Sunday, F6bruory 11, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Poge Five Sunday, Februciry I 1, ~1 973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Bright makes right John Simon's Bergman: Critic as artist THE BEST AND THE BRIGHT- EST, by David H lberstam. Random House, $10.00. By ADAM SIMMS TVO HAVE READ David Hal- berstams book as I did during the period between Henry Kis- singer's ill-fated election-eve pre- diction that peace was "at hand" and President Nixon's Christmas- eve resumption of the bombing was to realize the full impact of Santayana's aphorism that those who do not learn from the past are condemned to repeat it. The U.S. government has been per- iodically bombing North Vietlam to the negotiating table for fully five years, and all that has been successfully negotiated so far has been the shape of the table. Something is radically wrong with our exalted national trait of pragmatism, our conceptions about cause and effect, means and ends, and our ideas about what the possession and exer- cise of power can achieve. A GOOD DEAL of ink has been fed through the printing press- es in an attempt to explain this seemingly unending tragedy. The most exhaustive explication pre- sented thus far has been the pub- lication of the Pentagon Papers some eighteen months ago. One of the Paper's most startling revelations was that from the beginning of America's military intervention in Vietnam, the in- formation gathered by the Cen- -tral Intelligence Agency was con- sistently pessimistic. At the same time that Robert McNamara was touring South Vietnam and pro- claiming to the American public that the "strategic hamlet" pro- gram was pacifying the country- side, the C.I.A. was reporting that the hamlets were counter- productive and creating new re- cruits for the Viet Cong. The Papers demonstrated that this sort of duplicity was routing and rampant in Washington's public accounting of the war. But the Papers offered no explana- 1ion of why such deception be- came a standard operating pro- cedure. For one, the study dealt almost exclusively with process, with the ways in which the lower echelons of the Defense bureauc- racy evaluated intelligence and formulated policy options which were passed along to decision makers higher up. But those materials used by and passed around among the highest mem- bers of, the State and Defense departments and the White House staff were kept off limits to th Papers' compilers. Secondly, the Papers were meant to be historical, in the narrowest and most restricted sense of that term. They were intended to be an objective, chronological recounting of what decisions were made at particu- lar points in time. Conspicuously absent was an attempt to account for individual motivation in the decision-making process, espe- cially at the highest levels. HALBERSTAM'S indebtedness to the Papers is obvious, as he acknowledges in a note about his sources. But he is not so much concerned with process as he is with personality. Halber- stam, unlike the historians who compiled the Papers, is a jour- nalist, and in the best tradition of journalism his reportage is concerned with people, with in- dividual human beings whose personal motivations and interac- tions provided, in the end, the vital factors in why and how the United States got involved in Vietnam. "The best and the brightest" of the book's title are the men who'rwere instrumental in mak- ing that decision: Dean Rusk, head of the Rockefeller Founda- tion and later Secretary of State; Robert McNamara president of the Ford Motor Company and later Secretary of Defense; Max- well Taylor, soldier-scholar, for- b 0 0 k s the White House and the Defense Department marshalled their an- alysts and computers and set out to devise strategems to save the South. Innumerable statistics w e r e gathered in the field in order to give the planners back in Washington some way to meas- ure the effectiveness of their pro- grams, and the criterion of suc- cess became those numbers-so many enemy troops killed each week, so many trucks and sup- plies interdicted, so many vil- lages fortified. The problem was that statistics could lie, particu- larly when they were tampered with, and especially when they were used to answer the wrong questions. Not once did Washing- ton ask whether the government they were attempting to save was viable, or whether this kind of war could be won at all by tech- nological and military superior- ity alone. EVEN WHEN pressure against the war mounted during the Johnson Administration, decision makers closest to the President failed to question initial assump- tions, to consider whether they might have possibly made an error in intervening in Vietnam. Rather, they gathered round to defend their policies and beat down with a vengence criticism from within their own ranks. Once, late in the war, George Ball raised some doubts about yet another troop increase, and McNamara cut him down with a barrage of statistics. Ball, un- familiar with the facts cited against him, had his aides comb through the intelligence reports to find out where McNamara had gotten his information. The aides went to work, and when the figures failed to materialize, Ball realized that they never would because they did not exist. Mc- Namara had invented them. As the war dragged on without reso- lution or apparent end, the main interest of most of the high policy makers was not so much to defend Vietnam as it was to protect the President When that happened, Washington truly lost its sense