Peace Frog
In the January 2002 Harper's magazine, contributing
editor L.J. Davis traces "modern" science fiction's roots to the
cultural environment that produced Mary Shelley's
Frankenstein. Shelley, it seems, was driven to write
Frankenstein, at least in part, after reading about
scientist Luigi Galvani, who had been the first to make a frog
leg twitch by applying electricity to it.
In retrospect, Galvani's seems a pretty humble achievement, but
at the time, neither electricity nor the origin of life was
particularly well understood. Galvani at first concluded that
the experiment had partially reanimated the frog and that
electricity was therefore the elixir of resurrection, and a
number of other things besides. Overcome with enthusiasm, he
subsequently "festooned his shrubbery with frog body parts,"
hoping in this way to predict approaching electrical storms and
at the same time tap into the spark of life that supposedly
crackled invisible in the air around us all. Needless to say,
Galvani's experiment failed. And imagine how he must have felt
when, in a calmer frame of mind, he looked at what he'd done to
his yard.
But if the science of Galvani's experiment fell a bit flat, his
hopeful ideal that life can be broadcast through the air shows
remarkable durability. With the 20th anniversary rerelease of
the sentimental fable E.T., it has persisted for nearly
two centuries now; the doe-eyed, other-worldly goblin of the
movie's title exudes all manner of life-giving energies, from
his glowing heart and healing fingertip, to the way the bloom
returns to wilting sunflowers whenever he waddles by. Were he
around today, Galvani might be pleased that in the scene that
establishes Elliott (Henry Thomas) and E.T.'s supernatural
life-force connection, frogs and misbegotten science figure
highly. The dream, however corny, lives on.
The classic frog scene comes, of course, some time after E.T.'s
egg-shaped starship takes off without him at the movie's
opening, leaving him stranded on Earth and one step ahead of
sinister federal agents who want to experiment on him. He finds
sanctuary in the bedroom of all-American suburbaboy Elliott, who
quickly debriefs him on Western civilization by feeding him
Reese's Pieces, showing him a Coke, and enacting a brief,
violent playlet with Star Wars action figures.
All goes well with the new friendship until Elliott has to go to
school and leaves his alien behind for the day. ("How do you
explain school to a higher intelligence?" he asks rhetorically.)
Killing time alone at the house, E.T. demonstrates an innate
knack for middle-class American lifestyle by downing a six-pack
of Coors and watching This Island Earth on television. In
the classroom, meanwhile, Elliott begins to feel a reflexive
empathy with E.T. -- E.T. drinks, Elliott burps; E.T. hits a
wall, Elliott rubs his nose; E.T. collapses in a drunken stupor,
Elliott slides out of his chair, and so on. All this transpires
in a biology class where Elliott's teacher (Richard Swingler) is
explaining the parameters of an upcoming frog dissection
experiment. The teacher is filmed almost exclusively from the
waist down so that he floats anonymously above and outside the
scene's action.
The trick is familiar to the audience by this time, since
Spielberg has been filming his federal agents at the hip as
well, their presence indicated not by searching gazes but by
flashlights and key rings. In the movie's visual language, this
sort of shot indicates that someone is up to no good, and
Elliott intuitively understands this just as well as we do.
Shortly after the teacher explains that the frog hearts will
still be beating as the students dissect them, Elliott --
miscuing on his reception of E.T.'s desire to return home --
"rescues" the frogs from their impending doom by shaking them
out of their jars and setting them free. The other students join
in and soon the dissection lesson is a complete bust. Although
Elliott's impromptu protest action gets him into heaps of
trouble, we know that he has done the right thing: his burst of
empathy also enables him to recognize a romantic spark between
himself and a co-student (Erika Eleniak), both of whom are
subsequently rewarded with the most torrid movie kiss involving
preteens since 1979's A Little Romance. Talk about peace
and love.
