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On
making a documentary film on psychoanalysis
Michael
Brearley
This paper appears on the website of
the 1st European Psychoanalytic Film Festival, held November 1st -
4th 2001.
http://www.psychoanalysis.org.uk/epff
The
original version of this paper was published in Psychoanalytical Psychotherapy, the journal of the
Association for Psychoanalytical Psychotherapy in the NHS, March 2000. The
version published here
is the one presented at the 1st European Psychoanalytic Film Festival
held at BAFTA, London, November 1 - 4 2001.
On making a documentary film on
psychoanalysis
Michael
Brearley November 2001
1.
Privacy
Psychoanalysis is an intimate relationship. Two people meet regularly in a
quiet room. As a rule, one lies on the couch. They discuss whatever comes
up, attempting to take seriously the most powerful current feelings of the
patient. The intimacy is not enacted but monitored and used for
understanding. Complete privacy is intrinsic to the process.
2. Curiosity
Privacy means exclusion. Such a scenario inevitably arouses curiosity.
What are they up to? I remember my six-year-old son asking me why I
wouldn’t change places with him: I could go to his school while he would
lie down on my analyst’s couch. No one is immune to the temptation to peep
through the keyhole; no one lacks Oedipal wishes.
3. Film makers and the portrayal of secrets
Such a prospect is also, naturally, alluring to film-makers, whose art,
like the psychoanalyst’s, is a sublimation of voyeurism and listening in.
Kieslowski offered an affectionate image of this in Three Colours Red
(1994), while the perverse use of a camera in Michael Powell’s powerful
film, Peeping Tom (1960) offers an altogether more cruel analogy to the
finding out of secrets by film-maker (and psychoanalysts).
Finding and showing secrets is a sort of second nature to the director.
And ever since Pabst’s great film – Secrets of a Soul, (1926) – made
rather against the wishes of Freud, but with the help and advice of
Abraham and Sachs - film directors have attempted, in feature film and on
television, to portray the dramas of psychoanalysis.
Secrets of a Soul may well have been based on an actual case. But the film
was a dramatisation rather than a documentary. I will argue here that, in
the case of psychoanalysis, one thing that differentiates dramas from
documentaries is that actual sessions cannot be portrayed directly without
distorting, damaging and degrading the analytic process itself. This
leaves us with a problem if we want to make a documentary that is not
merely a studio discussion or a number of talking heads.
4. Frustration
And this is frustrating. A well-made, fly-on-the-wall documentary on
psychoanalysis would undoubtedly win acclaim for the film-maker and
de-mystify psychoanalysis, while informing and entertaining the public.
And it might seem that such a film would be the most direct means of
letting the public know about our work and ideas at a time when they are
in competition with so many other psychotherapeutic approaches.
5. Dead-ends
In my experience negotiations between interested filmmakers and
psychoanalysts tend to come up against a wall on this issue. The former
are wedded to the idea of filming, no doubt often with respect and care,
sessions as they occur, which is precisely what in the end we reluctantly
conclude we can’t with integrity allow.
6. Arguments
The director/ producer is not insensitive to the
analyst’s problems, but tends to believe, deep down, that our qualms
reveal a kind of reticence about exposure with which they are familiar in
other fields. They assume that it is no different here. They believe that
once they have established their credentials of trustworthiness, our
archaic, quaint over-caution will fall away. They suspect that we share
with other ‘Establishments’ a fear of open access to what we do. Perhaps
like the fraudster who opposes the intrusions of the Inland Revenue we
have something to hide. Are we not all in favour of Open Government, at
least until we become the Government ourselves?
My view is the opposite: that this is a situation in which those who
demand to look, to get right inside, are the ones on the side of
perversion of the truth. Such a stance goes against a prevalent
contemporary view, according to which nothing should be kept private.
