
Go and see War of the Worlds for the machines. The glorious Martian Tripods are the real stars of the picture and their Gigeresque techno-organic sublimity almost redeems this hobbled summer blockbuster from its director’s own worst instincts. War of the Worlds may not be “a sci-fi masterpiece,” as Slate’s David Edelstein preposterously asserts, but the stunningly-realized Martian hardware and the creepy alien vines they cultivate are genuinely marvelous additions to the visual language of science fiction film.

Nonetheless, with the resources of Industrial Light and Magic at his fingertips, Spielberg is able to bring Wells’s nimble tripod design for the Martian war machine to cinematic life--and in many ways, the timing couldn’t feel more right. Science fiction filmmakers as diverse as George Lucas and the Wachowski brothers (below) have been borrowing Wells’s arresting vision of alien technology for years now, and it’s about time someone did justice to the original.

What interests me for the moment is the return of the Tripods and their displacement of the warships. Are the Tripods just a nostalgia trip? The gosh-gee-whiz-back-to-the-future-retro-joyride of a starry-eyed kid with an ILM magic wand at his disposal? Or are they in some way connected to the film’s garbled political vision, and if so, how? Despite the care with which Spielberg and the film’s writers have perused Wells’s text, we know that Spielberg isn’t primarily concerned with filming a faithful adaptation of Wells’s War of the Worlds. For as good as she is in the role of Cruise’s doe-eyed daughter (and say what you will, she is an extremely subtle young actor), there was no Dakota Fanning in the novel’s besieged London. So what gives? And more viscerally, what is it about Wells’s Tripods that remains so thrilling and so disturbing more than a hundred years later? What exactly has happened to Martian war machines since 1953? What is the difference between a Martian battleship and a Martian Tripod?
The answer to both of these latter questions is, in a word: multiplicity.

The Martian threat of Spielberg’s remake is considerably more complex and contradictory. It emerges neither exclusively from without, nor from within, but from both simultaneously: the prehistoric war machines are already under foot, sleeping patiently through the millennia, waiting to be activated by Martian pilots who ride eerily silent lightening bolts to their subterranean control centers. Just as the sleek warship design mirrored the singularity of the red scare in the political allegory of the first movie, the unsettling idea of a menace that seems to emerge from multiple sources is embodied in the amazingly heterogeneous Tripods themselves. And here, Spielberg sticks rigorously to the brilliant, evocative descriptions of the source material:
And this Thing I saw! How can I describe it? A monstrous tripod, higher than many houses, striding over the young pine trees, and smashing them aside in its career; a walking engine of glittering metal, striding now across the heather; articulate ropes of steel dangling from it, and the clattering tumult of its passage mingling with the riot of the thunder… Seen nearer, the Thing was incredibly strange, for it was no mere insensate machine driving on its way. Machine it was, with a ringing metallic pace, and long, flexible, glittering tentacles (one of which gripped a young pine tree) swinging and rattling about its strange body. It picked its road as it went striding along, and the brazen hood that surmounted it moved to and fro with the inevitable suggestion of a head looking about. Behind the main body was a huge mass of white metal like a gigantic fisherman's basket, and puffs of green smoke squirted out from the joints of the limbs as the monster swept by me. And in an instant it was gone. (Wells, WOTW Part 1: Chapter 10)

The Tripods of Wells’s novel and Spielberg’s movie suggest something different. Bipedal Martian machines would be unthinkable, for these would simply be giant robots--uncanny reflectors of human beings, but not truly “alien.” The third leg of the Tripod produces genuine strangeness. Like some vestigial limb, it muddles the symmetry of human, animal, reptile, and even insect forms, conveying something unpleasantly unearthly and difficult to locate ontologically. And yet its excess, its multiplicity, is not superfluous. The Tripod boasts both a disturbing stability and a frightening capacity for movement. And the conjunction of this strange multiplicity with awesome power is the mainspring of the discomfort it elicits.

Most of its arms were retracted, but with three long tentacles it was fishing out a number of rods, plates, and bars which lined the covering and apparently strengthened the walls of the cylinder… Its motion was so swift, complex, and perfect that at first I did not see it as a machine, in spite of its metallic glitter. The fighting-machines were coordinated and animated to an extraordinary pitch, but nothing to compare with this. People who have never seen these structures, and have only the ill-imagined efforts of artists or the imperfect descriptions of such eye-witnesses as myself to go upon, scarcely realise that living quality. (Wells, WOTW, Part 2: Chapter 6)

