Interpol Dude Makes, Like, A Film
03/03/2009

Bassist Dengler produces, stars in, and composes score for new 26-minute short. He also muses at length on the nature of celebrity.
By Blurt Staff
Apologies for the Pitchfork-style headline, but it seems appropriate here. My Friends Told Me About You is the filmmaking debut of Carlos Dengler, bassist for Interpol. The 26 minute short film targets "the idea of celebrity as affliction" - see Dengler's slightly eggheaded, Freudian explanation below (something about ego and the phallus) - and premieres in New York City at Anonymous Gallery on April 17th and runs through May 5.
Filmed around Chicago in 2007, MFTMAY charts the journey of a man at the beginning of a downward spiral. Paranoia, confusion, and anger start to color all that he knows to be true and as reality blurs with his subconscious fears, an alternate world propelled by violence and mistrust begins to take over. As sonic as it is visual, Dengler also composed the original score for MFTMAY in collaboration with acclaimed English clarinetist Ian Mitchell.
Carlos Dengler produced, stars in, and composed the original score for My Friends Told Me About You. MFTMAY is
co-produced by Todd Eckert, producer of award-winning Joy Division biopic, Control, which won the 2007 Cannes award for Best
European Feature.
According to Dengler, "Making My
Friends Told Me About You was a chance to explore the narrative potential
of sound and spectacle. The idea was to achieve the expression of film as a
composition, a tone poem of carefully selected cinematic effects and
gestures."
My Friends Told Me About You is a
main feature in Wholphin DVD Volume
#8, due Spring 2009. (Wholphin is the
quarterly DVD magazine of short films published by McSweeney's.)
To view the trailer for My Friends Told
Me About You go to:
www.myfriendstoldmeaboutyou.com
***
Carlos Dengler on "The Onset of Celebrity":
Celebrity is a kind of affliction, a malaise, in essence, a condition.
It is part of a psychosis derived from the overabundance of positive value
assignments made by a crowd choosing a particular visage to carry these assignments.
The wearer of this visage
experiences this assignment as something against his will. And thus,
understanding that he will never be able to meet all the people who have
assigned his visage this positive value within his lifetime, as there are too
many to meet in the limited time frame of his lifespan, the wearer of the
visage experiences this fact as a wound. This deep wound leads to the psychosis
called the onset of celebrity.
The inability of the man to manage all of these positive value assignments
within his lifetime is a crisis of identity in that he no longer is in charge
of his face; the crowd has taken it from him.
Upon the onset of celebrity the man experiences a fundamental rupture within
his psyche that transforms him into the famed-ego.
From the moment of the onset, the path of the famed-ego leads inexorably to
dehumanization. The famed-ego is in a continual state of mismanagement of its
relationships with the crowd as it is powerless to control the gradations of
esteem accrued upon the visage of the person ensconced around it. This abject
powerlessness produces a failure in causality between choice and consequence,
reducing the famed-ego to a state of total arbitrariness.
The visage is the chief signifier of singular, personal identity; it is the
meeting-point between the subjective reality of the ego and the objective
reality outside of the ego. Since the famed-ego is in a continual state of
mismanagement of this gateway, the social reality that has inundated it with
positive value assignments has effectively stolen his face.
In this vacuum of meaning, the famed-ego is disconnected from the self's
personhood. The inability to establish meaning for itself places the famed-ego
in an interminable bind of nihilism of action, a purgatory where no action or
reaction produces stability nor stepping-stone to personal fulfillment. This is
existential imprisonment, which is to say a total loss of free will. The self
can not feel its own humanity, know or show love; the crowd has stolen the face
and with that, the self collapses into the void of the onset of celebrity.
There is no break from this condition, no more than a person in a wheelchair
may break from his affliction and walk on two feet for a moment. Because the
onset of celebrity is an attenuation on the value of the visage dictated by a
social imperative, it places the famed-ego in a space over which it has no
control, under a condition of paralysis. The famed-ego inhabits a world in
which the social reality blockades its path choices. These blockades have a
logic known only to the collective responsible for positioning them, but the
famed-ego has no epistemological access to this logic. Thus, the famed-ego
experiences its reality as caprice.
Shackled in the catacomb of a universe of caprice, the famed-ego is barred from
participation in the agreement of the crowd; so it continues its life in
isolation from the crowd, in its own separate universe. As the agreed-upon
social reality of the crowd rubs against the isolation-universe of the famed
ego, a rupture from historical complicity occurs. In its isolation, the
famed-ego is banned from the shared historicity the crowd enjoys.
Celebrity is indeed a psychosis. But as one can glean from this account, it is
no simple hallucination nor mental condition. It is not treatable by medication
or therapy. It is an ontic-psychosis, a psychosis not of the mind but of
existence, the existence of the merciless electrical current that bonds the
crowd with the famed-ego.
