“…It's incredibly obvious, isn't it? A foreign substance is introduced
into our precious bodily fluids without the knowledge of the individual, and
certainly without any choice. That's the way your hard core commie works.”
Brigadier General Jack D. Ripper explaining his theory about
fluoridation in Dr. Strangelove (1964). [1]
The famous character quoted above makes a good spokesman for
the topic of the next part of our Anxiety
study – obsession.
Before the black and white film starts, we get a disclaimer
that the U.S. Air Force has safeguards to prevent the events in our movie from
taking place, then the camera stealthily advances, over a puffy cloudscape,
toward some protruding mountaintops. A narrator tells us of rumors about an
ultimate weapon being developed in the “perpetually fog-shrouded wasteland
below the arctic peaks of the Zokov islands,” and dulcet strains of “Try a
Little Tenderness” play as we see one plane fueling another mid-air, then gently
letting it go.
{These planes can help us engage in
our new class, where Lacan promises to discuss the relationship of object o to
the desire of the subject, noting that he has been led to treat desire} as by
an articulation in which the function appears in a sort of gap, of residue of
the signifying function as such; but I also did it piece by piece, this is the
path that I will take today. {He further reminds us that} o is not the object,
but the cause of desire, {and he discusses the “veiled fashion” in this causes’
function. He then brings up the symptoms of obsessionals: I}t is the symptom which takes in its most
exemplary form, implies as I might say, that not following the line awakens
anxiety…[Without constituting the symptom,] there is no means of getting out of
it and not simply because there is no way of speaking about it, but because
there is no way of catching it by the ear. What is this ear in question? It is
this something of the symptom that we can say is unassimilated by the subject. [2]
We get a night scene of Burpleson Air Force Base, then cut
to the interior, where we see Group Captain Lionel Mandrake, an English exchange
officer, looking at some computer printouts. He interrupts his examination to
answer a call from the Base commander quoted above. The General asks if
Mandrake recognizes his voice, which the Captain acknowledges, adding, “Why do
you ask?” Answering, “You don't think I'd ask if you recognized my voice unless
it was pretty damned important do you, Mandrake,” Ripper tells his executive
officer to try to “stay on the ball.” Saying, “It looks like we’re in a
shooting war,” he orders Mandrake to put the base on condition red, transmit “Plan
R” to the wing, and seal the Base tight. Lastly (and “most importantly,”) he
commands the Group Captain to impound all radios and report to him. We hear the
sirens begin and see Ripper closing the blinds in his office before we cut to an
exterior shot of airborne B-52’s.
{We’ll use this scene to warn us of
the need to articulate} the relationship between the function of o, the cause
of desire, and the mental dimension of cause as such{, a topic Lacan had
covered in a journal article, “Kant with Sade.” To mark this dimension, he
notes the need to examine} the whole analysis of the transference, a phenomenon
which long predates Freud,} for the transference neurosis is there in each and
every one, even in Alcibiades: it is Agathon that he loves. But in a being as
free as Alcibiades, the transference is obvious. Even though this love is what
is called a real love, what we too often call a lateral transference, this is
where the transference is. [3]
The narrator tells us of the large force of bombers that
America’s Strategic Air Command maintains, each of which can deliver a nuclear bombload
of 50 megatons, and each two hours from its target inside Russia. We then cut
to the interior of one of these planes, in which we see its pilot, Major “King”
Kong, and his men engaged in various activities, such as reading paperbacks,
playing solitaire, and looking at Playboy
magazine. We hear an alarm sound and see codes change on a display panel, and communications
officer Lieutenant Goldberg (“Goldie”) informs the pilot of the message. Kong
at first tells Goldie to stop “horsing around,” then to make sure that he has
the right code for the day, before coming down to check for himself. Finally, opening
a safe and putting on some earphones, he tells Goldie to get confirmation from
base, saying, “Ripper wouldn't be giving us plan R unless them Russkies had
already clobbered Washington and alot of other towns with a sneak attack.” On
getting confirmation, the major also removes a cowboy hat from the safe, and we
hear the music to “Battle Hymn of the Republic” play before he returns to the
cockpit. When he gets there he delivers a speech - the “Hymn” playing
throughout [4], during which we get close-ups of his men’s worried faces - a
speech in which he professes to empathize with how they must feel about nuclear
combat, but telling them they can’t let the folks back home down and that they
will all likely get “some important promotions and personal citations when this
thing's over with … regardless of your race, color or your creed.” We get an
outside shot of their plane before cutting to a large hotel room, two of its
walls covered with mirrors. We hear a phone ring, and watch a beautiful woman,
lying on the bed in a bikini and black heels, turn and raise up on one elbow –
It is the centerfold, "Miss Foreign Affairs," from the Playboy Kong had been perusing. The
woman calls to “Buck,” off-screen, asking if she should get it and, at his
reply, turns off her sunlamp and answers. In a professional tone, she says that
General Turgidson is unavailable at the moment and identifies herself as his
secretary, Miss Scott. At the caller’s reply, her demeanor softens as she tells
“Freddie” that she and the General were catching up on paperwork. She says that
Turgidson is currently “tied up,” but, at the caller’s insistence, shouts to
her employer, “a General Puntridge calling.” She then mediates a dialogue
between the two generals, softening her employer’s replies for Freddie, until
Buck, in boxer shorts and an open Hawaiian shirt, emerges from the “powder
room.” Taking the phone, he says, “What's it look like? Yeah. Waa... are you
sure it's plan R? Huh. What's cookin' on the threat board? Nothin? Nothin at
all? I don't like the look of this, Fred. Alright, I tell you what you better
do, old buddy [slapping his belly] … You better give Elmo and Charlie a blast,
and bump everything up to condition red and stand by the blower; I'll get back
to you.” Hanging up, he tells Miss Scott that he “might mosey over to the War Room
for a few minutes.” She lies back down seductively, saying that she’s not tired
either, and he conveys sympathy. Saying that he knows “how it is,” and crawling
over the extra bed toward her, he advises her to just start her “countdown, and
old Bucky’ll be back here before you can say, [here, he has reached her, and
she has her arms over his shoulders] ‘Blast
Off!’”
