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The Banality of Ghosts |
25www.jrfm.eu
2018, 4/1, 15–34
The Act of Killing is set in Medan, a highly multi-ethnic Indonesian city in
North Sumatra.38 The film follows a group of “preman”, or free men, around
former death squad leader Anwar Congo. Back in the 1960s, these men were
fans of Marlon Brando, John Wayne and other American movie stars. They saw
themselves as cowboys, selling and reselling cinema tickets. In Medan, this
group was deeply involved in the killings of thousands of “communists”, as
they claim them to have been, and Chinese. The film does not provide informa-
tion or tell stories but challenges the perpetrators to re-enact the killings they
performed while Oppenheimer is behind the camera. The result is, in Oppenhe-
imer’s words, a “non-fiction fever dream”.39
The film director was initially struck primarily by the boasting of these killers.
He recalls filming in 2004 former death-squad leaders who demonstrated to him
how in less than three months their squads had slaughtered more than 10,000
people in a clearing by a river. That experience inspired him to try to under-
stand such bragging and how it was related to impunity. In Oppenheimer’s own
words, quoted in the New York Times, “Here are human beings, like us, boasting
about atrocities that should be unimaginable.”40
For Oppenheimer, and for many people watching his work on the G30S, this
boasting appears as a strange ritual of exorcism. In The Act of Killing Oppen-
heimer searches for moments when ghostly apparitions are articulated non-dis-
cursively. To find these moments, he focuses on “symptoms”, so on shivering,
uneasiness, angriness, loud voices, laughter and silences. For him, symptoms
are “telling”. He understands his role as a cinéaste as similar to that of a mid-
wife, as he explores “how to massage reality so that it gives birth to those meta-
phors that are immanent in it”.41 His perspective is, however, more similar to
that of a priest, as I will show in my analysis of Scene Three below. Moments and
symptoms hidden in these metaphors make visible how people cope with the
“good” killing of “bad” people, as the Suharto New Order regime has portrayed
this history for decades. The boasting of the cocky killers is such a symptom.
Boasting, Oppenheimer claims, is a means of hiding. It means “desperately run-
ning away from the guilt”, he told kunstundfilm.de during an interview.42 Silence
in the movie is another symptom, especially present in the director’s cut. These
moments of silence, Oppenheimer assumes, are “haunted landscape shots”.
The absent victim seems to appear in the silence, as if this victim “haunts every
frame of the film”. This haunting becomes tangible in portrayals of the dead
who are continually addressed, as cut-off heads, bleeding victims or happy mur-
38 Anderson 2012, 274–279.
39 Louisiana Channel.
40 Rochter 2013.
41 Louisiana Channel.
42 Barnes 2017, kunstundfilm.de.
JRFM
Journal Religion Film Media, Band 04/01
- Titel
- JRFM
- Untertitel
- Journal Religion Film Media
- Band
- 04/01
- Autoren
- Christian Wessely
- Daria Pezzoli-Olgiati
- Herausgeber
- Uni-Graz
- Verlag
- SchĂĽren Verlag GmbH
- Ort
- Graz
- Datum
- 2018
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 14.8 x 21.0 cm
- Seiten
- 129
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften JRFM