Saturday, October 24, 2009

An Indicative Scene?

So, while watching A Serious Man, for some reason a scene from the Wire popped into my head. It was the one in which Marlo steals a lollipop or some crap from a corner store when he knows the security guard is watching, and then when confronted outside says to the guy, "You want it to be one way. But it's the other way." I've been trying to clarify what he is saying. It's important that he says the other way, not an other way. There are, in his view, two possible ways the world can be. One is the way the security guard wants to see it. The first way, the one in which, when he goes outside to talk to Marlo, the security guard engages in a conversation based on mutual respect that ends with Marlo acknowledging that though the law abiding life is not the one he has chosen, it is a valid one. It is a way that, despite the reality of drugs and violence, is based on principles and a kind of moral code. But for Marlo, principle takes second seat to his ego, to his attachment to his "name."
I found the clip on youtube,


and there were some insightful comments following the clip. There were several that caught my attention. The first was about Marlo's obsession with power, which I think is supported very well by the lollitheft. Marlo has no reason not to pay for it, and he makes sure the guard sees him and realizes he can do nothing. The second comment noted the difference between Marlo and most of the other players. Stringer, Avon, Omar, even Prop Joe etc. These men have very different goals from Marlo, and, despite often producing the same results, different ways of operating. I think the closest anyone comes of the four is Stringer, when he mutilates Brandon. I think that "other way" as Marlo expresses it, is the way in which it is whether you win or lose, not how you play the game.
There are many examples of criminals, though breaking the law, following specific rules. The Sunday truce for example, or basically anything Omar does (that guys a walking code of honour). Can you picture Avon stealing that candy, or Stringer. Definitely not Omar, remember the time he robs the stash in that store and then pays for cigarettes?
I think David Simon is demonstrating more than just the differences between these characters. I think that when Stanfield says "it's the other way," he's speaking to us as viewers as well. Most of the characters in The Wire, despite being involved in the drug trade, or crooked police, or part of the structure perpetuating suffering, are sympathetic. We like Avon, we like Omar, we like Brother Muzone. Stringer, maybe not so much, but he is closer morally to Marlo than the others. Marlo is reminding us of the reality. The "game" we see on the Wire, the one Bodie talks about when he is reminiscing about the days before Marlo, is idealized, romanticized, just like what we're watching. The unprincipled reality that we see briefly through Marlo is probably much closer to the real thing than the rest of the show.
Despite the tragedy of the cycle apparent in The Wire, we see Marlo getting "justice" at the end of the series (and here I am deriving from another YouTube comment), through the ruin of his name. This, with the cast of likeable drug dealers and crooked cops, serves to remind us that although this series is closer to reality than the vast majority of crap on TV, we're still watching extremely well written and socially important television. It's still entertainment, and we are seeing it one way, but it's probably the other way.

3 comments:

  1. Avon also brings up "that other thing" when he is relating the way he play's the game to Stringer. He is talking about the honour and muscle behind his name which draws a parallel between him and Marlo as well.
    Stringer and Avon are a dynamic duo who each excel in different aspects of the game where Marlo maybe embodies traits of each. What undoes B&B is distrust in their relationship, something a man and his crown wouldn't have to face.

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  2. True Dat, but I still think Avon and Marlo are different in a key way that also makes Stringer and Marlo very similar. Avon observes the Sunday truce, sticks by D'Angelo even when he pushes Avon away, and gives up Stringer to Brother Muzone. All of these things done on principle, a recognition of a certain type of code. Stringer kills D'Angelo, turns mother against son, mutilates Brandon, gets with D'Angelo's girl, and tries to bribe his way into international business without putting in his time. I think this is far closer to Marlo's general attitude, wanting his name to "ring out," without regard to whether it rings out in fear or respect.

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  3. Avon and Prop Joe share that code, like weathered knights. Their respect for a code makes them more humanistic, or maybe the code shows through in areas of sympathy rather than malice. Like the Sunday truce.
    Avon's human side is best explored in the first season. Remember when he takes D'Angelo to the hospital to visit his brother(?), he confides all of his fear of death in D'Angelo. The message being their shared inheritance does not insulate them from the game. Later in the season we watch Avon scurry from building to car time and again for fear of either being seen or shot.

    Stringer never really plays to a human side, but his character isn't nearly as developed in the fist season.

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