Lords of Chaos (2019)
Dir Jonas Åkerlund
Written by
Dennis Magnusson, Jonas Åkerlund
Starring
Rory Culkin, Emory Cohen, Sky Ferreira, Jack Kilmer
LORDS OF CHAOS is
ostensibly a musical biopic centering on the rise and fall of "True
Norwegian Black Metal" band Mayhem (they always say the whole phrase,
every time), who rose from humble beginnings to become kings of a tiny
subculture of disaffected, angry youths, only to then become victims of that same
community's downward spiral into hatred and violence. And it IS that story,
though a telling of it which is almost palpably disinterested in the music
which theoretically sits at its center. But it also works as a broad, mildly
satirical examination of how angry young men ruin the things they ostensibly
love. Which is to say, how pathetic posers escalate into dangerous zealots.
With a few details swapped, this could be the story of everything from ISIS recruits
to people sending rape threats over STAR WARS sequels. It's not an elegant
beast, but it does effectively and mercilessly articulate that particular tale
of woe, which sadly feels especially relevant right now.
The plot is a fairly
straightforward rise-and-fall template. We begin with the creation of the band
Mayhem, by guitarist Øystein Aarseth (Rory Culkin, SIGNS) --better known (to
the kind of people who would watch this movie, anyway) by his metal name,
Euronymous-- an auspicious moment in metal history made slightly less so by the
fact that it occurs in his middle-class parents’ basement. Mayhem eventually
recruits troubled Swedish singer “Dead” (Jack Kilmer, son of Val, THE NICE
GUYS) and become the center of a burgeoning Norwegian black metal scene, until
“Dead” commits suicide. Euronymous, upon finding his body, sees a straight shot
to the kind of infamy which will boost his band’s capital, and photographs the
corpse for the cover of their debut album. The strategy works, and Euronymous
sets himself up as the leader of a devoted local scene called “The Black
Circle,” opening his own record shop (with his parents’ money) to use as a
lair. But things begin to fall apart after awkward outcast Varg (Emory Cohen,
THE PLACE BEYOND THE PINES) shows up on the scene and starts taking Euronymous’
shock-bait philosophy seriously, escalating the group to arson and murder.
In its details, it is a fairly
simple thing. It’s based on, as the opening intertitles tell us, “the truth,
and lies, and what really happened.” I’m not really sure what that means, but
it imparts a good sense almost immediately of the kind of snarky tone the movie
wants to cultivate. More specifically, it’s based on the nonfiction book of the
same title, a fact which seems more relevant, but perhaps less important.
It is based on a true story (and seems quite faithful to the basic facts of
that story) but objective journalistic accuracy is less important here than
tone. The movie is not intended as a piece of dispassionate reportage; it clearly
sets out with an explicit goal to demythologize the larger-than-life music
scene it’s depicting. And “demythologizing” means something rather specific in
this case. Most musical biopics --if they bother at all-- try to do that with a
“warts and all” approach, wherein we see the musical icon at their worst, as
well as their best. But in this case that wouldn’t work, because the denizens
of the particular subculture we encounter here were trying their damndest to
look “evil,” and would be most proud of their worst moments. So instead, LORDS
OF CHAOS adopts a different strategy. It offers the familiar highs and lows,
sure, but it lingers on the mundane in a way that reveals the most shameful
truth imaginable for a bunch of hardcore satanist metal junkies: they were all
a bunch of dorks.
On the surface, the plot sounds
pretty intense, and from time to time it is; there’s a bluntness to the
occasional violence which is genuinely shocking, and the film effectively
conveys the sense of panic that descends upon Euronymous as Varg starts to drag
his little community into violent madness. But the movie finds its real reason
for being in the downtime between the tragedies: Euronymous trying to look
scary for a photo sessions after having his little sister help him dye his hair,
Varg stumbling through a poorly-thought-through interview with an unimpressed
journalist, the “black circle” pathetically trying to look tough and one-up
each, convincing their parents to pay for it all. It doesn’t make fun of them,
exactly; it just offers a brutally honest portrait, and trusts that they’ll
make fools of themselves without the film needing to do anything at all. Which
they eagerly and enthusiastically do. It has not an ounce of respect for them,
though it does have an understated but crucial sliver of affection for them, in
all their moronic enthusiasm. They may be dumb, but they are just kids, after
all, and their follies are the follies of misspent youth… until they aren’t
anymore.