Here I can only give my arguments in a schematic form:
(i) More than any other process, analysis both requires a measure of
co-operation and trust – so that the patient may become able and willing
to say whatever comes to mind - and is also an ongoing examination of the
conscious and unconscious reasons for lack of trust. Any (mechanical or
personal) third-party presence would be an intrusion into that delicate
process. A comparable example might be the confessional, though I am not
suggesting that the two processes are in other respects similar. The
filming of sessions would turn psychoanalysis into a version of ‘In the
Psychiatrist’s Chair’ – good journalism, even sometimes some revelations -
but not an occasion for the patient’s freedom to express whatever he
thinks and feels in a setting of confidentiality.
(ii) The issue of intrusion is a fundamental one in any
analysis. We are bound to find fantasies of others getting into the
sessions from outside, and wishes in the patient to get into the analyst’s
life or mind. The presence of another in the session would make it
inevitable that these phantasies would be side-stepped or acted out. If
the analyst were to allow it he would be colluding in such an acting-out,
whatever the meaning for the patient who has sought it –whether
exhibitionism, appeasement, triumph, or the creation of a dilemma for the
analyst.
(iii) The presence of a camera in sessions, however discreet,
would interfere with the analyst’s attempt to achieve a proper state of
‘evenly suspended attention’. The analyst like the patient is vulnerable,
though for different reasons. He would certainly be vulnerable to his own
tendencies to appeal to a neutral ‘audience’, or to fear of rebuke, and
this would interfere.
(iv) So far my reasons have been that giving permission to
film would be anti-therapeutic and unethical. Such a film would also fail
to give what is wanted. The hoped for transparency could in fact be an
illusion, as these conversations and silences have their own dense history
and unique code. Much is taken for granted between the participants,
rather as in intimate conversations between people who know each other
well. Moreover there would also be falsification. Bion speaks of the idea
of ‘mechanical recordings’ being introduced into sessions. He says: ‘These
have the truth that pertains to a photograph, but the making of such a
record, despite a superficial accuracy of result, has forced the
falsification further back – that is into the session itself. The
photograph of the fountain of truth may be well enough, but it is of the
fountain after it has been muddied by the photographer and his apparatus;
in any case the problem of interpreting the photograph remains. The
falsification by the recording is the greater because it gives
verisimilitude to what has already been falsified’. I agree.
(v) Nor would I accept various watered down scenarios, like filming a
consultation (with regard to which the same arguments apply), or doing
pretend-consultations or trial sessions. These would simply be
inauthentic. Analysis is not play-acting. It is a living relationship,
often dealing with explosive and sensitive material, which needs to be
nurtured.
Our objections to the presence of a camera or other recording device in a
session are, then, ethical, therapeutic and epistemological.
7. Outcome
The outcome is that potential filmmakers tend to feel that without this
inordinately desirable peep into the exciting intimacy of the consulting
room the whole idea of the film loses its fillip and appeal. The warning
story of Tiresias , blinded for having seen too much, does not carry much
weight when placed in the balance against the delicious prospect of being
the breaker of this taboo. The obstacles feel to them insurmountable. They
suspect, perhaps correctly, that they will not be able to sell any less
explicit scenario to those who might commission such a film. And the
enthusiasm drifts away.
Except with one filmmaker. I met Hugh Brody when about three years ago he
attended a showing of Nineteen Nineteen, as part of the Film and
Psychoanalysis series chaired by Andrea Sabbadini and Peter Evans. Hugh
has been, as you have heard, intrigued by the challenge, and has grasped
the nettle. For the past two years or more, he has been working with two
colleagues, Andrea Sabbadini and Paul Williams, and myself, on a different
idea for a documentary on psychoanalysis.
8. Obstacles to assets
In our brainstorming debates, we have voiced all sorts of possibilities,
but we keep returning to one guiding idea: that we want to make a creative
documentary film whose central issue is the fact that we can’t make the
film we instinctively wanted to make. We are attempting, that is, to deal
with our obstacle by embracing it, by embodying it in the film-making
process itself. We thus follow in the footsteps of psychoanalysis itself;
Oedipal feelings, like the transference and counter-transference, began by
being perceived as obstacles, but are now part and parcel of every
treatment. These ‘interruptions’, as Freud at first called the irruption
of transference, have had to be accepted as intrinsic.