{With the coincidences of Scott’s published
image and business/intimate acquaintances, we can reflect on Lacan’s proposal
to transfer the category of the cause from what Kant called the transcendental
aesthetic} to that which - if you are willing to agree to it - I would call my
"transcendental ethics." {He reminds us of his discussion of the
scopic field of desire, adding} that space is not at all an a priori category
of sensible intuition … that space is not a feature of our subjective constitution
beyond which the thing in itself would find, as one might say, a free field,
namely that space forms part of the real … [and that the] topological
dimension, in the sense that its symbolic handling transcends space, evoked for
many, not only for some, so many shapes which are presentified for us by the
schemas of the development of the embryo… {He contrasts Kant’s idea of “good
shape” with the Freudian idea of the sublime “uncanny,”} something which is
everywhere reproduced, and regarding which, in an impressionistic notation, I
would say that it is tangible in a sort of torsion to which the organisation of
life seems to be obligated in order to lodge itself in real space. [5]
We get different views of the men at the base listening to
Ripper’s voice tell them, “Your commie has no regard for human life, not even
his own,” before giving them “three simple rules” over the intercom. We see men
who have collected a truckload of radios as he delivers the first: “…trust no
one, whatever his uniform or rank, unless he is known to you personally.” We
cut to Ripper himself delivering the second: “…anyone or anything that
approaches within 200 yards of the perimeter is to be fired upon.” We then see Mandrake
shutting computers and lights off as we hear the third: “…if in doubt, shoot
first, and ask questions afterwards.” As Ripper tells the men that it has been
a privilege to command them, we watch his executive officer opening a printer
to turn it off and finding a transistor radio beneath. Switching it on and hearing
soft jazz play, he rushes toward Ripper’s office. We cut first to an exterior
shot of the B-52, then to the interior, where one of Kong’s men opens a safe [6].
In it are various envelopes, each designated by one letter and carrying the
words, “Top Secret.” He selects Profile “R” and brings it to Kong, who first has
Goldie set and lock code prefix, “OPE,” then identifies primary and secondary
targets. We cut back to Mandrake, walking briskly into Ripper’s office,
carrying the radio. Playing the music, he says cheerfully that the Pentagon
must be testing them, adding that he thinks “it’s taking it a bit too far; our
fellows will be inside Russian radar cover in about twenty minutes.” Ripper responds
gruffly and walks to the door, saying, “…the officer exchange program does not
give you any special prerogatives to question my orders.” Mandrake, not
noticing his commanding officer locking up, replies, “I thought you'd be rather
pleased to hear the news. I mean after all, well let's face it we... we don't want
to start a nuclear war unless we really have to, do we?” After Ripper returns
to his desk, telling Mandrake to sit down and turn the radio off, the Group
Captain checks his watch, asking about the planes – “Surely you must issue the
recall code immediately.” His smile fading as Ripper tells him that his orders
stand, Mandrake starts to fidget, assuring the Base commander that the music
would not be playing if a Russian attack was in progress. To Ripper’s question,
“What if that’s true?” his executive officer answers, “Well I'm afraid I'm
still not with you, sir. Because, I mean, if a Russian attack was not in
progress then your use of plan R, in fact your orders to the entire wing...[looking
down and dropping his voice] oh. Well I would say, sir, that there was
something dreadfully wrong somewhere.” When Ripper tells him, “…please make me
a drink of grain alcohol and rain water, and help yourself to whatever you'd
like,” Mandrake salutes him, saying, “General Ripper, sir, as an officer in Her
Majesty's Air Force, it is my clear duty, under the present circumstances, to
issue the recall code, upon my own authority, and bring back the wing. If
you'll excuse me sir.” Trying the door, he turns – “I'm afraid sir, I must ask
you for the key and the recall code. Have you got them handy sir?” Ripper
informs his executive officer that there is nothing anyone can do (reinforcing
his message by uncovering a pistol on his desk,) and we get a low closeup of
his face as he puffs his large cigar and informs Mandrake that “war is too
important to be left to politicians,” declaring his commitment to stop “the international
Communist conspiracy to sap and impurify all of our precious bodily fluids.”
{This may be a good time to enter our
next passage, where Lacan, connecting the aforementioned topology and points of
torsion to the points of rupture he has been discussing throughout the seminar,
discusses the role of desire in the paradox of history:} The less the cause is
graspable, the more everything appears caused, and up to the final term, the
one that has been called the meaning of history.
One can say nothing other than that
"everything is caused", except for the fact that everything that
happens there presides and always begins from a "sufficiently
caused", in the name of which there is reproduced in history a beginning,
an un-caused which I would not dare to call absolute, but which was certainly
unexpected and which classically leaves lots of work to be done nachträglich by
the … professional interpreters of the meaning of history.