Like the singular swan-necked warships of the first film, the amphibious, polymorphous nature of Spielberg’s war machine has a naughty sexual correlate. Indeed, Spielberg seems almost to have conceived of this feature as the sexual complement to Jennings’s ship design. Instead of a Martian phallus, Spielberg gives us a livid pink membrane that is genitally unclassifiable (a toothless vagina dentata? a Martian anus?) but undeniably suggestive. A sort of carnivorous sexual organ that stands in for the vampirism of Spielberg’s blood-draining Martians (Wells made them cannibals), the pink “mouth” communicates between the Tripod’s metal baskets of human victims and the inner, never-glimpsed world of its command centre. It is the film’s ultimate liminal space: a passageway between outside and inside, between life and death, between the tenuously human and the fully Martian world, between the organic and the technological. It crystallizes the disturbing “living quality” of the alien war machine. It is, in short, the core of the Tripod’s frightening multiplicity, its terminal blurring of categories.
If the difference between the war machines of Haskin’s and Spielberg’s films amounts to the difference between singularity and multiplicity, what does this have to do with the politics of the most recent War of the Worlds?
I said earlier that its politics were “incoherent.” “Vapid” would serve just as well. What is important to note is that it is calculated vapidity, a willed incoherence that has two distinct dimensions.
“No,” we and Dakota Fanning are chastened as the devastating attacks begin, “it’s not the terrorists; this is something else.” And “No,” one can almost hear Mr. Spielberg yelling at us, “the movie is not a political allegory!! Honest, it’s just a story about a lost dad trying to save his kids and reunite his family. Really it is!!” And yet, in a recent news story, Spielberg confirmed the 9/11 references of the film, commenting, “There are politics underneath some of the scares, and some of the adventures, and some of the fear, but I really wanted to make it suggestive enough so everybody could have their own opinion.” For “suggestive,” one might be inclined to read “deliberately muddled.”
No matter how one feels about the current handling of the real American war machine, what is clear is that the film is painfully aware of the impossibility of making a non-allegorical Martian invasion movie in the wake of 9/11 and is as anxious to avoid reproducing the paranoid jingoism of its Cold War precursor as it is of appearing too liberal.
Hence the movie’s three symbolic endings. Although they necessarily appear sequentially, I like to think of them as following a sort of “choose your own adventure” model in which each provides a satisfying ending for a range of viewers across the political spectrum. The first ending is the liberal ending, in which Tom Cruise saves America by blowing up a Tripod (an “Axis of Evil” if ever there was one) with the cooperation of ethnically diverse fellow prisoners who pull him free of the Martian anus in an jaunty pantomime of coalition-building. The second ending is the more Conservative ending, in which the U. S. Army saves America by blasting a Tripod to smithereens the old fashioned way. This ending is stodgier and lacks the dramatic tension of the first, but it is a strategic (and one senses, half-hearted) addition in any case. The third ending is arguably the most irresponsible of the three, as it echoes the conclusion of Haskin’s flag-waver and Wells’s original in bringing about a reunion of church and state. In this ending, provided by Morgan Freeman’s voiceover narration, the Martian-unfriendly microbes, which “God in his wisdom” placed on earth, carry the day. God saves America, giving us a literal deus ex machina.
A suspicious viewer might argue that these are not three endings at all, but the same ending repeated three times in (not so) subtly different registers. For such a viewer, Spielberg has prepared a special fourth ending that comes before the other three, and which might be taken as a hint to leave the theater early. This ending is of course the one in which Tom Cruise murders Tim Robbins’s whacked out would-be resistor in the cellar with his bare hands. In terms of its politics, this ending--indeed the entire cellar episode--is potentially the most radical and the most subversive of the lot because it is here that Spielberg makes the strongest explicit claim for an enemy within, and suggests that the real danger to American ideals is posed not by the “other” from without (the laughably fake CGI Martians whose very absurdity suggests parody), but by a certain paranoiac attitude that emanates from within. Of course, when dealing with Martian exterminators, one cannot be too paranoid! But Spielberg seems to want to complicate the political allegory here in order to distance his film from the patriotic stridency of Haskin’s The War of the Worlds, and he does this by setting up Tom Cruise as the liberal alternative to Tim Robbins’s jittery, gonzo “enemy within,” the human equivalent of the Tripod that emerges from beneath the city street in the film’s harrowing beginning.
A number of critics have commented on the intensity of the silent life-and-death struggle between Cruise and Robbins as the serpentine Martian eye slithers ominously all around them in the dingy claustrophobic basement. It would not being going to far, I think, to see this scene as a Spielberg’s comment on the current state of American politics--and it is potentially the most lucid political statement of the movie. Even here, though, there is something distinctly odd about casting the most vocal and visible Hollywood lefty in a role that is so politically abject. No doubt, Tim Robbins had a blast playing against type, but one senses Spielberg’s political equivocation at work here too. At the same moment that Tom Cruise’s (liberal) “Ray” kills off (right wing paranoiac) “Ogilvy” in order to survive, we are uncomfortably aware that he’s also bumping off dyed in the wool lefty Tim Robbins. Once again: stalemate.
The political soupiness of War of the Worlds is not accidental. It amounts to a strategic dodge. Spielberg knows that he cannot avoid the political implications of his material, and on some level, it seems, he does not entirely want to. The political “suggestiveness” of the script gives the proceedings a ponderous hint of depth. But only a hint, for the possibility that the film actually has a political vision at all is highly doubtful. As Rick Groen has recently argued in a penetrating article about Spielberg’s career,
everything about Spielberg’s work reflects his innate belief in the triumphant power of goodness... Not feigned but genuinely felt, this abiding belief is what makes him a populist, specifically an American populist (life, liberty, and the pursuit of happy endings). But it’s also what makes him a Capra-corn sentimentalist. The white light of goodness animates his artistry and the limits of his art, doubling as his main strength and his enduring weakness, his bete blanche. (The Globe and Mail, Saturday, July 2, 2005: R8)