Thus, our approach is to orient the film round the deep psychological
situation that refusal of access echoes and repeats, the Oedipal
situation.
9. Oedipus Complex
Ever since the late 1890s, we have followed Freud in the idea that as
children we all experience an Oedipal complex. That is, we’ve all had to
come to terms with the fact of the sexual and emotional relation that gave
us our existence, and the fact that our mother has desires for someone
other than ourselves. We have to deal with these blows to our omnipotence
and our narcissism by mourning their loss, and valuing what we do have –
which in satisfactory childhoods is also a special relationship with each
parent or parental figure. We develop sexual and emotional desires to have
one parent to ourselves, and murder and take the place of the other. Our
childhood exclusion from our parents in their closest emotional and
physical intercourse is a source of frustration for us all. I mean not
only physical exclusion (though most people would feel it best for the
child to be protected from the incomprehensible, alarming, and arousing
position of witness to his parents’ love-making), but emotional exclusion.
For the child is simply unable to understand the nature of adult
sexuality. So the idea of his parents’ sexual life leads to unconscious
fantasies of many kinds, such as that what is going on is violent or defecatory. The child has to learn that the parents can do something that
he or she cannot yet do, that there is an unavoidable difference between
the generations, as well as between the sexes. The complex of feelings,
including the various ways in which we attempt to resolve them -
structures our minds in permanent, though not unchangeable, patterns.
10. The prospective film
To return to the idea of our potential film. Hugh Brody is willing to try
to find ways of turning this pillar of psychoanalytic theory to advantage
by retaining the privacy of the analytic encounter, but also making it a
focus in the film. The pleasure principle gives way to the reality
principle. The film could be structured and enriched by the fact that both
director and viewer must bear with and modify the pain of being in the
position of outsider, experiencing the feelings of that position
imaginatively and thoughtfully, rather than evading it by means of
smuggling the voyeuristic camera into the parental bed of the privacy of
the session. The plan is that Hugh will weave into the documentary the
theme of exclusion and the reasons for it, whether for a small child
painfully becoming aware of his parents’ special relationship, or for the
director and viewer of this film. Such a film would be, like
psychoanalysis itself, self-questioning and self-reflective.
We think that our letting go of the Oedipal desire is not a matter to be,
in the end regretted, it is to be celebrated. Let me give a brief example
of what I am getting at from another art form. Architect Daniel
Liebeskind makes the physical centre of his Holocaust Museum in Berlin an
empty and inaccessible space, a space of absence. Thus in moving around
the museum visitors experience a central fact of the Jewish experience –
absence, loss, emptiness, a terrible gap at the centre. These felt or
unfelt experiences also represent the impact of the Holocaust on survivors
and descendants. And since the memorial is in the heart of Berlin, it also
represents the hole at the heart of the members of the non-Jewish
majority, whose elders and predecessors were involved in perpetrating or
turning a blind eye to the Holocaust. The building conveys, finally,
something universal; an experience of feelings of loss or exclusion, as
well as a vision of an outcome of our murderous impulses when unbridled.
What we have in mind, then, is a film which will make its point about
exclusion by means of its structure and its content.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Bion, WR (1962a) A Theory of thinking. Int. J. psychoAnal., 43, and
in
Second Thoughts London: Heinemann 1967.
Bion, W.R. (1962b). Learning from Experience. London: Heinemann.
Freud, S. (with Breuer) (1895). Studies in Hysteria SE 2.
Freud, S. (1905a). Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality SE 7.
Freud, S. (1905b). Fragment of an analysis of a case of hysteria SE
7.
Freud, S. (1911). .The Two principles of mental functioning SE 12.
Michael Brearley,
20, Provost Road, London, NW3 4ST.
Copyright
© 2001 Michael Brearley
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