Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Review: Memento (Chris Nolan)

SPOILERS

How do we find truth?

We build it upon certain, known, established facts. So it seems as though the only way to get the whole picture of the truth is by corralling different facts which surely will cohere neatly into a unified body of knowledge.

That was the premise that Memento advertised to us. It’s a movie about a man who suffers from short-term memory loss and who has to find out about the events surrounding his wife’s murder. IMDb says so. Wikipedia says so. It’s marketed as a sort of whodunit, and the audience patiently watches Leonard’s journey as he writes down clues -  “mementos” – to build a picture of the truth from the ground-up.

In any good detective fiction, it’s normal to have assumptions. You need to have assumptions to build a hypothetical scenario of how the crime happened. But the danger lies in building an entire case around pre-assumptions, i.e. prior knowledge that you think are certain and that you never questioned. From the beginning of the movie, we are told that “Teddy is a liar”. We (Leonard and the audience) take it, we don’t question it, we think it to be true. As the movie works its way forward in time, which is itself an interesting narrative device, the statement that “Teddy is not to be trusted” seems to align with what is happening. It has the appearance of truth.

But at the very end of the movie, which is when the chronological action actually starts, we see how this pre-assumption is totally wrong. Turns out… Teddy isn’t a liar. The basic premise that we’ve been operating on, is actually entirely false. Knowing this, we then see how we’ve misinterpreted every other fact that we have assimilated into our “truth” jigsaw puzzle. And the big irony is that by revealing us events from the past, the movie is depicting the danger of building our views based on past assumptions.


Even the way the movie is marketed is an example of this. The summary shows that it’s a movie about the unreliability of memory. With this “knowledge” given to them even before they watch the movie, the viewers are lulled into thinking that the major problem in this detective story is Leonard’s memory loss. We suspect that his memory will be the “tragic flaw” that will lead him and the audience astray. But we think because we know this (a pre-assumption), all we have to do to anticipate this trap and steer clear of it. In the end, however, we see how we’ve actually misread Teddy, Leonard - the entire movie - based on that one false premise we never sought to challenge. 

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