"Black dog"
When people talk about wanting more "quality" television, they
usually mean programming like The Gathering Storm. It has
all the elements of "quality tv" as established by, say, PBS's
Masterpiece Theater, including respectable (even
venerable) stars and topics fit for high school history or
civics class. However, despite being thoughtfully constructed
and acted, this is not a movie for thinkers, which, in its way,
may also be an element of "quality tv."
Although the film shares its name with Winston Churchill's
memoirs and a 1974 British made-for-TV movie based on them, this
version is no epic. Anyone who has heard about the 2002 The
Gathering Storm at all has likely heard it is about Winston
Churchill "the man" (here played by Albert Finney) and his
relationship with his wife Clementine (Vanessa Redgrave, and
both she and Finney have received rightful praise for their
performances). Though the film leans occasionally toward being a
heroic biopic (we know who is good or who is evil, who knows of
what he speaks and who is ignorant), it also provides humanizing
ephemera about Churchill, elaborating somewhat on the fairly
well known fact that he was a moody depressive.
Displaying the personal lives of larger-than-life historical
figures runs the risk of overly debasing them through too much
disclosure. But while we see Finney's Churchillian posterior as
he prepares to bathe, this is not an investigation of corporal
desires. This is History, framed artfully. The scene in which we
see Churchill bathing is a emblem of his renewal: he removes his
clothes, is cleansed, is contemplative, and begins to resurrect
his career, and, according to this narrative, his love affair
with Clementine. It's as if he were going through a quiet but
crucial period of rebirth before emerging as the pink-faced idol
we know from photos and newsreels. (I do wonder, if someone
makes a movie about Margaret Thatcher or Golda Meir's late
years, how much of her aging female body we would see.)
The point here is that Churchill is "human," that he has faults.
That is, we not only see him naked, but also broke, depressed,
forsaken by his wife, and mocked by his peers. The period
covered by The Gathering Storm shows Churchill after his
infamy in British political circles, but before
international fame. In the scenes in Parliament, for example, he
is clearly well known, but considered by some to be a
reactionary, outdated warmonger. Fortunately for Churchill, he
proves to be correct about Germany.
The simplicity with which this film's Parliament addresses war
is troublesome. Basically, two points of view are presented:
that of Churchill, who contends that Germany is arming for war
and preparing a campaign of genocide; and that of most of
everyone else, supporting isolationism in the name of continued
trade revenue from continental Europe. There is no room here for
characters who might have other or more complex analyses. This
is tricky for viewers with hindsight regarding the Holocaust.
The film positions those viewers to agree with Churchill, which
means supporting more war. Who could possibly argue that
stopping the Nazis might require caveats? I won't do it.
The one character who voices concern about personal
responsibility for death and destruction is a young family man
and mid-level bureaucrat in the foreign office, Ralph Wilgram
(Linus Roache, who makes the most of this small role). This
character suggests how compelling Churchill was, in that he
convinces the rule-abiding Wilgram to jeopardize his career,
reputation, and family life to provide Churchill with
confidential government documents. Churchill, according to this
narrative, is a solitary man by reputation only. In addition to
having servants and assistants, not to mention Clementine, to
manage his daily life, he also has cadres of "little people,"
acolytes like Wilgram who, depending on whom you ask, either are
mentored by Winston or are used by him.
What The Gathering Storm does not do is consider the
complexities of war and politics. (This might be considered
strange, given that Churchill thought a lot about such things.)
Though it's focused on that moment when England was on the brink
of entry into World War II, the film is surprisingly inert,
presenting vignettes of a superficially quiet nation while
hinting heavily that just beyond the calm is quite a mess, both
for England and Churchill.
It is in this context that the film addresses "the man's"
chronic melancholia, which he poetically calls his "black dog."
Less poetically but more accurately, The Gathering Storm
also shows that Churchill endured a combination of egoism and
depression that sucked the life out of people around him. The
film shows him to be irritable and often cold to his family
members, friends, and staff, while still expecting devotion,
immediate attention, forgiveness, and compassion from them in
return. Churchill was politically brilliant and an asshole --
but we already knew that. What we didn't know before, and what
The Gathering Storm offers, is insight in to the
day-to-day details of life with him.
7 May 2002