{Reminding us that o is} the
remainder of the constitution of the subject at the locus of the Other in so
far as it has to constitute itself as a speaking subject, a barred subject, ${,
he returns to the symptom:} entirely implicatable in this process of the constitution
of the subject…,[it] is a legitimate part of this becoming. {He names a
question as the cause implicated in the question of the symptom}, but one of
which the symptom is not the effect. It is the result of it. The effect is the
desire … an effect which has nothing effected about it. {Saying that every
phenomenology rediscovers that the} cause is thus constituted as supposing the
effects of the fact that primordially the effect is lacking there … The gap
between cause and effect, in the measure that it is filled - this indeed is
what is called in a certain perspective the progress of science - makes the
function of the cause vanish… {Lacan then returns to Piaget’s research, which,
in overlooking this function, he calls naive.} [7 (scholarly citations removed)]
We get one overhead view of the Pentagon, then another of
the War Room inside, where the President, Merkin Muffley, and a large group of
high ranking officials [8] has convened. A gum-chewing General Turgidson tells
him that Ripper has ordered his planes to attack their targets inside Russia,
and shows a large electronic graphic of these targets on “the Big Board.” To Muffley’s
protest that the President is the only one authorized to issue such an order,
Turgidson reminds him of Plan R, a plan in which a lower echelon commander may
order nuclear retaliation after a sneak attack if the normal chain of command
is disrupted (a plan meant as a safeguard, although Turgidson admits “the human
element seems to have failed us here.”) To Muffley’s further questioning,
Turgidson reveals that they cannot recall the planes without a three letter
code group prefix, a prefix of which there are seventeen thousand possible permutations.
Turgidson adds that it would require two and a half days to transmit them all. The
President, on being reminded that the planes would penetrate Russian radar
cover in about eighteen minutes, asks Turgidson if he is in contact with Ripper,
and his general replies that the commander has sealed off the base and cut off
all communications. Muffley, trying to hide his growing agitation, asks where
Turgidson got his information, and the General reads a transcript of Ripper’s
last communication with Strategic Air Command headquarters. The call,
confirming that the planes are on their way, advises “for the sake of our
country and our way of life” that the rest of the airforce also mobilize. After
Turgidson reads the end of the message – “God willing, we will prevail in peace
and freedom from fear and in true health through the purity and essence of our natural…
[pulling the corners of his mouth down] fluids” - he comments, “We're still
trying to figure out the meaning of that last phrase, Sir.”
{Urging his students to read
Piaget’s book, The Language and Thought of
the Child, Lacan returns to the idea of “egocentric language,” a concept
Piaget developed from his belief that children at this stage do not understand
each other. Our professor identifies where he disagrees with Piaget, who} clings
to a position of the question which is precisely the one which veils the
phenomenon which, as a matter of fact, is very clearly displayed, and the
essential of it is essentially the fact that it is a different thing to say
that the word has essentially for effect to communicate, while the effect of
the word, the effect of the signifier is to give rise in the subject to the
dimension of the signified essentially. [9 (scholarly citations removed)]
The President answers, “There's nothing to figure out General
Turgidson. This man is obviously a psychotic,” but Turgidson expresses
reluctance to make such a judgement. Muffley then scolds him for, when the plan
was being developed, having denied the possibility of the kind of scenario that
they are now facing. After his general reproaches him for condemning the whole
program “because of a single slip up,” and telling him that getting Ripper on
the line is impossible, the President turns away from Turgidson, asking an army
general, Faceman, if there are any units near Burpleson. Meanwhile, Turgidson’s
line rings, and he answers, then whispers, “I told you never to call me here…” The
General then assures his caller that he deeply respects her as a human being,
tells her to say her prayers and go back to sleep, and hangs up. Muffley tells
Faceman to have his men enter Burpleson and put Ripper on the phone to him, and
Turgidson asks if he can make “one or two points.” He stretches the number to
six as he makes the argument to do as Ripper had suggested. He dismisses the
President’s objections that this would be mass murder, first with the words, “I'm
not saying we wouldn't get our hair mussed,” then by admonishing the President
to be more concerned with the American people than with his image in the
history books. Muffley’s aide, Mr. Staines, then says that the Russian ambassador
is upstairs, and Turgidson protests that the “enemy’s” representative would be
able to see everything, including (gesturing theatrically toward it,) “the Big Board.”
{These scenes can point us to Lacan’s
discussion of Piaget’s illustration of his belief that children cannot
communicate with each other. In his study, the developmental psychologist
explains the function of a tap to a small child in seven points, and the child
faithfully repeats the explanation back to him. However, when the child is told
to convey what he has learned to another child, the message is drastically
transformed. Lacan brings up the flaws in Piaget’s narrative: “the explanation
of the tap is not well done, if what is involved is the tap as cause, by saying
that it operates sometimes on and sometimes off. A tap is made to be turned off,”
and discusses how a child would understand the process of a tap in accordance
to how the child could use it. Lacan remarks that the study actually illustrates
“that the explainer explains badly, the one to whom he is explaining
understands much better than the explainer, by his inadequate explanations,
bears witness to having understood.” [10 (scholarly citations removed)]
We cut to the airborne B-52, as Kong reviews the contents of
the survival kits. These contents include “one drug issue containing
antibiotics, morphine, vitamin pills, pep pills, sleeping pills, tranquilizer
pills,” money in both rubles and gold, an issue of prophylactics, three
lipsticks, and three pairs of nylon stockings. Kong comments, “Shoot, a fellah
could have a pretty good weekend in Vegas with all that stuff.” We return to
the War Room to see the ambassador, DeSadeski, putting his glass on and looking
over the contents of the buffet table, then ordering Havana cigars and poached
eggs. When Staines tells Muffley that he is unable to reach Premier Kissov,
DeSadeski gives him another number to try, commenting that, although a “man of
the people,” the Premier is “also a man.” Turgidson and DeSadeski spat over
some remarks the General makes about Kissov’s “degeneracy,” and Muffley tries
to get the two to act with more dignity. Learning that Staines is trying the
number, the President walks away, but turns back on hearing a scuffle, and sees
Turgidson pulling DeSadeski backwards, away from the Big Board. The General,
holding up a camouflaged camera, accuses the ambassador of trying to take
pictures of the War Room. DeSadeski scoffs, “This clumsy fool tried to plant
that ridiculous camera on me,” and Muffley rebukes both men - “Gentlemen, this
is outrageous. I have never heard of such behavior in the War Room before.”