Director Jonas
Åkerlund is best known as a music video director (he's worked with everyone
from Madonna to Rammstein), and there's a little bit of that frantic style
everyone used to associate with music videos in here, probably not to the
movie's benefit. There are some semi-cheesy stylistic affectations, ranging
from the film's smirking voiceover narration to some corny avid-fart horror
imagery. But it does get the most important thing right: it truly understands
these heavy metal dorks, fundamentally gets who they are, what they want.
Åkerlund himself is a Swedish-born former heavy metal drummer (for extreme
metal band Bathory) who spent his formative years in the same
circles and clearly knows the culture inside and out in a way no outsider would
be able to. The movie, by extension, absolutely understands why the kids were
attracted to something like this, intuitively grasps what's cool about metal,
and, hell, to a certain extent embodies actually those things itself. The idea
that anyone except total squares wouldn’t think corpse paint and blast beats
are inherently awesome doesn’t even cross its mind; no character needs to
explain aloud that this music is blowing their mind, because that’s assumed. It
has not the slightest shame in trafficking in metal iconography and horror
movie tropes, sees no irony at all in acknowledging that while church burning
is clearly a bad thing, it is an awesome and totally metal visual.
I mean, I'm against arson and everything, but come on. |
But in understanding that, it is also
relentlessly unromantic about how dumb and lame these dorks were, even at their
very darkest moments. The movie is, at its very core, an exploration of the
contrast between the epic fantasy of extreme art and the banality of
real life. It suggests that Euronymous’ original sin was to blur the line
between those two, ushering in a dissociative fiction which gradually
metastasized into something deadly. But never into something cool. There’s
nothing lamer than someone who just misses the point, who doesn’t get it,
no matter how far they push. Varg, as dangerous and vicious as he will reveal
himself to be, is the object of scorn more often than fear; he’s a pathetic
figure, a desperate wannabe who wanted to be so badly that he actually became
the thing that everyone else was smart enough to know was a irresponsible
fantasy, not an actual way of life. Even when he’s committing a brutal murder,
we’re invited to laugh at his self-conscious tough guy posturing and his
laughable ineptitude. And it’s an ugly, slow murder; Åkerlund doesn’t skimp
over the nastiness of what Varg is doing, it just denies him the only thing he
actually cares about: his image as a badass. He strips him of his fantasy of
himself as a cold-blooded warrior, and reveals the bumbling, needy child
lashing out that he really is. He may think he’s Hannibal Lecter, but the movie
makes it clear he’s just an angry Napoleon Dynamite.
This feels like an
especially vital strategy on today of all days. I’m writing this on March 15,
2019, a date that will probably not mean much to anyone reading this in the
future, but which happens to have dawned with the headline “49 killed in
terrorist attack at mosques in New Zealand.” And that date probably won’t mean
anything to you in the future because by then we’ll have seen a dozen more
headlines just like it. Angry young men becoming murderous young men is
a sickeningly pervasive part of life these days, and that adds an awful urgency
to a story about people who, in a happier world, we wouldn’t need to think much
about. If these Mayhem assholes were just an isolated aberration, it wouldn’t
feel so necessary to try to dig into them. But this snapshot of the groping
death spiral of a subculture back in the 90’s feels like the first modern stirring
of the now-tragically-common impulse for niche subcultures to “radicalize” --I
don’t think we even had that word back then-- and end up visiting their
murderous fantasies on the real world. Varg’s chosen name even means “Lone
wolf,” the name we have taken to calling these sorts of killers. And now is as
good a time as any to say it: though you wouldn’t necessarily know it from
watching the movie, Varg was, and remains --you guessed it-- a hardcore white
nationalist, and today is probably better known for that than for his terrible
music. Mayhem may not have been patient zero for this kind of ideology (and as
far as I can tell the rest of the band didn’t share his politics), but they’re
certainly emblematic of a rising tide of forces which have spent the last 30
years twisting typical obnoxious teenage rebellion into murderous hate. And
that tide is showing no signs of ebbing.
