Wednesday, August 28, 2013

The House is Black- a shield meant to open our eyes


The House is Black was a film unlike any I have ever experienced before. While watching it, I felt a range of emotions and feelings such as pity, thankfulness, surprise, and numbness.  Leprosy is something that the average American college student does not think about or come into contact with on a daily basis. However, I do not believe that Farrokhzad made this film with solely the American college student in mind. This work functions on a global scale because it really is a study of human lives that are so far removed from normalcy. The film has potential to affect a large audience of many backgrounds and cultures. She has accomplished this by portraying the lepers in the colony as ordinarily as possible. They are filmed playing games, singing, eating, resting, spending time in groups as well as alone. The only difference is their physical appearance. Normally, a person may be aghast when seeing a person plagued with leprosy for the first time. However, I believe the film acts a sort of shield to open the doors to the leper colony without as direct of an impact. Because of this, a viewer will be more comfortable, and therefore more receptive to the intended message. It’s like Farrokhzad is trying to ease us into it so we are sure to accept the fact that these are people too, and that there no longer needs to be a stigma against them. Even though the film was repetitive and possesses a slight sense of horror, it is beautiful in it’s realness.

Her poetry is a type of shield as well, using description, metaphors and a roundabout way of discussing a subject that may otherwise not be as, say, beautiful as the prose on the page. In The Gift, she says: “O kind friend, if you visit my house,/bring me a lamp, cut me a window,/so I can gaze at the swarming alley of the fortunate.” And in Mates: “slipping from the tap/then, two cigarettes/two spots of glowing red/the tick tick of a clock/and two hearts/steeped in loneliness…” These two poems have a beautiful flow throughout their entirety, yet, are discussing very sad things. I think her message through both forms of art is that you can find beauty within the dreadful. Lepers may not be what is considered attractive on the outside, but they have beautiful souls. And writing about loneliness and desperation can be flowery and poetic as well. 

3 comments:

  1. Melissa, our interpretations of both the film and poems were very similar. With her film, Farrokhzad proved that the lepers were no different than you and me. I noticed that many of her poems were sad but covered up with either the beauty of her vocabulary and form. We definitely both found beauty in something that is easily considered the opposite of that.

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  2. This was a really interesting way to look at The House is Black. You hit the nail right on the head, in that we as American college students do not have to deal with or even think about leprosy. That is a huge reason why I was so uncomfortable with this movie. I do not handle well people that are extremely ill, it makes me uncomfortable to be around them, even my relatives. I believe you are correct in that the lepers were meant to be humanized. Like I said in my response, and you touched on here also, it just made me thankful. I am thankful that I have such wonderful life, and have little to complain about.

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  3. This was a really interesting way to look at The House is Black. You hit the nail right on the head, in that we as American college students do not have to deal with or even think about leprosy. That is a huge reason why I was so uncomfortable with this movie. I do not handle well people that are extremely ill, it makes me uncomfortable to be around them, even my relatives. I believe you are correct in that the lepers were meant to be humanized. Like I said in my response, and you touched on here also, it just made me thankful. I am thankful that I have such wonderful life, and have little to complain about.

    ReplyDelete