We seem to have come a long way from Tripods. But in fact, they have been with us all along.
As images of a multiplicity that confuses inside and outside and refuses or complicates simplistic binaries with its disturbing tentacles and extra appendages, the Tripods could--and to some extent do--reflect the contradictions, challenges, and complexities of the current political situation where the enemy itself becomes amorphous, multiple, and sometimes difficult to pin down. If Jennings’s singular Martian war machines embodied the dark side of a deadly political binary from an earlier (Cold) War, then Spielberg’s ambiguous Tripods seem poised to reflect the uncertainties and dangers of the contemporary moment. And yet, as we have seen, Spielberg is uncomfortable with such difficult, potentially illuminating complexity, preferring instead to beat a hasty retreat from the public sphere to the safer domestic space of the fractured but “good” nuclear family that his films obsessively mythologize.
What is unfortunate about the new War of the Worlds is that ultimately, the Martian Tripods and the endlessly proliferating Martian vine are not allowed to bear any meaningful symbolic weight at all. If their unsettling multiplicity represents anything for Spielberg it is not the complexities and contradictions of contemporary political life, but the political sphere as such. It is politics that are alien to Spielberg’s sentimental vision, and as we watch Tom Cruise being pulled to safety from the voracious pink lips of the Martian war machine, having left a handful of grenades inside to destroy its disturbing complexity and multiplicity and blast all of the human captives to “freedom” and the still greater “safety” of home and hearth, we might catch a glimpse of the director’s own reactionary fantasy of familial insularity. And as the Tripod topples into an already dying network of red, brilliant, tangled Martian weeds, we might get an inkling of what is at stake in Spielberg’s war against the machines.
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great review, I could not read it all, because it might spoil the movie for me - I prefer to read reviews after.
ReplyDeleteby the way, I've listening to the war of the worlds rock cd, that was reissued last week. it's pretty out that, prog rock, I guess you could call it.
Jesus Christ! All this for a Sci-Fi movie ? Maybe you should stop living in the basement and go outside for once in your life. Come On, really. If I looked hard enough, I could probably find numerous political references and nuances in Stev Martin's "The Jerk" as well. But hey, it's JUST A MOVIE. Meant to entertain, and I thought it did a good job of that. I, unlike you, don't have that much free-time on my hands as to look at every scene and devise this majestic "second meaning" for everything that happens in the movie. This is probably because I have a life, and see this film for what it ultimately really is: A movie meant to entertain us.
ReplyDeleteHere's a suggestion for you: Watch the movie upside-down through a mirror, and maybe then you can decipher the subliminal messages Speilberg must have put in there as well! Sound ridiculous ? So does your long-winded, self serving review.
Nothing personal - This is business.
Wow, anonymous really makes himself sound like an ass. Why did you sit and read the review and then write a "long-winded" and "self serving" comment, if its just a "MOVIE" that is so meaningless to you? I'm just curious why you would invest so much time in all of this, when your life is obviously so interesting and you do things outside of your basement. Some people just like to read a bit more into the art they enjoy, as opposed to mindlessly staring at a movie screen for two and a half hours, and then just dismissing everything you saw as mearly entertainment and nothing more. Film and literature are tremendous art forms, and though they may entertain, they're also a vehicle for another person to communicate meaning and show you how they see things. I thought the article was flippin' awesome.
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