The note sounded by aligning the teacher with the feds (and
rewarding resistance against them both) is an echo of the
warning note Shelley sang so well in Frankenstein. The
study of the phenomenon of life has gone quite a spot too far by
the time the living body's consciousness is being evacuated and
its mechanics recreated simply to scrutinize them.
Or, to put it another way: killing something to see how it lives
is the height of soulless stupidity. "They won't feel anything,"
the teacher assures his students as they apprehensively poison
their frogs with chloroform. "They won't be hurt." The students
only need Elliott's leadership to see through this farce. The
frogs won't be hurt, they'll be dead, and
afterward, any hope of learning something useful from them will
be gone. Elliott's avenue of interrogation, though maybe a bit
less practical, is more to the point of how one should study
living things. Earlier, he taps the jar containing his frog and
asks gently, repeatedly, "Can you talk?"
E.T.'s rerelease reminds us of this subversive theme of
connection and life-affirmation, and, alas, that its cynical
cross-market product placements have long since become
commonplace. E.T. debuted as a fledgling Reagan-Bush
administration was beginning a protracted drama of nerve-racking
U.S.-Soviet nuclear brinksmanship, hideous military
interventions in Central America, and "police actions" such as
Grenada, Libya, and Panama that culminated in the slaughter of
hundreds of thousands in the Persian Gulf War. In 1982, no one
could have known where the Reagan presidency would lead (in
retrospect, it could hardly have turned out worse), but many
were concerned. Spielberg seems to have been among them, with
his dangerous and unscrupulous federal agents -- so different
from the largely beneficent government of Close Encounters of
the Third Kind -- who in E.T. damn near ruin
everything.
2002 is similar to 1982 in that both are periods of political
transition, but the rerelease of E.T. raises questions
that underscore the difference between the Reagan-Bush years and
the years of Bush Jr. and Dick Cheney. We are now being told,
once again, that killing "others" is the answer to all of our
problems, but this time, views dissenting from the current
drumbeat for war are being covered up, publicly vilified, or
actively suppressed. Even a movie as ultimately mainstream as
E.T. is not immune. For this release, the federal agents'
guns are erased by computer in favor of walkie-talkies, to make
the feds seem kinder, gentler, and more compassionate. Also,
during the
Halloween sequence, Elliott's mother, Mary (Dee Wallace-Stone),
nags his brother Mike (Robert MacNaughton) about his costume. In
the original movie, she tells him he looks like a "terrorist";
this time around, he looks like a "hippie."
As an attempt to marginalize today's ongoing peace movement,
this couldn't be more obvious. In his Washington Post
review, Desson Howe refers to these moves as "digital
airbrushing" and charitably attributes to them a motive of
"political correctitude," when what they are is historical
revisionism. Despite his coyness, Howe allows that some viewers
may find these alterations "cringe-inducing," and his use of the
word "airbrushing" calls to mind the notorious rewriting of
history by a particular authoritarian Soviet regime that since,
thankfully, has vanished from the face of the earth.
If there is room for optimism here, it lies in the fact that
these obnoxious revisions are extremely ineffective. The label
given Mike's costume can be changed, but the costume itself
cannot: when he adjusts it by adding a shaggy wig and a fake
knife through his head, he certainly seems an odd sort of hippie
-- as he must, in 1982, have seemed an odd sort of "terrorist,"
being disguised neither as a practitioner of violence nor a
resister of the violent impulse, but simply as another of its
victims. Tarnish the good name of hippies all you like; when
they show up with knives through their heads, they will seem
sympathetic nevertheless.
Mike's hippie tendencies turn up a bit earlier, as well, when --
in a detail that, inexplicably, nobody airbrushed out -- he
comes into Elliott's room wearing a "No Nukes" T-shirt. Thus
Spielberg (or someone) subtly perpetuates a long-forgotten
peacenik slogan of the 1980s, one reminding us of the pervasive
anxiety about nuclear war during the Reagan years. In the weeks
and months to come, no doubt, many people will recall this
anxiety more and more vividly. Since Galvani's time, we've
learned of so many other horrors that can be broadcast through
the air.
4 April 2002