{We can use this scrap to hash out Lacan’s
further thoughts on Piaget’s illustration, noting that the third-party child’s
lay in} the effect of the tap as something which can be turned off and the
result, namely that thanks to a tap one can fill a basin without it
overflowing, the emergence as such of the dimension of the tap as cause. {Our
professor comments:} If man had a tendency to forget that in the presence of
water he is a communicating vessel, there is in the childhood of most the
washtub to remind him that effectively, what happens in a child of the age of
those that Piaget designates for us, in the presence of a tap, is this
irresistible type of acting-out which consists in doing something which runs
the greatest risk of upsetting it, and thus the tap finds itself once again in
the place of the cause, namely at the level also of the phallic dimension, as
that which necessarily introduces the fact that the little tap is something
which can have a relationship with the plumber, that one can unscrew,
dismantle, replace… etc: it is (-^). [11 (scholarly citations removed)]
We get a look through a Burpleson soldier’s binoculars as
Faceman’s troops approach, then see the watcher and two companions discuss how
authentically American the equipment looks. When one asks where “those commies”
could have gotten it, another answers, “Probably bought them from the army as
war surplus.” They open fire before we cut to Ripper’s office, where the General
sits, staring blankly out the window while Mandrake fidgets with a piece of
foil-wrapped gum and looks at his watch. We return to the War Room, where Muffley’s
aids have reached Kissov. The President asks DeSadeski to tell his premier
where he is and that he will enter the conversation if Muffley says anything
untrue, but not to say anything more. When the ambassador seems unresponsive,
the President says, “Alexiy, please, …I beg you,” and DeSadeski replies, “I
don’t have a phone.” After getting one, the ambassador speaks briefly, then
covers the speaker, telling Muffley, “I've done as you asked. Be careful Mr.
President. I think he's drunk.”
{Passing from the first stage of
the definition of the o, the nipple as the “need in the other,” [*] to the
second, the anal object as} the demand in the Other, the educative demand
par excellence, {Lacan continues:} The whole dialectic of what I have taught
you to recognise in the function of ( – ɸ) a function unique compared to all
the other functions of o in so far as it is defined by a lack, by the lack of
an object, this lack manifests itself as such in this effectively central
relationship – and this is what justifies the whole axing of analysis on
sexuality – that we will call here jouissance in the Other. [12]
After asking the Premier to turn the music down a little,
the President gives him the bad news. He adds that he wants to give the Soviet
air staff a complete run-down on the targets, the flight plans, and the
defensive systems of the planes, and finds that he can get the number for The
People's Central Air Defense Headquarters through Omsk Information. Replying to
Dimitri, “I’m sorry too,” Muffley quarrels briefly with the Premier about who is
sorrier, then, at Kissov’s request, gives the phone back to DeSadeski. Hearing
the alarm in the ambassador’s voice, Muffley asks, after DeSadeski hangs up,
what Kissov had said. The ambassador replies, “The doomsday machine … A device
which will destroy all human and animal life on earth.” We cut from Turgidson’s
skeptical face to Mandrake, still fidgeting in Ripper’s office, as the commander
sits beside him, putting a comforting arm around his shoulder. After asking him
if he has ever seen a "commie" drink a glass of water, Ripper discusses the
importance of the liquid, noting that communists never drink the
life-sustaining fluid. When he asks if Mandrake had wondered why he never
drinks it unless it is distilled or rain water, his executive officer, sweating
and quietly going to pieces, says that it had occurred to him. The General then
asks if Mandrake knows what fluoridation is, finally denouncing the process as
“the most monstrously conceived and dangerous communist plot we have ever had
to face.” Seeing bullets come through the window, Ripper compliments the “nice
shooting,” and pulls a gun out of his golf bag. He then sets it on his desk, ordering
the Group Captain, “Come help me with this belt.”
{On this command we can follow
Lacan as he moves to the fifth stage, telling us} that there ought to emerge in
a pure form -I am saying that this is only a provisional formulation –
something which is of course present at all the stages, namely the desire in
the Other. {He uses the example of the obsessional, noting that in his
symptoms, specifically} where the dimension of the cause is glimpsed as
anxiety-provoking … The solution is known: to cover the desire of the Other,
the obsessional has one way: it is to have recourse to his demand. [13]
Mandrake first says that he hasn’t had much experience with
“those … sort of machines,” then that the “string” in his leg is gone - “I've
got a gammy leg. Oh dear. Gone. Shot off.” However, at his general’s
insistence, he finally relents. We cut to the War Room, DeSadeski exclaiming
that, after the Doomsday machine is detonated, “it will produce enough lethal
radioactive fallout so that within ten months, the surface of the earth will be
as dead as the moon!” To Turgidson’s skepticism, the ambassador explains that
the H-bombs that are set to explode are coated with “Cobalt thorium G,” which
has a radioactive half-life of ninety-three years, and the explosions will
release a lethal cloud of radioactivity that will encircle the earth for that
period. At Muffley’s questioning, DeSadeski tells him that, not only is the doomsday
device triggered automatically, but is set to explode if any attempt is ever
made to un-trigger it. Turgidson, growing impatient with what he sees as a
“commie trick,” steps back and trips, but summersaults back to his feet and
points at the Big Board, yelling, “They're getting ready to clobber us!” The
President, ignoring the display, asks why the Soviets should build such a
thing, and the ambassador replies, “There are those of us who fought against
it, but in the end we could not keep up with the expense involved in the arms
race, the space race, and the peace race.” Describing his people’s desire for
more luxuries, he notes how much less a doomsday scheme costs than the
Soviets’ other defense systems. “But the deciding factor was when we learned
that your country was working along similar lines, and we were afraid of a
doomsday gap.” The President, objecting that he had not authorized this work,
calls out to Dr. Strangelove, director of weapons research and development, and
the wheelchair-bound doctor approaches. In a heavy German accent, he admits
that he had commissioned a study of the project, but had decided against it “for
reasons which, at this moment, must be all too obvious.” He then explains the value
of such a device, which is “within the means of even the smallest nuclear
power. It requires only the will to
do so.” At Muffley’s question about the triggering of the murderous device, Strangelove,
through his characteristic faintly deranged rictus, answers, “…because of the
automated and irrevocable decision-making process which rules out human
meddling, the doomsday machine is terrifying; it's simple to understand, and
completely credible and convincing.” While the doctor continues his
explanation, we see Turgidson, aside to Staines [14], marvel, “Gee, I wish we had one of them doomsday
machines…” The two continue to comment on Strangelove as he, speaking in an almost
dreamy fashion, remarks that the point of the device “is lost … [then, his
voice becoming harshly interrogatory,] if you keep it a secret! Why
didn't you tell the world, eh?!” The
ambassador replies, “It was to be announced at the Party Congress on Monday. As
you know, the Premier loves surprises.”
