Homage to Flannery O’Connor: Looking for ‘Intrusions of Grace’ in Films

Today is the birthday of Flannery O’Connor. As a tribute, I’m re-posting a piece I wrote a few years ago entitled “Looking for ‘Intrusions of Grace’ in Films: Pickpocket and Drive”

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Our age not only does not have a very sharp eye for the almost imperceptible intrusions of grace, it no longer has much feeling for the nature of the violence which precede and follow them.” — Flannery O’Connor (quoted in my post A Good Man Is Hard to Find and Other Stories)

Flannery O’Connor made this remark back in 1963. It was not only a sharp social commentary and prophetic, but to me, it also stands as one of the signs of a good film. Amidst the violence and ugliness a film may depict, the presence of grace, however small, or a mere spot of purity, could bring out a powerful contrast. Usually that is what’s needed to emit a redemptive spark, a glimpse of light pointing to the transcendent.

With this frame of grace among violence, I go back to the films I’ve watched and try to find some good examples. My task proves to be more difficult than I first thought. But after some deep searching through my mental archive, several films came to mind. I’ll just mention two for this post.

Pickpocket (1959)

 

pickpocket movie poster

Robert Bresson’s modern version of Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment. Caught in his own desensitized internal world, our protagonist Michel commits acts of theft as a desperate measure to fill the void in his existence. He goes through his days in a haunting vacuum devoid of meaning and emotions. He is unfeeling even towards his own dying mother, reminds me of Meursault in Camus’s The Stranger. Although not an axe murderer like Raskolnikov in Crime and Punishment, Michel theorizes that those with superior talents and intelligence, the supermen in society, should be free to disobey laws in certain cases. He is numbed by his own hubris, and stifled by his cold and absurd worldview. Outright violence is not visible here, but we see the battle of wits he engages with the police inspector behind his trails, and we see him struggle in an amoral and meaningless existence.

Grace comes as Jeanne, a neighbor and carer of Michel’s ailing mother. Jeanne lives on her own looking after her younger brother. Her father is a drunk and her mother has deserted them. But she continues to live and care. She accepts her circumstances calmly, and extends kindness to those unrelated to her, caring for Michel’s mother, a neighbor on another floor. She stands as a stark contrast to Michel’s aloofness. At the end of the film, Jeanne came to visit Michel in prison after he was arrested, the two separated by the cold iron bars. For the first time, Michel feels love and wants to reciprocate it. And thus the cathartic ending as he totally melts in the presence of pure love and grace, wrapping up the film with this last line:

“Oh, Jeanne, to reach you at last, what a strange path I had to take.”

 

Pickpocket

 

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Drive (2011)

A current release that comes with high acclaims. The film was nominated for the Palme d’Or and Nicolas Winding Refn won Best Director at the Cannes Film Festival this year (2011). With slick and dashing camera work, the violence in “Drive” is visceral and graphic, a big contrast to the black and white, internal “Pickpocket”. However, I see some parallels between these two films made 50 years apart.

Ryan Gosling is “the Driver”. He does not even have a name. He is an expert stunt driver for movies and works at an autobody shop by day, drives a get-away car in the underworld of crimes by night. Like Michel in “Pickpocket”, he drifts in existence, numb and desensitized to the world around him. That is, until he meets Irene (Carey Mulligan), his neighbor.

Drive 1

 

Mulligan’s almost angelic presence in the film is most effective as a stark contrast to those around her. She lives alone looking after a child and works as a waitress in a diner. She appeals to the Driver by being herself, innocent, taking life as it is, responsible, caring for a child alone while his father is locked up in prison. Irene is a spot of purity in a rough environment. Her mere presence has transformed the Driver. From being aloof the Driver has become engaged emotionally, friendly and protective of both mother and son.

Drive

The plot thickens as Irene’s husband is released from prison and rejoins his family. The Driver is caught in an awkward situation. But he soon realizes that the husband’s resolve for a new start is genuine. The power of transformation is so thorough that the Driver is willing to go out on a limb to help the husband with one last heist in order to break the hold a gang has on the man, his wife and kid. While things go awry terribly and the ending is not as clean-cut as “Pickpocket”, we learn that the Driver remains a changed man from the ephemeral friendship he once had with Irene and her child.

Some might say Mulligan is a miscast, that she’s not “damaged enough”, and would prefer a ‘stronger’ character. I disagree. I feel that Mulligan has portrayed Irene’s innocent persona aptly, and yes, those ethereal dimples can just melt any heart. Hers is the perfect role for exactly the right reason. In the dark underworld of gangs, violence and crimes, she stands out as a tiny source of purity, a spark of grace. It all shows that what may look weak and vulnerable can have transformative power over the strong. A thought that may well be unpopular today.