of purpose about the war, if not the war itself. If there are any reservations that should be noted about The Best and the Brightest, the most imhportant one is that the author decided to cast his work in the style of the "new journalism." With a topic as complex as Viet- nam decision-making, the adap- tions of the novel's narrative techniquesthelp to give the sub- ject a human dimension and keep the reader interested. But the "new journalism," at least as practiced at this stage of its development, can be especially grating with its subjectivity. Af- ter almost seven hundred pages of small anecdotes designed to describe scores of personalities, all without any citations about their sources. one begins to won- der what the writer has in mind, character portraiture or charac- ter assassination. Still, an frri- tation such as this serves its pur- pose because it reminds us that a nation may go to war for an abstraction, but it is people who decide when a nation fights and where its soldiers die. mer Army Chief of Staff and later ambassador to South Viet- nam; McGeorge Bundy, dean of Harvard College, and Walt Whit- man Rostow, professor of eco- nomic history at M.I.T., both later special assistants to the President. In 1961, in what now seems to be an irrevokably lost time of naive faith and hope, these men and their companions were acclaimed as the new men of a new Establishment-not then so detested a word-whose mem- bers were willing to forsake plush private positions and emoluments in order to serve their nation. On January 20, 1969, after al- most a decade of public service, the last of them left Washington. By then their reputations were tarnished; their nation internally divided and internationally re- pudiated; their hopes and prom- ises derailed; all because a small country's problems had attract- ed inordinate amounts of their attention and energy, totally out of proportion to its international importance or their own nation's domestic priorities. At the root of their public failure was a mixture of hubris and corporate mentality. These were men who believed, above all, in the applicability of ra- tionalism to public affairs. Given America's technological capabili- ties, they were sure that there were no problems that could not be resolved in America's favor. So when noncommunist Vietnam teetered on the verge of collapse, I N G M A R BERGMAN DI- RECTS, by John Simon. Har- court Brace Jonanovich, $9.95. By DAVID GRUBER A HORSE-DRAWN carriage is seen on a hilltop, silhouetted against a gray sky. Leaning to- ward it from the left is a gal- lows and reaching toward it from the right are the bare, crooked branches of a fallen tree. The carriage is that of Vog- ler's Magnetic Health Theatre. Albert Vogler is a mesmerist; he sells cures, performs feats of magic, and claims to possess powers by which he can induce visions in any human being. He has been accused by many of being a'fraud. It is said that his magic is made of cheap tricks, that he has no extraordinary powers. The setting is forebod- ing. The gallows and the bran- ches are waiting to claim him, each in its own way. In this single, prophetic image, filmed in 1958, Ingmar Berg- man captured the look of John Simon's critical mind. It is as if he knew that one day he would face this man in person, and knew also something of the unpleasantness involved in doing so. Indeed, let us presume for a moment that Bergman is Vog- ler, Later in The Magician, the film which opens with the above scene, Vogler finds himself caught between two people. One is Vergerus, an arrogant, conde- scending counselor of medicine. To him the very idea of magic, of the sipernatr, is repugnant. He believes Vogler is a charla- tan. "Everything is exlinable," he says. He wold fig'iratively, if not quite literally, like to hang Vogler, and this would sit his purposes quite well. His only interest is psvsiology. In Vogler he sees a woderfl secimen for an autonsy. The other person is Ottila Egermn, a woman bor- dering on desair who harbors a rather pathetic belief in Vogler's powers. "I understand you," she says. "I have longed for you I understand why you've come .. . YI will enlin why my child died. What God meant. That's why von have come. To soothe my sorrow and lift the burden from my shoulders." Vogler is helpless. before both these people: that his magic is made of tricks is true, and he has no way of knowing the ans- wers to Mrs. Egerman's qes- tions. Besides, part of his act is pretending to be a deaf mute. BERGMAN used Vogler as a prototype of the artist, the artist being a man who used me- chanical devices to produce cal- culated effects in his audience. Bergman's thinking today is not so different from this, and not that much different from what he once though to be the ideal position for himself as an ar- tist. In the interview that onens Ingmar Bergman Directs, John Simon mentions this to him: S: There is one statement of yours tht everybody is al- wys quoting: about your thinking of yourself as a hum- ble, anonymous workman on a Gothic cathedral. B: Very romantic. Forget it. Whet I meant originlly ws that anonymous creation in art, in music or painting or sculpture or theatre, was very unneurotic. And that is the best kind of all, creating unneurot- ically: which is why the nine- teentf - century romantic no- tion of original genius strikes me as very silly, and as hav- ing nothing to do with creation. S: But, then, if you're nei- Today's writers... Dan Feld is a graduate stu- dent in American Studies