We’ve got to talk
about these guys, we can’t afford not to. But the danger in doing that is that
you end up giving them exactly what they want -- attention, a platform, an
audience. For a normal person, being portrayed as a dangerous, vicious
psychopath would be an insult, but for these fuck-os, it feeds into their
narcissism and their desperate need to be, if not respected, at least feared.
At least taken seriously.
That’s the brilliance
of Åkerlund’s approach. If there’s one thing here that only a filmmaker
with some real roots in the metal community would have known to do, it’s how he portrays these assholes in the one way which is absolutely guaranteed not to
feed their ego. Åkerlund acknowledges the harm that scumbags like Varg are
capable of. But he refuses to take them seriously. Because they’re not worth
taking seriously. Their ideas are not worth debating, their art is shallow and
juvenile, their philosophy is a joke. They don’t deserve to be psychologically
probed, they deserve to be mocked. And the best way of doing that is to strip
away their self-aggrandizing personas to reveal what bumbling, dull losers they
are. Dangerous,
sometimes, but only in the most banal, pathetic sort of way. They’d never
object to being portrayed as evil, vicious scumbags, but they hate being
portrayed as shallow, preening chumps (and just in case you had your doubts,
the remaining band members regarded the film as a “big fuck you,” which it most
certainly is. Varg himself* called it “character murder,” which is fucking rich
coming from an actual murderer, and was especially incensed about the movie’s
brilliant alpha dog move of casting a Jewish actor as him. Only a movie that
really understood these guys would be able to get under their skin this badly,
which is a noble enough goal to make it entirely worth making the movie even if
it had no other artistic merit of any kind).
Not everyone seemed to
understand that approach: “Åkerlund likes the immediacy of an awful act….But
there’s also an unmistakable tone of jokey disdain for hollow youth...
Ultimately it all adds up to a hodgepodge of styles and attitudes with hardly
any insight into what made this corrosive clique so magnetic to its adherents,”
complained the LA Times’ Robert Abele. But that misses the whole point; it’s the
hollowness and the strange, stupid naïveté of it all that explains the whole
thing. The lack of insight is the insight, because there’s nothing
especially interesting or well-thought-through about any of this. None of it
was necessary, none of it was inevitable, it was just something dumb that
happened when a bunch of dumbasses competing with each other got out of control
because everyone involved was too self-interested and shallow to stop it.
Remember: metalheads are the jocks of the musical world. Affording these guys
the dignity of prying into their psyche would be an insult to their victims.
They were just dumb, selfish young men, and, as will happen when such a group
gets together, one thing led to another. Their motives were as shallow as their
philosophy, and worthy of about the same cursory level of scrutiny.
And yet, we do need
to stop this kind of tragedy in the future, and so the film invites us to
wonder, who is responsible? Is Euronymous actually Donald Trump, a vain,
cowardly poser whose phony tough-guy stance ends up inspiring guys like Varg
--or the New Zealand shooter--
to go out and live their violent ethos for real? Or is he more like (one
possible reading of) the central character in AMERICAN SNIPER,
a fundamentally sensitive soul trapped in a brittle, macho ethos which he lacks
the emotional tools to adequately challenge as a poisonous fantasy, and who
ends up perpetuating that very ethos because it’s become too intrinsic a part
of his identity for him to know how to do anything else? Perhaps overly
generously, Åkerlund and (especially) Culkin seem to see Euronymous as the
latter, and do their best to let us read his “evil” posturing as a symptom of
his insecurity and inability to deal with the trauma of his friend’s suicide.