{With this secret, we can reveal Lacan’s
discussion of the circular constitution of the function of o, noting that,
after the “negative” phallic stage, stages 4 and 5} are in a return position
which brings them into correlation with stage 1 and stage 2. {Focusing on
stages 2 and 4, he quips, I}t is the privilege of analysis to have made emerge
in the history of thought the determining function of this unpleasant object in
the economy of desire. {Remarking on the primordial form of the cause of
desire, he infers the need} to make a veil subsist over the tight determinism.
[15]
Back at the Base, we see the men engaging in “friendly fire”
before a sign that says, “Peace Is our profession,” then cut to Ripper’s
office. The commander elaborates on his theory, listing various foods for which
there are studies underway to fluoridate, ending with ice cream – “Children’s ice cream”! Ripper expounds
on the plot, using the words that started this entry, before Mandrake asks, “Jack...
Jack, listen, tell me, ah... when did you first become, well, develop this
theory?” Ripper answers that he had become aware of it “during the physical act
of love,” describing a “profound sense of fatigue, a feeling of emptiness” that
followed before he interpreted the symptoms as “loss of essence.” The commander
assures his subordinate that the symptoms have not recurred, since he denies
women his essence. We cut to an exterior shot of the building from which soldiers
emerge with a white flag. At the cessation of hostilities, Ripper ignores
Mandrake’s entreaty to recall the wing and comments, “Those boys were like my
children, Mandrake. Now they let me down.” His subordinate tries to comfort him
- “I'm sure they all gave you their very best. And I'm equally sure they all
died thinking of you, every man jack of them…” then says that, although a
“water man,” there is nothing wrong with his own fluids. We get a closeup of Ripper’s
glum face as he continues to smoke, glancing sullenly at Mandrake during the speech.
Then, still looking straight ahead, he asks if his executive officer had ever
been a prisoner of war. The Group Captain, who had returned to the subject of recalling
the wing, looks up, asking, “huh?” After the commander repeats the question,
Mandrake says that he was, and, at Ripper’s next question, says that he had
been tortured by the Japanese “swines,” remarking, “Strange thing is they make
such bloody good cameras.” The General expresses concern that the invaders will
torture him for the code, and that he won’t be able to stand up under the pain.
Staring blankly while puffing away at his cigar, Ripper barely responds to his executive
officer’s attempt to seize on this idea to convince him to give Mandrake the
code. The General then says that he believes in an afterlife in which he will
have to answer for what he did, adding, “And I think I can.”
{These
interactions can help us relate to Lacan’s distinction between the cause of
desire at stage 5 from the effect, describing the mode of the object o for the
obsessional, a mode in which} the subjectifying constitution … results from the
dominance of the subject who speaks over the subject who understands, over the
subject of insight whose limits we know in the shape of the chimpanzee. {He
remarks that this very process of subjectifying leads to a new critique of
reason which} is not psychological or developmental. It shows what joins to the
accidents of development – those which I first of all enumerated just now by
reminding you of the list of them, the anatomical particularities that are
involved in the case of man – joining therefore to these accidents of
development the effect of a signifier whose transcendence is henceforth evident
with respect to the aforesaid development. {Our lecturer specifies that t}his
transcendence is neither more nor less marked, at this level, than any other
incidence of the real, this real that in biology is called on this occasion the
Umwelt as a way of taming it. [16]
Ripper walks despondently toward the bathroom, dropping his
weapon and jacket as he goes, and Mandrake follows, trying to coax the code out
of him. Entering the washroom as Mandrake proposes a “little guessing game,” the
General shuts the door. We then hear a gunshot from within, and Mandrake finds
that the door will only open a few inches. We cut to the B-52, then get a
closeup of the radar display showing a blip on the lower left that we soon
discover to be a missile. Despite sustained evasive action, the plane is hit, and
we watch as the men tend to the fires and struggle to get the aircraft under
control. We finally see the B-52 steady and lift before we get a closeup of the
phrases, “Peace on Earth” and “Purity of Essence” written crossword-style on a
piece of notepaper. We pull out and hear Mandrake reading the phrases, then
saying, “POE,” before we cut to the office door. Two shots suddenly blow the
handle off, and it opens, revealing Colonel “Bat” Guano.
{These bullets can help us penetrate
further into Lacan’s discussion. Pointing to the animal anxiety involved when “something
has shaken this Umwelt to its foundations,” such as during a meteoric accident our
professor notes, “For them as for us, it is the manifestation of a locus of the
Other,” and denies} that there is anywhere … that this locus in the Other
cannot lodge itself outside real space.” {He then drives home his point on the
need to look for the domain of causes in} the most disagreeable aspects of life.