and was formerly an editorial asso- ciate of the Books Editor. Nigel Gearing is a grad stu- jent in English and is the Books Editor's roommate. David Gruber spends most of iis time at the flicks and is in ,io way connected with the Books Editor. A BORDERS SPECIAL AM i'uni VflI'DC' flt9 ther the nineteenth-century or- iginal nor the medieval work- man on the cathedral, what third possibility does that leave - something in between? B: Yes, I am a man making things for use, and highly es- teemed as a professional. I am proud of my knowing how to make those things. Very few critics are willing to see him this way. In his own country of Sweden, where there is a growing concern with social issues and living conditions, the popular verdict among the younger critics and filmmakers is that Bergman's intensely per- sonal, psychologically, oriented films are irrelevant. (Bergman brushes this off by simply stat- ing he is unable to make social films; it is not his style and not his interest.) Outside his coun- try he is seen as something of a magician, one who grapples with life's fundamental problems. He is acknowledged to be an ex- tremely talented director who is always developing his concerns and techniques, but cannot al- ways blend them together well. Nevertheless, those instances where concerns and techniques do work together are marvelous, sometimes startling pieces of filmmaking, and they h a v e earned him continual critical re- spect. BUT NOW what a lucky man Bergman is. In beginning his introduction to Bergman's films John Simon proclaims: "Ingmar Bergman is, in my carefully considered opinion, the greatest filmmaker the world has seen so far." Ah, to be in the hands of a carefully con- sidered opinion! Notice how cleverly pl-ced is that carefully considered clause thro'igh which we will read the rest of the book. In John Simon's opinion! It be- comes clear that Bergman is bo- ing used for someoae's ulterior purposes. Simon is going to re- veal to us as much about him- self as. about his subject. He continues: I tike film to be a totally visual and totIlly aural me- di'm - in this ambidextrous- ness lies its glory - and I consider utterly mist-ken the nostalgic sentimentality of those exalters of time past who would put the silent film above the sound, or in any way minimize the imoortance of the ear in the enjoyment of film . . . Now though a film- maker-who masters the visual possibilities of cinema is to be admired, the true lord of the medium is he who controls equally sight and sound, whose word is as good as his image, and, above all, who can manip- ulate the two in such a way that they reinforce each other and perform in unison or har- mony, contrast or counter- ,point, at the filmmaker's beck ... Bergman has, I firmly be- lieve, achieved the perfect fu- sion more often than Antonioni and Fellini combined . .., or anyone else in history, ob- viously. IT IS SIMON'S custom to write in sweeping pronouncement (a term -he uses himself) whe- ther it be for his film column in The New Leader or this book- length study of a filmmaker's work. But rarely does he give ot such praise. In Private Screenings and Movies into Film, both of which are collec- tions of his film criticism, he spends a good deal of time com- plaining . that there are not enough films worth writing about, that most films are not Art. Films that are not Art are, of course, not worth his atten- tion, but being a critic he is ob- ligated to write on them. The pain that this causes him, the sense that he feels his profound intelligence is being squandered on films that are something less than the "perfect fusion" of "sight and sound" pervades all his writing. His sense of futility seems so great that one won- ders r. - he continues writing. The answer is that he enjoys ex- pounding his beloved opinion. So, in order tobdo this, he stabs peo- ple in the back, filmmakersand critics alike - with witless crude, carelessly considered de- nincintions, designed in the end to attract attention to himself. His world of film is filled with "derailed fanatics." "modish shaman," and "brilliant mono- maniacs." and he is their self appointed executioner. Ironical- Iv, Simon, near the end of his inter-iew with Bergman, asks the director about an encounter with a man of a similar nature: S: Sneaking of critics, do you have any afterthoughts aho't vo'ur famous, incident with Johnson? (Bergman had hit this critic at an open re- hearsal.) B: No, the only thing is ex- actlv wh-t I said, I hate phy- sical violence. - S: What did this particular critic do to make you so an- gry? B: He doesn't believe in what he's doing and he's cynical and he plays a game with oth- er human beings, and I hate this way of behaving. Not of humiliating me, because I know who I am and what I am, but he has a way of humilia- ting, in a terrible way, the ac- tors. I have seen too much of what he has done to people in this theatre and in other houses. TO BE SURE, Simon does not humiliate Bergman in his book. He shows himself instead to be a surprisingly flexible man. While at one moment he will be looking way down upon the in- significant members of the film world, which now means every- body, he will, in the next mo- ment, be bent oyer backward to eye his savior. This rounds out his character. He deems Berg- man the one filmmaker worth his serious, detailed discussion. Exalting him to the skies, how- ever, accomplishes nothing. In fact, aside from thrusting upon Bergman a status he cares noth- ing about, it carries very