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Other related posts from Ripple Effects:

A Good Man Is Hard To Find and Other Stories by Flannery O’Connor

Bernini’s Corpus and Modern Movies

Notes on the Synthesis of Film, Art… Life?

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Published by

Arti

If she’s not birding by the Pond, Arti’s likely watching a movie, reading, or writing a review. Creator of Ripple Effects, bylines in Asian American Press, Vague Visages, Curator Magazine.

14 thoughts on “Homage to Flannery O’Connor: Looking for ‘Intrusions of Grace’ in Films”

  1. I remember when you first posted this and I was so determined to see both the films. And I am STILL determined to see them both, though a bit embarrassed that I haven’t already. Thank you for the reminder!

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    1. Jeanie,

      There are just too many good films to watch. I’ve a lot of backlogs on my TBW list too. We’ll never catch up. But then again, it’s always a wonderful feeling to know they are there waiting for us. Robert Bresson’s works are classics. Hope you’ll have the chance to view them. As for Flannery O’Connor, I want to reread and explore more of hers too.

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  2. I wish the second film weren’t so violent or I’d watch it. I find Carey Mulligan a very intriguing actress. Have you seen ‘An Education’? (I’ll bet you have!) I really liked her in that. You remind me, also, that I must read Flannery O’Connor.

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    1. Litlove,

      I’m afraid certain scenes in Drive carry graphic violence, that only contrast more the character played by Carey Mulligan. Mind you, some of Flannery O’Connor’s stories are quite violent too. 😉

      Yes, I’ve seen An Education and had reviewed it a few years back. You know that movie is based on a memoir written by Lynn Barber published in Granta. You can find all these info and links on my review post. I’m sure you’ll enjoy reading it if you’d liked the movie.

      BTW, Carey Mulligan will play Bathsheba in the upcoming movie adaptation of Far from the Madding Crowd, and another film I highly anticipate, Suffragette. Lots to look forward to with CM.

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  3. I wholeheartedly agree, “intrusions of grace” are often difficult to perceive because we have been so desensitized by media and the world around us that it isn’t easy to shock anyone anymore. I hadn’t even looked at Drive that way until now that I’ve read your post. I saw it awhile back and was drawn by Carey Mulligan’s character then. I remember it reminded me of her character in Never Let Me Go as well. (I don’t remember if you’ve reviewed that one as book-to-film?) Thinking about instances in films with intrusions of grace, have you seen Malena (starring Monica Bellucci)?

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    1. Claire,

      Now that you’d mentioned it, yes, Carey Mulligan in Never Let Me Go is a touch of grace, esp. in contrast to Keira Knightly’s role. I did have a book to film review post on it. If you’re interested, here is the link to my post. In it, I mentioned Ishiguro’s view about a movie adaptation of his work. It’s quite insightful. And no, I haven’t heard of Malena, I’ll check that out if I come across it.

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  4. You’re exactly right about the violence in O’Connor’s stories. It wasn’t particularly gratuitous — she knew what she was doing — but it certainly did lead her mother to ask, time and again, “Why can’t you write NICE stories?”

    In addition to that quotation you have at the top of the page, I always remember this one, as a way of understanding her approach to such things:

    “There is something in us, as storytellers and as listeners to stories, that demands the redemptive act, that demands that what falls at least be offered the chance to be restored. The reader of today looks for this motion, and rightly so, but what he has forgotten is the cost of it. His sense of evil is diluted or lacking altogether, and so he has forgotten the price of restoration. When he reads a novel, he wants either his sense tormented or his spirits raised. He wants to be transported, instantly, either to mock damnation or a mock innocence.”

    That’s about right, I’d say.

    As for the weak and vulnerable exercising transformative power over the strong — this is the season to ponder such, isn’t it? The evidence can be mighty slim from time to time, but I still believe it.

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    1. Linda,

      Thanks for your comment… insights from a Flannery O’Connor ‘devotee’, shall I say? 😉 A great quote you’ve left us with. Redemption doesn’t come in cheap. Somebody has to pay a very high price. Thanks for leaving that last thought as we progress through Lent and into the final station.

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  5. Flannery O’Connor’s ‘A Good Man is Hard to Find’ left me stunned for moments afterwards, my hands involuntarily flipping the pages back to reread. Linda’s quote in her comments certainly enlightens.

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