regeneration notes
DESCRIPTION
Brentwood Arts Cinema Club as part of Brentwood Arts Festival 2014 showed the film Regeneration at the Brentwood Theatre, followed by a discussionTRANSCRIPT
“The conflict has, for many, been seen
through the fictional prism of dramas such as Oh! What a Lovely War, The
Monocled Mutineer and Blackadder, as a misbegotten shambles – a series of
catastrophic mistakes perpetrated by an out-of-touch elite.”
– Michael Gove
“It is a joy to go to the Front with such comrades. We are bound to be victorious!
Nothing else is possible in the face of such determination to win. My dear ones, be proud that you
live in such times and in such a nation, and that you too have the privilege of sending several of those you
love into this glorious struggle.” – Walter Limmer, in a letter home to his
family
“I am making this statement as an
act of wilful defiance of military authority, because I believe the war is being deliberately prolonged by those
who have the power to end it.” – poet and officer Siegfried
Sassoon
“And all this madness, all this rage, all this flaming death of
our civilisation and our hopes, has been brought about because a set of official
gentlemen, living luxurious lives, mostly stupid, and all without imagination or heart, have
chosen that it should occur rather than that any of them should suffer some infinitesimal
rebuff to his country’s pride” – philosopher Bertrand Russell
Brentwood Arts Cinema Cub
A subtle, intelligent and profoundly moving film based on the acclaimed novel by Pat Barker, ‘Regeneration’ tells the stories of several British Army officers brought together in Craiglockhart War Hospital, one of some 3,244 auxiliary hospitals created to deal with the wounded during World War One, where they are treated for ‘shell shock’. The military authorities, caught out by the high number (25%) of such wounded affected mentally, identified the problem as shell-shock. Although often dismissed as cowardice, this condition was later known as post-traumatic stress disorder. Treatment was oriented to returning soldiers to the front as quickly as possible and included a range of procedures ranging from rest to punishment. At Craiglockhart the psychiatrists treat the officers with humanity, applying Freudian talking cures and activity treatments.
The film centres on the real life encounter between one such psychiatrist, Dr. William Rivers, and the poet Siegfried Sassoon, a decorated officer who is institutionalised in an attempt to undermine his public disapproval of the
RegenerationUK / Canada 1997Gillies MacKinnon109 mins
Brentwood Arts Festival 2014Brentwood TheatreJuly 6th & 7th 2014
prolongation of the war. Clearly Sassoon is not actually ill, and so arguably Rivers must persuade him to recant and thus return to the ‘madness’ of the front.
Siegfried L Sassoon, 1917This item is from The First World War Poetry Digital Archive, University of
Oxford (www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/ww1lit); © The Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge / The Siegfried Sassoon Literary Estate
Rivers also treats other patients, notably the fictional Billy Prior, who is initially mute and disrespectful, conflicted by his need to be accepted as dutiful and his disturbing experiences in the trenches. This disrespect enables Prior to criticise Rivers’ treatment and observe the symptoms that Rivers himself shows, brought on by the horrors patients relate to him in therapy sessions and his guilt at returning them to the trenches once ‘cured’.
Also at Craiglockhart is the poet Wilfred Owen, who admires Siegfried Sassoon’s poetic work and is helped by him to develop his own writing to address war. Sassoon becomes a champion of Owen’s work and corresponds with Rivers after returning to the front and beyond – The film ends with Rivers reading Sassoon’s letter which includes Owen’s poem The Parable of the Old Man and the Young.
Wilfred Owen, 1918This item is from The First World War Poetry Digital Archive, University of
Oxford www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/ww1lit © The British Library / The Wilfred Owen Literary Estate.
The ‘Regeneration’ of the title perhaps refers to the repair of minds, the patching-up of soldiers to return to the front, but also raises questions that surround the connection between damage to body and to soul, and how each may be treated. Rivers’ own past includes an experiment to cut the nerve of a fellow doctor in the cause of discovering how it would regenerate. In the story told by the film, a contrast is made between the talking therapy & activity treatments offered at Craiglockhart and the coercive electro-convulsive treatments offered by others. In the background there is the broader question of how society itself may be regenerated,
and the rôle of patriotism and war in energising and focussing a nation’s people.
The events depicted in the film occurred as the treatment of this kind of mental illness underwent real change and the realisation that it was not derived from cowardice nor insanity, but as a natural reaction to the extraordinary circumstances of war.
Rather than simply offering an anti-war rant or a pro-war glorification, Regeneration asks us to to consider the detailed experiences, contradictions and feelings of individuals and portrays their moral challenges without flinching from a depiction of the inhumanity that is perhaps the inevitable outcome of resorting to arms.
Brentwood Arts Cinema Club
For our members, we hope to find films like this that push us a little further to think; which stimulate our debate about the characters, the plot and the ideas that the film makers are trying to convey, but which also engage us in aesthetic and philosophical questions beyond the storytelling.
What do you think about this film and what are your tastes - film as escapism and entertainment or film as a provocation and enlightenment, or can we have it all? Please join us in the discussion after the film and give us your opinion!
Richard Millwood, July 2014
Links to further information:
Did Craiglockhart hospital revolutionise mental healthcare?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/guides/z9g7fg8
‘Dottyville’—Craiglockhart War Hospital and shell-shock treatment in the First World War
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1484566/
The First World War Poetry Digital Archive, University of Oxford
http://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/ww1lit
[email protected] www.brentwood-arts-cinema-club.co.uk 07938 197 939
" " " "The Brentwood Arts Cinema Club works on a membership basis. It is run by a committee which selects and screens a programme of some of the best of world cinema and independent English language films. Foreign language films are subtitled. All films are shown on Sunday evenings at 7.30 in the United Reformed Church Hall (opposite the library).