The affliction of the onset of celebrity is a result of one of the logics of
the ontic plenum established by the crowd via their positive value assignment
to the visage. Thus, the famed-ego can not even locate a point of origin for
its psychosis within the development of its own ideation. That point of origin
is located from without the famed-ego's universe, at some arbitrary coordinate
within the ontic plenum of the crowd logic.
If celebrity is a malaise, it is a malaise acquiring its élan from social
forces willingly conspiring with each other in a type of concealed Totentanz.
This interaction congeals to the phenomenal realm, to the universe of things.
Celebrity is not just psychosis, a distortion of cognition isolated to synaptic
verities of particular mentation. It is ontic psychosis, a condition in which
the psychopath is a unity of social forces that bond the crowd with the
famed-ego and thrust the condition of celebrity into the milieu of an ontic
plenum established via social contract. Thus, the ontology of celebrity relies
heavily on the understanding that existence is an agreed upon reality.
--------------------------------
The famed-ego is entrenched in a hysterical purgatory.
This hysterical purgatory is the ontic node of the famed-ego's psychosis. It is
continually repositioned by the unknowable crowd logic that sets its condition
in the first place, like a pebble rolled over and over by the undulating
movements of a gigantic centipede.
As the centipede rolls this pebble over, the famed-ego, locked in its
purgatory, experiences life as a state of tragedy.
Tragedy is process. Process has procedure. Therefore, the onset of celebrity
has a procedure.
My Friends Told Me About You is the
photographic documentation of the nature of the procedure of the onset of
celebrity. It is the synaptic interface through which data transmissions leaked
from the onset of celebrity bottleneck into the filmic-narrative apparatus. The
real estate the movie occupies within the filmic-narrative apparatus is a
display case of the most excessive plot points from the onset of celebrity, the
points intense enough to push through the bottleneck and into the display case.
The film recasts the tragic procedure of the onset of celebrity as
surrealistic-tragic melodrama. It distills the highest degree of truthful
moments within the conceptual framework of the onset of celebrity and weaves
them into an arabesque depicting a collapsible reality across a comprehensive
experiential spectrum. It photographs an empirical tableau of excessiveness
from the vantage point of a Cartesian ego under the duress of fame. It
amplifies the conceptual nodes of the onset of celebrity as a crusade rife with
the agonies of the pursuit and acquisition of fame.
My Friends Told Me About You deploys
the dramatization of this pursuit as a primordial conflict between Man and
Woman. It assigns the famed-ego the phallus and instantiates it as a genderized
polarity called Man. To depict the rubbing-against of the famed-ego as-Man with
the "city limits" in which the crowd has ostracized him, it places
Man in opposition to Woman. In its isolation, the famed-ego can not see the
crowd that has placed it into its purgatory. However, in order to live the
struggle of its purgatorial realm, as Man, it contracts the horizon of
the crowd forces that constrict it into a genderized locus that opposes it.
This opposition is Woman.
The opposition between the famed-ego-as-Man and Woman is characterized in My
Friends Told Me About You as misogyny. In its tragic fall from grace, once it
has acquired a genderized articulation of identity, the famed-ego experiences
its purgatorial isolation as a total Loss of Love. The absence of Love is Hate,
and thus the opposition this absence spawns takes on the character of
Disrespect for Woman, or misogyny.
Misogyny in My Friends Told Me About You is
an effusion of imagination that results from the catatonic rupture occurring in
the psyche of the famed-ego from the onset of celebrity. It is a component of
the epic complex of suspicion and paranoia that constitutes the empirical
tableau exhibited across the photographic slideshow of then film's display
case. The failure to establish a reliable temporal axis of linearity and the
excursiveness of the event horizon of the film's narrative are necessarily
symptomatic narrative structures emanating from this epic complex, of which
misogyny is but one component.
The process of narration of the procedure of the onset of celebrity involves
the operations of the handed-down filmic-narrative apparatus colluding with the
conceptual axes of three resonances, nonlinearity, surrealism, and misogyny,
which operate on a metatextual level.
This totality is the instruction of a tragedy.
The onset of celebrity is a tragic fall from grace and dehumanization of the
famed-ego by the crowd agreement to assign its visage positive value. It is an
atemporal process resultant from the concurrence of psychic-ontic effusions
from the social reality. Thus, the onset of celebrity can not be a story per
se; but it requires narration, a specific type of narration, to illustrate
itself. As the onset of celebrity acquires articulation through narrative, its
conceptual framework is infused with particularity. As the narration unfolds,
we see this particularity, of necessity, as devastation.