nega- tive undertones. It reinforces his condescension toward everyone else, and it forces upon the read- er a limited critical position. Ap- parently Simon's sole criteria for greatness is the "perfect fusion" and the number of times it is achieved. What is lacking is any acknowledgment of other kinds of energies at work in filmmak- ing. These he positively dis- counts, both in Ingmar Bergman Directs and in his reviews. Dir- ectors who make only one "mas- terpiece" or one every now and then are considered one-shot ar- tists or sporadic artists. Fellini and Antonioni, having once made masterpieces of their own, have now fizzled out in his mind. If a masterpiece is not made on a regular basis the film- maker drops from Simon's mind completely, or he receives from him various malicious comments. It is no matter that some di- rectors have contributed some- thing lasting to film, that they have found new forms of cine- matic expression, that they have exnanded the range of film's possibilities. To my mind, a filmmaker need only do this once (and this once need not be a flike) to earn a position of admiration or even greatness. SIMON'S PRAISE of Bergman is overbearing. That Berg- man is a master of the medium need only be stated once in the course of a book on his works. Simon uses "master" and "mas- teroiece" and "Bergman master stroke" and "Bergmanian mas- ter touch" to describe every- thing in his films but the credits. He probes Bergman's movies (The Clown's Evening, Smiles of a Summer Night, Winter Light, and Persona are the ones he has selected for this book) like a surgeon, in metallic sentences' often using unintelligible words dug up from moldly corners of the dictionary. All to sound im- pressive. Unfortunately, though, it only sounds like a little boy doing his hero worshipping at the expense of the reader. In reality, Simon assumes a sub- missive position in realtion tp Bergman, whereas in relation to whomever he considers inferior he makes his opinion the one to be reckoned with. He is the Ver- gerus-Ottila Egerman figure of film criticism, every bit as arro- gant as the former, less human and more pathetic than the latter. The one noteworthy thing about Simon's book is the format of the book itself..Ingmar Bergman Directs is the second in a series of "visual analysis" books by the Halcyon Press (the first was Stanley Kubrick Directs). These analyses are studies of form and content; they discuss a particular filmmaker's individual works, or the best of these works if there are many to' choose from, what these' works say, and how they say it. Extensive use is made of stills and shot sequences from. the films, enabling the reader to see for himself what the writer is referring to in his commen- tary. Lighting, editing, camera angles, compositions, settings, dialogue, acting, and other com- ponents of filmmaking are taken into consideration. There is room for everything in these books; they offer film criticism its first chance to do a thorough study of the film medium. ALL ONE gains from Simon's book is a sense of futility. One comes to it wanting to learn something about Ingmar Berg- man, and one is met by a acritic who doesn't care to tell you any- thing unless you acknowledge him to be of as great importance as Bergman. It is the reader that Simon ultimately dislikes. The reader is but a "layman," Simon and Bergman are true Artists. A "layman" cannot possibly be ex- pected to understand the Artist without the help of another Art- ist. Simon is no Artist and he is no help. Other articles and books on Bergman do exist, many by writ- ers who geniuinely care about Bergman's films and about their readers; Robin Wood, Stanley Kaufman, Pauline Kael, John Donner, Susan Sontag to name a few. Many of Simon's views, in fact, are padded by those of other critics. A good deal of his chapter on Winter Light is mere- ly a transcription of Wood's ideas on the film. Bergman's screenplays, including the re- cently published Persona and Shame, also do more to give a feeling for Bergman's emotional and intellectual concerns than does Simon's brittle writing. Simon is best left alone to sit on the shelf, or perhaps left to some monastery where he can sit in silence and carefully con- sider his opinions without offend- ing anyone. History as she is writ, new style Centicore Bookshops, Inc. SAVE UP TO 20% on ANY SBOOK, POSTER, GRAPHIC or FRAME in our. current stock H A R V E Y WASSERMAN'S HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES, by Harvey Wasserman. Harper Colophon Books, 262 pp., $2.95. By DANIEL FELD NOT VERY MANY people read American history any more. Who can blame them? The prob- lem with historical writing is the historians who have lost sight of their function as story tellers. In this age of social science specialization they are trying to become "scientific" specialists themselves-never realizing that good story telling about how we came to our present state is more urgently needed than ever. Harvey Wasserman has a story to tell. That's the first point. It's about how the fore- bears of the present ruling class took over the country right after the Civil War-and how they then destroyed the progressive left-loyal-opposition, a task ac- complished by economic and po- litical blackmail, by violent re- pression, and by incarceration and extermination. THE STORY, which Wasser- man tells in a frank and un- pretentious manner, is as fasci- nating as it is tragic. Wasserman abandons the dry footnoting style of most academic history writ- ing (the sources are in a bibli- ography at the back-where they belong) and instead offers us an historical tale that is satisfy- ing in several different ways. He comes up with information that is omitted from most American history books. For in- stance, did you know that there was a "back to the land" move- ment around the turn of the cen- tury, championed by the progres- sive left-which helped to pub- lish books such as Three Acres and Liberty, by a Mr. 3olton Hall? Or did you know that Mabel Dodge (a friend of D. 1I. Lawrence's) and some of her pals were doing peyote in New York City in 1914? THE ANECDOTES in Wasser- man's book are interesting, but they are relevant mostly because they are part of a tough argument which makes sense on a much deeper level. Was- serman stakes out the.argument at its origin, Puritanism, and explains how the descendants of that religious orthodoxy fought a pseudo-battle with the neoposi- tivist evolutionists in the late nineteenth century -pseudo be- cause the battle obscured the fact that the two were forging an alliance, ensuring that the new ruling class, with its might- makes-right social philosophy, would shape the character of our contemporary society. The two groups held different conceptions of the basis of social values-godly creation and origi- nal sin of the Puritans contrast- ing with evolution from a more primitive species, the view of, the new Liberal ruling class. But the conflict this defference led to obscured a more important fact, for both conceptions justified an ideology designed to protect the position of the ruling class, re- gardless of which class it was. In Puritan America this meant punishing (or at least ostraciz- ing heretics: "So the Puritan community 'punished' without mercy-to the point of organized murder -Indians, witches, Quakers, Baptists, Nonconformists, and other deviants on whom they often practiced elaborate tor- tures, as if their own preoccu- pation with hell demanded the construction of a wo rk in g model on earth." When the Liberals took con- trol, whatever moral value the Puritan ideology contained was lost, and so the triumph of the Liberal evolutionary ideology be- came a victory for an even less humane view of social values. Now "the fittest" who survived (who - were on top socially) were, by definition, the ones who had the right (power) to en- force their idea of social values. At least in Puritan America this included the idea of a commu- nity of men. Now, with the ascendency of the Liberal ruling class, community was replaced by a politically crippling ideology of total individualism. THE LEADERS of the progres- sive (and loyal) opposition knew well what the ruling class was up to. Wasserman quotes one of them, Tom Watson, who said: "You are kept apart that you may be separately fleeced of your earnings. You are made to hate each other be- cause upon that hatred is rested the keystone of the arch of financial despotism that en- slaves you both." Not only was Wasserman able to find such statements, but he was able to document the con- sequences of a failure to unite. A generation after Watson, un- der the guise of wartime secur- ity measures, the Wilson admin- istration (of making the world safe for de mo c racy fame), cracked down on the left pro- gressive opposition: "Under the cover of war the government smashed 'Mother Earth,' 'The Masses,' and the entire Socialist and Wobbly press. Four printings of James Joyce's 'Ulysses' . . . were confiscated and burned in pub- lic . . . Mote than a quarter of the Socialist party local headquarters were b u r n e d, blown up, or otherwise de- stroyed." THE PROGRESSIVE left alli- ance of farmers and laborers, created with such struggle after the Civil War, was destroyed in the twentieth century. In part its collapse was caused by gov- ernment oppression between the two world wars. But this is not the only reason. Today many of the sons and daughters of that alliance form a central pillar of support for the Nixon admin- istration-and this fact points to the rest of the explanation. In a larger sense the defeat of the progressives is a testimony to the capacity the ruling class has for spreading its gospel of sur- vival of the fittest. That gospel was fed to the workers and farm- ers who once supported the pro- gressives. But while they were being brainwashed by the world's most effective propaganda ma- chine-American media, particu- larly radio and television - the workers and farmers also were bought off with that parade of "consumer goods" we have comestoscall progress. Progress is what the people get from those fittest who survived; but the INCLUDING BOOKS ALREADY ON SALE This coupon entitles you to $1.00 OFF on any puchase of $5.00 or more. It may be used in either store. No more than one coupon may be applied to each purchase. coupon offer valid through Feb. 18, '73 We invite you to visit Ann Arbor's two most complete bookshops Our main store at 336 Maynard St. has Ann Arbor's best collection of fine art books, poetry, music, classics, best sellers and general literature. __d Discover Emotion: A Perfect Guide for Any Situation The human race is unaware of a powerful force of na- : ture which, when it's recog- nized, reveals a personal guide for right and wrong. We admit most disturbances stem from wrong but not .thatthey all do. However, conflict or an accident are examples where both sides suffer over the same wrong. So there is proof that all disturbance results from wrong. This allness ihakes the disturbing force of