Culkin called him “a bit of a sweetheart” and strongly implies with his performances
that Euronymous’ violent rhetoric and nihilist front was a put-on, a harmless
geek show that ended up getting away from him, at worst a somewhat
irresponsible cover for a needy kid who doesn’t know how to appropriately
express his feelings.
But of course, that diagnosis (minus the
“sweetheart”) could describe Varg just as easily, and the movie mercilessly
tracks his descent from pathetic reject to cold-blooded killer. Euronymous may
not have meant any harm, and he may have been a benign little weasel with just
enough savvy to understand that shock tactics bring attention. But it’s kind of
hard to let him off the hook when his actions had so many real-world
consequences that he never took any responsibility for. One of those real-world consequences eventually affected him directly (making this a rare case of an instigator who also ended up a victim), but even this sympathetic portrayal seems to openly acknowledge
that he shares a lot of the blame here. None of this would have happened without him. Hate-fueled killers feed off
the claptrap of phony self-interested con men like Euronymous, from politicians
to preachers to TV talking heads and internet agitators, amoral hustlers all,
who see an easy mark in the the beta-male outcasts who transform their
self-serving bullshit into true hate. They’re charlatans, not true believers,
but you don’t get to duck the responsibility for your actions just because
you’re a transparent fraud. It’s easier to have some
sympathy for Euronymous, who, after all, was only a fucking kid, and even at
the end doesn’t seem to quite understand what he’s unleashed. But still, he set
this in motion, he kept it going, and he was perfectly happy to enjoy the
benefits of notoriety even after the harm it was doing was perfectly clear.
Which forces me to
ask: am I part of the problem too? After all, you know what these
assholes have in common? They look like me. They came from the same background
I came from. They watch the same movies, dig the same music, run in the same
circles. I was once a teenage asshole who thought he was edgy, too. I wasn’t a
black metal guy myself, but is being into over-the-top provocative movies that
much different from being into over-the-top provocative music? Am I, thinking
I’m being a perfectly harmless little shithead, actually just as guilty as
Euronymous in aggrandizing a culture and a fantasy which has disastrous
real-world consequences? Are those guys a frustrating persistent bug in the
system, or do we need to start worrying that they’re actually a feature?
There was a time when
I was a evangelical free-speech absolutist, and the answer to these questions
was a simple one: no, you don’t have to feel responsible for whatever wrong
idea some nutcase takes from your art, and no, you don’t need to apologize for
the art you enjoy. Scorsese has no responsibility for John Hinckley, DIRTY
HARRY doesn’t owe the world a good moral lesson, Venom (the extreme metal band,
not the beloved Tom Hardy film) --referenced by both Euronymous and Varg--
isn’t to blame if a few demented fans don’t understand their whole Satanism
schtick is an act, just a logical next stop in the footsteps of Alice Cooper
and Ozzy Osbourne. Art doesn't kill people; people kill people. And after all, before we start fretting about violent lyrics and swear words, let’s not forget that we already had a
moral panic about heavy metal music, and we lived to regret it; in fact, in 1993,
the Satanic Panic which heartlessly pathologized the genre and persecuted its
dumb, harmless fans was still in full swing. The West Memphis Three were convicted the next year. Metalheads really are mostly sweethearts, and their lives are already hard enough due to their poor social skills and terrible taste in music (just kidding, metalheads. You know I love you). It's unfair and harmful to demonize them and treat them with suspicion just because they like bands with names like Darkthrone or Napalm Death. And besides, fantasy, including
(and perhaps especially!) anti-social fantasy, is part of the human experience,
and it’s something that we intrinsically demonize at our great peril.
