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The Whole World Was Watching

“Chicago 10,” which opened in theaters a few days ago, is one of the most exciting movies ever made about any aspect of the 1960s. It is also among the most frustrating; for it turns out that excitement is only just so much of a virtue in a documentary film. Sensation minus context is desensitizing. And in a number of ways “Chicago 10″ marks an almost complete triumph of visual intensity over historical memory.

Intellectual Affairs

Yet it is also the product of some impressive digging in the video archives. Much of the footage in it was shot by television crews roaming the streets during the Democratic National Convention in August 1968. Thousands of people had gathered in Chicago to protest the Vietnam war, by any means necessary; and thousands of cops marched in formation to prevent them from doing so, also by any means necessary. Guns were not actually fired in the process, which is something of a miracle. In one harrowing scene, a group of demonstrators taunts the police, challenging them to shoot.

You see Walter Cronkite on the evening news (a sober and avuncular anchorman, like nobody now in broadcasting: the living voice of the middle of the American road) comparing Mayor Daley’s city to a police state. There is a shot of a placard in the streets of Chicago saying “Welcome to Prague.” For this was one of those moments in history when the whole world was not just watching but, it seemed, performing from a common script. At the same time as Chicago was turning into an armed camp, Soviet troops were busy putting down Czechoslovakia’s experiment in reforming its own regime.

The confrontation in Chicago between the protesters and the forces of law and order is chronicled, day by day; and the tensions build up to a frenzy when the police go on a rampage. One unnamed and seemingly apolitical Chicagoan describes sitting in a bar, minding his own business, when the cops stormed in, making everybody leave under the threat of being pounded senseless. Anyone with long hair did not get a choice in the matter.

The street scenes are intercut with animated sequences based on transcripts of the government’s prosecution of those it accused of organizing the demonstrations. This is not the first time the court case has been put on screen (both the BBC and HBO have done so in previous decades) nor will it be the last, since a film called “The Trial of the Chicago 7″ is in production this year. That title is something of a misnomer, since the Black Panther Party chairman Bobby Seale was the eighth defendant until his case with severed from that of his alleged co-conspirators. In “Chicago 10,” the figure is bumped up to include the two lawyers who represented Abbie Hoffman, Bobby Seale, et al. — since they, like the defendants, were cited for contempt of court.

As hyperkinetic eye candy, “Chicago 10″ is as good as it gets. A soundtrack with Eminem rapping his fantasy of an anti-Bush insurrection is, I suppose, one way to make history come alive. Likewise with turning the courtroom antics of the revolutionaries look like something out of a video game. But the mash-up between archival footage and music-video aesthetics has the effect of stripping the events out of any sort of historical context. In making their work as up-to-date as possible in style and overtone, the movie makers seem never to have asked whether they might also be doing a disservice to the past.

All the fast cuts and visual tricks here might be justified by reference to the presumed demands of Today’s Youth, with their supersaturated yet shrinking attention spans. But if kids born in the 1990s really are the intended audience, why give that quick shot of the sign reading “Welcome to Prague” without any explanation for it? (My apologies, of course, if it turns out that Today’s Youth are completely up to speed on postwar Eastern European history.)

How is it that the film never mentions that student protests in France a few months earlier led to a general strike that almost brought down the government there? The “May events” in Paris were still on many people’s minds as the summer wound down; they help to make sense of what might otherwise look like plain craziness, at times, in the streets of Chicago. But no hint of the outside world ever breaks into any frame of the film. It revisits the past in an almost isolationist, if not solipsistic way — quite as Tom Brokaw did in a recent TV program that treated the year 1968 as if it had unfolded almost entirely within the United States. (The convulsions in Paris, Prague, and Peking that year were dispatched in about two minutes.)

In the case of “Chicago 10,” the perspective is shallow as well as narrow. Events are not simply yanked out of the past and detached from their contemporary global significance.They are shown without concern for long-term causes or effects. Incidents and images are presented without any reference at all to a larger narrative in which they might have some meaning. No effort is made to discuss the effects of the Chicago protests and the conspiracy trial in American politics. And that really takes some doing.

When we talk about the “culture war” now, the expression is usually just a very tired metaphor. But what happened outside the Democratic convention was an early battle in it, and a very literal one.

The turmoil gave many people a sense that the whole country was hurtling towards a much greater showdown. That prospect has dimmed for the protesters who marched in the streets, then, but it never really did for the “silent majority,” as the winner of the presidential campaign later that year put it.

In his book Chicago ‘68 — first published 20 years ago by the University of Chicago Press, which is now reissuing it — David Farber, now a professor of history at Temple University, quotes a position paper that Richard Nixon wrote as a candidate: “The first right of every American, to be free from domestic violence, has become the forgotten civil right of the American people.”

Obviously Nixon did not mean freedom from having your head massaged by a policeman’s billy club. The Republican candidate’s complaint was that the government was abdicating its responsibility to protect the individual’s right to be left in peace. “Instead,” writes Farber in his paraphrase of Nixon’s argument, “that state has pledged itself to a policy of inclusion, a policy that insists that the state has the right to intrude in local affairs and order private citizens to accept the rights of other citizens — the blacks, the Latinos, the poor, the protestors — to intrude on their privacy. Such a policy, Nixon is implying, naturally leads to a situation in which certain citizens would intrude violently into other people’s lives, marching and sitting in an taking over streets and even burning and destroying private property.”