[17]
Guano tells Mandrake to put his hands over his head, and,
ignoring the executive officer’s demand that he identify himself, asks him
about his “suit.” Mandrake, deeply offended, identifies it as an R.A.F. uniform
and himself as Group Captain. To the Colonel’s question, Mandrake says Ripper
is dead in the bathroom, then tells him that he has a very good idea what the
recall code is, trying to convey the urgency of communicating with SAC
headquarters. Guano continues to ignore Mandrake’s demands, ordering him to
keep his hands over his head and asking for witnesses to the General’s death. The
executive officer, finding that the Colonel is ignorant of Ripper’s attack
order, gets him to let him try the phones on Ripper’s desk, but discovers that
they have both been shot away. Guano, deciding that he has “wasted too much
time” on Mandrake, tells him, “Start walking.” We cut to the plane as Kong’s
men assess the damage, finding that the radio is out and that though, at the
rate of fuel loss, they can reach their primary and secondary targets, they
cannot return to any base or neutral country. Kong repeats this information
over the intercom, adding that their low flying at least gives them the
advantage of being untraceable by radar. We return to the Base as Mandrake and
Guano exit the office. Suddenly, the Group Captain stops and, pumping the air
with his fists, says, “Colonel! Colonel, I must
know what you think has been going on here!” Guano replies, “I think you're
some kind of deviated prevert. And I think General Ripper found out about your
preversion, and that you were organizing some kind of mutiny of preverts.” As
he resumes walking, keeping the R.A.F. officer at gunpoint, the Colonel adds, “All
I was told to do was get General Ripper on the phone to the President of the
United States.” The Group Captain again stops, pointing out that the President,
being unable to speak to Ripper, would need to speak to him as the General’s executive
officer. He gestures toward a phone booth and says he will try to reach Muffley,
and, to Guano’s skepticism, says, “I can assure you, if you don't put that gun
away and stop this stupid nonsense, the court of inquiry on this'll give you
such a pranging, you'll be lucky if you end up wearing the uniform of a bloody
toilet attendant!” The Colonel allows Mandrake to use the booth, but threatens to
“blow his head off” if he tries any preversions in it. The executive officer, after
reaching the operator, finds he doesn’t have enough change and that SAC will
not accept a collect call. After trying various options, he tells the Colonel
to shoot the lock off a nearby Coca-Cola machine to get some change. When Guano
protests, “That’s private property,” Mandrake finally barks out, “Colonel, can
you possibly imagine what is going to happen to you, your frame, outlook, way
of life and everything, when they learn that you have obstructed a telephone call to the President of the United States? Can you imagine? Shoot it off! Shoot!
With the gun! That's what the bullets are for, you twit! Guano complies, after warning
Mandrake that, if he cannot reach the President, he will have to answer to the
Coca-Cola Company. The Colonel then kneels down to collect the coins, and the
product sprays out of one of the bullet holes onto his face.
{With these scenes we’ll confront Lacan’s
next issue - how the anal object takes on its “subjectified importance,” it
being} observable that at the level of what one could call the living economy,
excrement continues to have its importance in the milieu that it can manage
also in certain conditions to saturate, to saturate sometimes to the point of
rendering it incompatible with life [* Our professor later points to the
atrocious historic case of reduction of entire human masses to its function.]; other
times, when it saturates it in a fashion which at least for other organisms
only takes on a function of support in the external milieu. There is a whole
economy, of course, of the function of excrement, an intra-living and an
inter-living economy. [18]
We dissolve from the Colonel’s face to the Big Board, on
which we see the planes’ retreat as we hear through an intercom that the recall
code is being acknowledged. The men, gathered in front of it, shake each
others’ hands and clap each other on the back, and Turgidson, still chewing
gum, leads them in prayer. While he speaks, we cut to Dr. Strangelove watching
from the shadows, then Staines interrupts to tell Muffley that Premier Kissov is
on the line, “and he’s hopping mad.” We then cut to the B-52 to find that the
plane’s fuel leakage has increased. Back in the War Room, the President tells
the Premier that there must be some mistake. Asking Kissov to hold “a second,”
he informs his men that the Soviet leader says that one of the planes,
according to information forwarded by the US air staff, is headed for the
missile complex at Lapuda. At Turgidson’s incredulity, he resumes his
conversation with Kissov, and finds that their air staff, which had earlier claimed
that they had shot down four of the planes, now only claims three - the fourth
may only be damaged. Over Turgidson’s suspicion that the “commies” are tricking
them, Muffley asks if the renegade plane’s success will set off the Doomsday
machine. On receiving confirmation, he tells Kissov, “Well, I.. I guess you're
just going to have to get that plane, Dimitri! Dimitri, I'm sorry they're
jamming your radar and flying so low, but they're trained to do it. You know,
it's it's initiative!”
{With apologies, I’ll return to the
question of subjectification. Lacan notes that through the Big Other’s
mediation, the object} for at least a certain time must be considered as not to
be alienated, then after that [the subject must] release it, always on demand.