That side was always
easy for me to see. And I still see it, obviously, especially where the
law is concerned. But there’s another side that didn’t come as easily (the side
that, I think it’s worth saying, seldom comes easily to people who come
from some degree of social and economic privilege): art, fantasy, and speech
are slippery things, never as comfortably abstract and removed from reality as
they sound. Art is important, fantasy is important, speech is important,
precisely because they are not some benign aesthetic thing independent
of the real world. They wouldn’t be worth fighting for if they were. These are
powerful, vital tools that we use to shape our understanding of ourselves and
the reality we inhabit, and consequently they have tremendous power to influence people and
cultures in profoundly negative ways, both maliciously and through casual
indifference. Art can hurt. Fantasy can kill. Speech can oppress. All freedom
has a cost, and that cost is often paid by someone else, most likely someone
who is already a target for one reason or another (it’s no coincidence that the
first victim of violence here is a gay man; insecure assholes will always kick
the suffering down, because it’s safer than directing their anger at someone
who might actually deserve it). Once upon a time, maybe even as recently as
1993, an artist --or anyway, a white, male artist of modest economic
privilege-- was typically asked only to look inwardly, to draw something from
inside and release it out into the world. It’s an appealing perspective for an
artist, affording endless personal freedom and demanding no accountability. But
it’s a myopia we can ill-afford anymore. If we embraced it in ignorance once,
we cannot claim to do so any longer. The act of creation alters the world, and
no one wielding the power to do that has the right to shirk the responsibility
that power imparts upon them.
But of course, the power of art to shape
reality is never a simple linear thing. Art that’s very bad for one person may
be very good for someone else, and, anyway, however benign and prosocial you
might try and make your art, there’s always gonna be some nut who takes the
wrong idea from it. The point is not that art should only depict good morals,
or that it needs to relate directly to reality at all. In fact, the point is
not really about art at all. It’s about people. We’ve got to be aware of
what we’re putting out into the world because we have a responsibility to our
fellow humans, and a shared investment in helping to guide them --individually
and as a culture-- to a better place. After much soul-searching, that’s the
conclusion I came to. Not that Euronymous ruined everything because he wrote
lyrics that inspired people to violence (the movie couldn’t be less interested
in his music, and you can’t make out the lyrics in any case) but that he built
a subculture which brought out the worst in people, used them for his
own self-gratification. His original sin was not an interest in loud music and
morbid subjects, it was using the death of his friend as a marketing stunt. And
he didn’t even do that because he was a heartless psychopath, but because,
ultimately, he was a “bit of a sweetheart,” but alas, one too cowardly
and juvenile to deal with his feelings directly. That weakness, and the need
for a cartoonishly exaggerated show of strength to cover it over, was the
poison that curdled a subculture that could have, under different
circumstances, really helped people.
After all, this is
ultimately about outcasts who are desperately in need of a home. Abele wondered why the movie doesn't explore "what made this corrosive clique so magnetic to its adherents." But isn't it obvious? These kids were feelings isolated and and alienated and unwanted in a small, homogeneous country that didn't offer much space for social misfits. Of course they leapt at the chance to find some acceptance within a community of kindred spirits. Most people, and especially most young people, experience this feeling to some extent, but for some --like the maladroit social rejects we find here-- it's much more intense and more difficult to achieve, and consequently can be almost all-consuming. A deep and unrequited need for connection and community is a powerful force, and people desperate enough will do almost anything to find it and hold onto it... making them easy targets for more self-serving community leaders with their own interests in mind.
This is the simple, sad why behind all the aberrent behavior LORDS OF CHAOS chronicles. It’s not for nothing that the first time we see Varg, he’s no threat to anyone, he’s just an awkward kid sitting by himself, trying to get up the courage to go talk to the cool guys. And the first thing Euronymous does is casually cut him down, sending him shame-faced back to his lonely corner. Obviously Varg is responsible for his own actions, and at some point crosses lines that no one is going to be able to bring him back from. But one act of casual cruelty begets another. The Vargs of the world don’t start out as bad seeds. The thing that makes them scary is that they’re so normal and pathetic. There’s nothing special about them, and that’s why no one ever sees them coming. Their flaws are mundane; flaws we could even be sympathetic to if they didn’t end up twisting into something so hateful. But one can’t help but think: what if Euronymous had been a little nicer? What if he hadn’t been so up his own ass on a power trip as the leader of his gang, what if he’d just learned to relax and enjoy living his dream on his parent’s dime, and offered a little acceptance and community instead of callous derision designed to feed his own ego? Straight society thought Mayhem’s loud music and scary makeup and morbid fixations were signs that they were deviant and dangerous. But the truth was something much more mundane: the only thing that made them dangerous was that they were selfish assholes, and one selfish asshole begets another. And if no one stops the cycle --especially where young men are concerned-- sometimes things end up getting really, really out of hand.