The upheaval in Chicago consolidated that feeling. But it also added something else — an element still lingering in the mix of resentments that fuels so much of American political culture. “Chicago 10″ exists because there were so many TV cameras in the streets. And it’s clear that the police gave members of the press extra special attention — beating them with the gusto they would otherwise have reserved for, say, student radicals carrying the Vietcong flag. Sympathy for the police and contempt for the news media were, for the “silent majority,” two sides of a common rage.

“Both stem from a mistrust of disembodied authority,” writes Farber. “Both feelings come from a suspicion that some outside, elite power has taken control of what should be commonsensical and local.”

A better movie would have found some way to portray that suspicion, and to address how much of it is still in the air, four decades later — a legacy that has outlasted any dream in the streets that year.

Scott McLemee writes Intellectual Affairs each week. He also blogs at Quick Study.

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Comments

My Review

I think Scott is demanding too much of a movie, to show everything and put it in deep historical context. At some point, people really do need to open up a book to get a serious understanding of 1968. But this movie gives a very good sense of the times. To read my review of Chicago 10, go to my blog at http://collegefreedom.blogspot.com.

John K. Wilson, collegefreedom.org, at 8:45 am EST on March 5, 2008

I would also add that the film gives the events a spark of life and sense of immediacy that Farber’s incredibly dry (and typo-laden) account does not.

C. Robinson, at 10:35 am EST on March 5, 2008

Film as History NOT

I am not disputing that this film offers immediacy and excitement, but it doesn’t convey contingency. Action makes great movies; ignoring complexity makes great movies; I wonder if in forty years there will be a ‘thriller’ showing Saddam Hussain and Osama bin Laden plotting together as the World Trade Center towers crumble?

The scary thing is that the visual impact of a cinematographically great film can’t be undone by facts—even without typographical errors.

Frank F. Conlon, Professor Emeritus at University of Washington, at 12:00 pm EST on March 5, 2008

Chicago 10 — Maybe “excitement” was all there was to it?

“The Whole World,” indeed, was watching. But what was happening? I agree with the comments that question whether it’s not asking too much of a movie to make sense of what was “really” happening circa 1970.

I haven’t seen the movie, but based on this review I definitely will. It sounds to me as though the moview succeeds in showing today’s youth how different current anti-(Iraq) war protests are from the protests back then. They were *in* to it then. But I don’t agree, necessarily, that any movie could go much farther toward depicting what happened then, because hardly anybody—if anyone at all—could then or now give a satisfactory answer to why “the 60s (and 70s)” happened, or indeed what exactly did happen. The tedious arguments and rants of the leaders of that movement, if movement it was, are no more convincing than the equally tedious and often bizarre arguments among the varous Protestant sects during the Reformation. The bigger picture of what was happening then seemed to elude those leaders, as they risked life and limb over whether God had every detail planned out in advance, a la Calvin, or whether wine turned into real blood during Communion, etc. etc.

So what’s different today, in the wake of those events? In general, the legitimacy of government has taken a permanent, though apparently not mortal, hit. The workforce has expanded faster than population due to widespread assimilation of women to the labor market—on terms, it should be noted, quite congenial to the then-hated “establishment,” for it resulted in a 30 percent reduction in real wages without nearly so great a reduction in worker productivity, all in all a pretty good outcome for the economy. But was that what it was all about? I doubt you could market a movie on that premise.

Rod Bell, Adjunct Professor at College of DuPage, at 1:25 pm EST on March 5, 2008

Film not as history

“Chicago 10″ doesn’t get the history wrong so much as it just leaves it out completely. That was the director’s choice. He wanted the story to be sliced out of its historical circumstances and so be more relevant to the present. One can of course quarrel with that choice. In interviews, the director, Brett Morgen, seems to have a good grasp of the relevant history and its nuances—that’s just not reflected in the film.

Dean B., Electronic Mktg Mgr at Univ of Chicago Press, at 1:25 pm EST on March 5, 2008

Varia

Despite his lack of credentials, Scott is really a closet historian!

But seriously, it’s rare to find a historical movie that takes context seriously. Few directors attempt to show the excitement in understanding simultaneous happenings. I think they fear that no characters will be developed adequately. But I can’t abide an argument that engaging context would lower the dramatic potential of a film. The excitement of historical context is that it provides momentum, it builds tension.

In the vein of movies about the 1960s, particularly 1968 and beyond, I thought that The Weather Underground did a fine job of providing context. — TL

Tim Lacy, at 4:25 pm EST on March 5, 2008

interview

I haven’t seen the film yet so can’t really comment. But I listened to an interview with the director that addresses (to some extent) Scott’s criticism:http://www.kcrw.com/etc/programs/tt/tt080312brett_morgen

Michael, at 5:00 am EDT on March 14, 2008

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