{Such a demand} is destined to valorise this thing recognized for a moment and
henceforth elevated to the function, all the same, of a part which the subject
has some apprehension he is taking on, this part becoming at least valorised by
the fact that it gives its satisfaction to the demand of the Other… {Lacan
notes certain cases which intensify this valorization before proposing} that we
can understand nothing about the phenomenology – which is so fundamental for
all our speculation – of obsession, if we do not grasp at the same time in a
much more intimate, motivated, regular way than we habitually do, this link
between excrement and, not just the (-<p) of the phallus, but with the other
forms evoked here in what we could call the classification of stages, the other
forms of o{, then says that what} is involved is grounded at the level of the
oral stage. [19]
Muffley tries to calm the Soviet leader (although betraying his
own hysteria in the process,) and concludes, “Look, now if our air staff say
it's primary target is Lapuda and it's secondary target it Bordkov, I mean it's
it's true, Dimitri! You gotta believe it. … Put everything you’ve got into
those two sectors and you can’t miss.” Cutting back to the B-52, we watch the
navigator discuss the new rate of leakage with Kong. At first denying that the fuel
won’t let him reach even the primary, the pilot finally asks where the nearest
target opportunity is, and his bombardier answers, “That’s the ICBM complex at
Kodlosk,” and Kong designates the location as the new target. We cut back to
Muffly, telling Kissov, “We’re all in this together” before he hangs up and
asks Turgidson if the aircraft has a chance to succeed. Telling his president
that “you just can't expect a bunch of ignorant peons to understand a machine
like some of our boys,” Turgidson, after apologizing to the ambassador,
enthuses about his pilots, spreading his arms to mime a plane and saying that
if one is “really... sharp, he can barrel that baby in so low - you oughtta see
it sometime, it's a sight. A big plane, like a '52, vroom! There's jet exhaust, flyin' chickens in the barnyard!” Muffley,
exasperated, repeats, “Has he got a chance?”
and Turgidson, carried away, starts, “Hell ye…..” then, looking around, puts
his hand over his mouth.
{Now would be a good place to uncover
Lacan’s discussion of the meaning of the nipple to the infant,} that in dealing
with o, he is dealing with the Other, with the big Other, the mother{, and
notes that the next stage is the first one in which a child} has occasion to
recognize himself in something … around which [the demand of the mother turns.]
{Our professor reminds his students of the ensuing sublimated satisfactions,
then notes that in the order of causality he is describing, the symptom is a
result and, as to desire, w}e have there a certain relationship of the
constitution of the subject as divided, as ambivalent, in relation to a demand
of the Other. [20]
We hear the B-52’s dogged theme as Kong’s plane approaches
its target, and we see the men cooperate in preparing to complete their mission.
At Kong’s request, the bombardier, Lieutenant Lothar Zogg, flicks a switch to
check the bomb door circuits, but the display for the door indicator lights up
the word, “closed.” We get a closeup of Zogg’s worried face as he flicks
another switch several times with no success. He reports, “negative function,” then,
at Kong’s suggestions, he attempts other ways to get the door open. After he
tries emergency power, we get a closeup of the “closed” light flashing, then we
cut to the pilot’s exasperated face as he barks, “operate manual override!” When
that doesn’t work, he orders, “Fire the explosive bolts!” but the “closed”
light continues to flash. Finally, removing his earphones, Kong tells his
co-pilot to take over while he goes below. We watch the pilot make his way down
[21] into the bomb bay [22], carrying a flashlight. Seeing some hanging wires
shooting sparks above one of the weapons, the pilot climbs on top of it, waving
at the sparks with his cowboy hat. We get close-ups of him, laboring with the wires,
interspersed with exterior shots of the plane as well as shots of the men
announcing their increasing proximity to the target. Finally, the navigator
says, “Target in sight - Where in hell is Major Kong?” We cut back to Kong as
the doors start to open, his scared expression changing to one of ecstasy as he
grabs his hat and lets out an “Aaaaaa hoooo!” We briefly cut back to the
bombardier, also asking where Kong is before we see the Major, riding the missile
as if it were a bronco, yelling, “Waaaaa hooooo!” The camera slowly pulls
back as the bomb goes from a horizontal to a vertical position, and we see the
ground come toward us before the screen goes white and the sound cuts out - We then
hear the explosion and see the mushroom cloud.
{This scene can help us retain our
next segment, where our professor reminds us of the formula of castration, and
that} the moment of the advance of jouissance, of the jouissance of the Other
and towards the jouissance of the Other, involves the constitution of
castration as a pledge of this encounter{, and he describes female jouissance
as} crushed in phallic nostalgia and henceforth is required, I would say almost
condemned to only love the male other at a point situated beyond the one at
which, she also, stops him as desire{. He then relates the formula to
obsession, repeating} that the metaphors of gift here are only metaphors. And
as is only too obvious, he gives nothing. The woman neither. And nevertheless
the symbol of the gift is essential for the relationship to the Other; it is
the supreme act, we are told, and even the total social act. {Restating the
borrowing of this metaphor, “the gift of love,” from the anal sphere, our
professor turns to the link between} possession, in the world, of territory and
of security for sexual union. [23 (scholarly citations removed)]
We get a shot from a low point of view of the shadowed figure
of Dr. Strangelove spinning his wheelchair away from the Big Board to face
Muffley. Pulling into the light, he advises using mine shafts, where
radioactivity couldn’t penetrate, “to preserve a nucleus of human specimens.”
Trying to answer the President’s query, he pulls out a circular slide rule to
calculate how long the specimens would need to stay there. He responds,
“possibly uh…one hundred years,” and, after some difficulty with his gloved
right hand, returns the slide rule to within his blazer. To Muffley’s
skepticism, the doctor says, “It would not be difficult mein Fuhrer! Nuclear
reactors could, heh... I'm sorry. Mr. President. Nuclear reactors could provide
power almost indefinitely. Greenhouses could maintain plantlife. Animals could
be bred and slaughtered. A quick survey
would have to be made of all the available mine sites in the country. But I
would guess... that ah, dwelling space for several hundred thousands of our
people could easily be provided.” He then eases Muffley’s worries about
deciding on who would live and die, saying that a computer could make these
decisions based on various factors, such as youth, health, and fertility. We
get a shot of the President and Turgidson together, the latter’s interest
aroused as the doctor, with a cunning smile, explains the need for top
government and military men “to foster and impart the required principles of
leadership and tradition.” We then see Strangelove’s uncooperative hand shoot
out in a Nazi salute, and his other fight it to get it back into his lap. While
Turgidson, eyes wide open and breathing through his mouth, listens, the doctor
describes the need for ten females to each male to return to the present gross
national product within twenty years. Continuing to struggle with his right hand,
he then answers Muffley’s concerns about the survivors being too grief stricken
to want to go on, saying that, since everyone would still be alive when the
specimens leave, “the prevailing emotion will be one of nostalgia for those
left behind, combined with a spirit of bold curiosity for the adventure ahead!”
