alone in his empty yet tastefully furnished apartment and clicks through the morning TV news shows. He laughs at the newscaster’s corny jokes unaffectedly. In the film’s final moments, the detective investigating Bloom can’t get past the fact that Bloom filmed his friend dying. Bloom replies, “It’s my job. It’s what I do. I like to think if you’re seeing me you’re having the worst day of your life.” Bloom’s laughter remains the same – innocent as it is amoral. Here and elsewhere, the film lacks any dynamism, either into cynicism or away from it, and the static characterization, Bloom’s resolute innocence, survives his ethically questionable activities unscathed, even as the more and more people end up on the wrong side of his camera.

In the climax, we do learn something important about Bloom: it’s not that he doesn’t understand people, it’s that he understands them and discounts their reality. “Maybe I just don’t like people,” he tells his partner. Throughout the film he makes seemingly earnest attempts to mimic human emotion – patting his assistant’s shoulder after they see someone they know die, giving self-help talks to the people that he meets, “Who am I? I’m a hard worker…people say I am persistent” – and the sad fact of the movie, the central conceit, is not that Bloom is a joke but that everyone in the film ends up being like Bloom; ultimately, we must take him seriously, for this is what passes for seriousness in our society – his grotesque films and entrepreneurial optimism are the only art and hope in an artless (indeed kitsch and sentimental) world.

Gilroy seems to be saying that Bloom dislikes us, the people who watch his videos, who form the literal fodder for his ambitions, but we watch these videos because we dislike people as much as him. In this respect Nightcrawler is not quite like other satires of American masculinity, violence and terror (like say American Psycho or Fight Club). Nightcrawler satirizes these movies. It critiques our rabid consumption of violence in movies that seek to make an earnest commentary about violence in America. It mocks us for desiring this violence, for wanting to indulge in death while simultaneously acting sententious about those who indulge in death (tellingly, Gilroy gives us little actual obscenity in a movie about obscenity). At times the plot stumbles – Gilroy has too many targets for a single film – but the movie does better than most in capturing this curious tension between indulgence and opprobrium, between our own self-involved fears and nihilistic desires.

Now what does this have to do with war stories? Well, a lot actually. Most war stories over the last forty years have been obsessed with representing the true obscenity of war; they operate under the notion that realism – a faithfully rendered account of horror – somehow does justice to the conflict. Many of these stories try to abrogate politics through authenticity and eventually mistake obscenity for profundity.  Bloom and the people around Bloom rationalize his snuff films in much the same way. In a way, Bloom gives the dying people dignity, by acting as a sort of witness to their final moments. The audience participates willingly, possessed by fear and hatred, projecting themselves on to the dead, forgiving this invasion of privacy and sadomasochistic prurience under the auspices of aesthetics.

Fury has been in theaters for about a month now. American Sniper will soon follow (timed perfectly to capture the coveted January demographic). These Christmas films have gone through great lengths to be accurate, to replicate the obscene violence of 1944 Europe and 2006 Iraq. Many will argue that it is possible to watch them simply out of respect for authentic death, not to find a sense of authenticity through this death. Yet after a movie like Nightcrawler, it is increasingly difficult to make the claim that we can do the former without also indulging in the latter, and perhaps this all movie about American violence can do – open us up to the nightcrawler in each of us, the ones making these films and the ones who keep going to see them.
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Michael Carson has written non-fiction about war and violence at Salon, the Daily Beast, The Hooded Utilitarian and Splice Today. He also attempts to write fiction that neither indulges in obscenity nor sanitizes the obscene. So far he has been unsuccessful. Check out his blog, the Wrath Bearing Tree, or follow him @WrathBT on Twitter.

8 thoughts on “Nightcrawler: The Holiday Season’s Best Violent Movie

  1. I wasn’t going to watch Nightcrawler out of respect for the many friends I have in journalism who have no real issue with this type of behavior, but you’ve presented a compelling argument in favor of the film. Thank you!

  2. This does make Nightcrawler sound intriguing. Implicating the viewer is always a tricky strategy — though people are way more into hating journalists than soldiers, so I can see it working better here….

  3. The opening of this piece is so good, I’ve decided to put it on hold, go and see Nightcrawler, and then finish it. Excited to read the rest!

  4. It’s definitely better than the sanctimonious pap written by Aaron Sorkin for The Newsroom. A much more believable portrait of journalism.

    “It mocks us for desiring this violence, for wanting to indulge in death while simultaneously acting sententious about those who indulge in death…”

    I don’t think Gilroy’s critique of violence quite reaches this level because movie violence is very easily shelved under make-belief while the subject under discussion in Nightcrawler seems to be more specifically America’s incessant hunger for physical and psychological violence in “reality” (granted that this reality is often edited/narrated into fantasy by news programs).

    If documentary footage of violence is 1-2 steps away from actual violence, then movie violence is several steps away from it. It’s possible to view movie violence as therapeutic (or useful for mental preparedness), but the desire to see violent video documentation strays closer to voyeurism and blood lust. This goes back to a discussion about war photography on HU a while back, where sociopathic tendencies seemed to be amply rewarded in photojournalism.

  5. Agreed. His critique does not extend to all fictional violence. I guess I thought more of “true” war stories like American Sniper, Zero Dark Thirty and Lone Survivor, all of which emphasize authentic violence and sell well because they actually happened. But I would be okay with including movies like Fury and Saving Private Ryan, which, though technically fiction, sell well because they are marketed and perceived as authentic – the hunger for a certain kind of reality you speak of is evident here and in other fictional films too.

    I would also argue that the there is an element of the film that does mock the traditional narrative arc in violent films, fictional or otherwise. What Bloom wins at the end by what he is willing to witness and arrange can only make one laugh. The violence neither sends him to hell nor to heaven but to a small company with four employees. I couldn’t help but feel he was making fun of Scarface as well as exploitive journalism. But this might be a moment where Gilory tries to do too much and the critique of capitalism loses out to the one of voyeurism (or vice versa).

    Found the Johnson piece on the ethics of war journalism you mention. Great stuff. Much to think about.

  6. Finally managed to see this, and holy shit, Bloom is an all-time cinematic creep.

    Funny, though, I found the sub-Baudrillard spectacle-of-violence-implicating stuff the least interesting parts of the movie. They seemed like distractions from the real show, which was (a) the plot’s burlesque of Horatio Alger-style triumphs of hard work and determination, (b) Gyllenhaal’s character and performance (which reminded me of Hayden Christensen’s Stephen Glass in that movie about him — they had a similarly unsettling way of unconvincingly simulating normalcy), and especially (c) his parody of that whole “7 habits of successful people” corporate ideology and lingo. The news critique also accounted for most of the movie’s (few) missteps…

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