This is the simple, sad why behind all the aberrent behavior LORDS OF CHAOS chronicles. It’s not for nothing that the first time we see Varg, he’s no threat to anyone, he’s just an awkward kid sitting by himself, trying to get up the courage to go talk to the cool guys. And the first thing Euronymous does is casually cut him down, sending him shame-faced back to his lonely corner. Obviously Varg is responsible for his own actions, and at some point crosses lines that no one is going to be able to bring him back from. But one act of casual cruelty begets another. The Vargs of the world don’t start out as bad seeds. The thing that makes them scary is that they’re so normal and pathetic. There’s nothing special about them, and that’s why no one ever sees them coming. Their flaws are mundane; flaws we could even be sympathetic to if they didn’t end up twisting into something so hateful. But one can’t help but think: what if Euronymous had been a little nicer? What if he hadn’t been so up his own ass on a power trip as the leader of his gang, what if he’d just learned to relax and enjoy living his dream on his parent’s dime, and offered a little acceptance and community instead of callous derision designed to feed his own ego? Straight society thought Mayhem’s loud music and scary makeup and morbid fixations were signs that they were deviant and dangerous. But the truth was something much more mundane: the only thing that made them dangerous was that they were selfish assholes, and one selfish asshole begets another. And if no one stops the cycle --especially where young men are concerned-- sometimes things end up getting really, really out of hand.
LORDS OF CHAOS was originally slated to be
directed by Sion Sono, who would almost certainly have made an amazing, intense
movie out of the material, as he always does. But having someone who came
from this world behind the camera gives the version we got a perspective that I
don’t know that Sono would have understood. So much of the world of Mayhem is
about aggressive provocations, about an art and aesthetic which are so extreme
that they seem like they could only meaningfully address huge, abstract
concepts. It’s easy to look at their art, and then at the extreme violence
which ultimately invaded their real lives, and assume you’ve stumbled upon some
dark, hidden underworld completely unfamiliar to outsiders. But Åkerlund deftly
dissipates that kind of mythologizing with a sobering reminder that there’s
nothing at all special about these guys, except that they really did make some
pretty baller metal. Other than that, this exact thing could have happened to
anyone. There was nothing epic about it, nothing unique, just ordinary, immature, insecure idiots bringing out the worst in each other. So maybe don’t be such an asshole all the time, and don’t reward other
people for being assholes, and then we might just help build a world where
we can all enjoy brutal-ass True Norwegian Black Metal and have ourselves a
good time without hurting anyone. Surely that’s not too much to ask?
Like
True Norwegian Black Metal itself, the movie works best as a blunt-force
instrument, and is consequently blind to subtler wrinkles here (the irony of
people who loathe their country and its culture becoming ethno-nationalists is
utterly lost on it). But as a perfectly honed poison-pen letter to some real
toxic assholes, tempered with just enough empathy to never lose sight of
the fact that for all their problems, they were still just dumb kids, I can’t
really imagine a better version of this same material. LORDS OF CHAOS may not
be a great movie, and it may not even be a movie which has a lot of resonance
to people who never thought much about extreme metal culture to begin with. But
at least for me, here and now, it’s a movie that feels both uniquely prescient
and deeply necessary right at this moment.
FIN
* Now out of prison
and living in France, a country which happily welcomed this white nationalist
arsonist and murderer and then had the audacity to complain about African immigrants.
Really happy to see this wasn't the only post tagged with "bassists with funny names"
ReplyDeleteI've been waiting 8 years for the chance to use it again. I don't wanna say "thanks, Varg," but, uh, I guess he finally did turn out to be useful for something.
Delete