After he beats down another salute, his gloved hand attempts revenge, gripping
his own neck, and we cut back to the President and Turgidson. The General asks
if the 10-to-1 ratio would not necessitate the abandonment of the “monogamous
sexual relationship, I mean, as far as men were concerned.” The doctor,
although regretting the “sacrifice,” adds that, “since each man will be
required to do prodigious … [here he looks down at his (off-camera) lap and
strikes the now unseen right hand with his (also unseen) left] service along
these lines, the women will have to be selected for their sexual
characteristics which will have to be of a highly stimulating nature.” We cut
to the ambassador complimenting him on his “astonishingly good idea,” then see
him walk away as Turgidson and another general advise Muffley to prepare for
the risk of a foreign threat to the survivors and their mine shaft space. Turgidson
continues to pontificate as we follow DeSadeski and watch him kneel down and take
pictures of the Big Board with a camera disguised as a pocket watch. We cut
back to the General as he rises, concluding, “Mr. President, we must not
allow... a mine shaft gap!” Strangelove also rises and says, “I have a plan,”
taking a couple steps before exclaiming, “Mein Fuhrer - I can walk!” We
hear Vera Lynn lead a chorus in the song, “We’ll Meet Again” as we see numerous
shots of nuclear bombs exploding, then we fade to black.
{At the end of our current lecture,
Lacan points out that animals, including birds, feel invincible within the
limits of their territory but become timid when outside of it, but that} up to
the present nothing explains to us the very particular relationships of the
obsessional to his desire. {Up to this level, although the divided subject and
the impossible union are symbolized, desire is not. Our professor identifies
the link in the} relationship between the specular reflection of the
narcissistic support of the mastery of self and the field, the locus, of the
Other{, then repeats,} the degree of luxuriance reached by [an obsessive’s]
phantasies, which are ordinarily never carried out, but after all it can happen
that through all sorts of conditions which postpone more or less indefinitely
the putting into action, he gets there, he gets there better, it even happens
that others overcome for him the space of the obstacle, a subject who develops
very early as a magnificent obsessional may happen to be in a family of
dissolute people. {Pointing out the prevalence of Christ associations for
western obsessionals, he then relates gods to} The ego-ideal, when at this
level what it is a matter of covering over, is anxiety, takes the omnipotent
form. The phantasy of ubiquity in the obsessional, the phantasy which is also
the support on which there come and go the multiplicity of his desires, which
are always to be rejected further away, it is there that he seeks and finds the
complement of what is necessary for him to constitute himself in desire. {Alluding
to Plato and the different ways people manifest belief in god(s,) Lacan promises
for next class to} highlight the relationship between the obsessional phantasy,
posed as a structure of his desire, and the anxiety which determines it. [24
(scholarly citations removed)]
After such a bleak ending, I thought this article [25] might offer some encouragement.
1. Stanley Kubrick, Terry Southern and Peter George. Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop
Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964.) in: visual-memory.co.uk. (Undated.)
Based on the book: Red Alert by Peter
George (1958.)
2. Jacques Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[252] from The Seminar of Jacques Lacan,
Book X. (1962-63.) pp. 252 - 270. in: springhero.wordpress.com. (January 27
– February 5, 2011.)
3. Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[253]
4. In fact, for the rest of the movie, this theme plays
through every scene of the B-52 and its passengers.
5. Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[253-254]
6. Inside the door is a page from Playboy or a similar magazine, a page with a number of pictures of women
with most or all of their faces cropped.
7. Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[254-255]
8. The President’s aide, Staines, tells him that the Secretary
of State is in Vietnam, the Secretary of Defense is in Laos, and the Vice
President is in Mexico City.
9. Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[255-256]
10. Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[256-258]
11. Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[258]
12. Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[259]
*…whose import one is only “able to perceive if, as I very sufficiently indicated to you, you see that the nipple forms part of the inner world of the subject and not of the body of the mother.”
*…whose import one is only “able to perceive if, as I very sufficiently indicated to you, you see that the nipple forms part of the inner world of the subject and not of the body of the mother.”
13. Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[260]
14. Interestingly, in the first shot of Strangelove, he
appears to have ashes and a large stain on his jacket; when we see him near the
end, his suit looks as if it has just been cleaned. Also, that latter scene has
Staines sitting on Muffley’s right and Turgidson on his left, but as we near
the end and hear the details of Strangelove’s plan, the frame shows only the
President and the General.
15. Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[261]
16. Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[262]
17. Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[263]
18. Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[263-264]
19. Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[265]
20. Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[266]
21. Oddly, as Kong checks in on the bombardier and DSO, the
ladder is positioned sideways from how it was when he had in the early scene,
and the trapdoor is much closer to the men.
22. We see nicknames in painted scrawls on the back of each
bomb; one is “Dear John,” the other, “Hi There!” Kong climbs on top of the
latter.
23. Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[267]
24. Lacan. “Anxiety.”
[267-270]
25. Maude Barlow, Meera Karunananthan. “Letting Corporations
Sue Governments Protecting the Environment is No Way to Solve the Water Crisis:
El Salvador fights to protect its water and people from ‘free trade.’” in: Common Dreams. (May 31, 2015)