Who Was Beowulf?
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
DIGG THIS
It
took twice through, but I’m finally convinced; Beowulf is a wonderful
film. There is plenty to recommend it, even if it had stuck to the
original plot line.
Nearly every
frame is beautiful and riveting. The visuals seemed to have borrowed
from the field of gaming, so you can never quite tell if what you
are looking at is real or animated. The music is a kick. Beowulf
is himself thrilling to watch, as are the monsters, dragons, swords,
and, above all, the time: it is set in the 6th-century
Scandinavia. The viewer is convinced that it must have been something
like this.
Having read
the
newest translation several years ago, by Seamus Heany, I was
not prepared for how the film would change the plot, which is rather
linear and boring in the original, but, hey, it’s the 10th
century, so who can complain? A monster vexes a town. Beowulf arrives
and kills it, kills the monster’s mother, and becomes king and then
does other amazing things before he dies a hero's death.
In the new
film version, this is a remarkable undercurrent. Hrothgar, the king
that comes before, has a hidden secret and it deals with the monster’s
mother. It seems that Grendel is his offspring, and the witch, played
by Angelian Joli, is irresistible to him, and, later, to Beowulf.
Beowulf kills Grendel and then sets out for the mother, who seduces
him into giving her yet another offspring that will return to torment
the community many years later. Beowulf lies, however. He had given
in to her, but only tells everyone that he killed her.
His secret
is known only to a few: his wife and his closest associate. Both
decide not to pass it on. He is a hero and generations will sing
his praises. So declare these court historians, and so it was to
be, in the official version. And so the official version has stood.
There is a
profoundly moral story here, much like Faustus. What we see are
the dreadful consequences of sin visiting themselves on many more
than just the sinner. The family is destroyed. The community is
destroyed. The path of history is distorted from its rightful journey
toward justice and truth onto another path of betrayal, hurt, suffering,
violence, degradation, and ruin.
Yes, the moral
can be described as Christian, and rigorously so. Indeed, there
is an overtly Christian theme in the movie. In an early scene, the
king is asked whether they should pray to the new Roman God named
Jesus Christ. No, he says, they don’t need Jesus; they need a hero.
Later in the film, the man who asks the question carries a crucifix,
and, even later, becomes a Christian monk, working to convert the
community and successfully so. (Why the Christian Right isn’t heralding
this movie is unclear.)
Is this just
another case of hero debunking in an age of cynicism, in which authentic
virtue is a myth and there is no one to admire? I don’t think so.
What’s at stake here is the reputation of leaders, who are a special
breed. The state organizes itself in order to celebrate itself.
It rules with the consensus of society, which also desires to celebrate
the state and its leaders. The head of state has to work very hard
not to emerge from this conspiracy as a hero.
We don’t have
to look far for examples. See Mount Rushmore. Are we really supposes
to believe the maniac, power-mad Theodore Roosevelt is godlike?
And let’s consider people who in private life would be considered
gangsters, thieves, liars, and murderers, men such as Abraham Lincoln
and Franklin Roosevelt. How is it that they came to have their images
on our nation’s money, that their glorious stories are taught to
all American schoolkids? That their lives are held up to us as models
of virtue and glory?
The underside
of government leadership is the primary subject of all revisionist
history, and this form of history is something we should always
give some benefit of the doubt. It is the official story of the
heroism of leadership that we should suspect. This is true even
with such untarnished demigods like George Washington, who, by all
revisionist accounts, was an incompetent general, a man who had
no sympathy for the original American idea, who jumped at the chance
to send in the troops to put down a tax rebellion. The father of
our country? Come on.
Have you visited
the Lincoln Memorial? Pure paganism, wrapped in state worship. There
he sits in the Temple of Democracy, with his hands on the fasces,
ruling us from the Heavens to which he clearly ascended after his
martyrdom – the glorification of power on display for all to us.
The tourists come and the tourists go. They figure that Lincoln
must have been pretty marvelous and think nothing more about it.
So
it might have – must have been – with Beowulf, the great warrior
who became the king. We know and do not question the version of
history handed down to us. We take his ancient hagiographers at
their word. But what was the truth? The film provides a credible
alternative history, but whether or not this is the true story,
the message is one we need to hear: power corrupts. If we care about
truth, we need to look at this corruption in its face, and learn
from it, and not merely believe what the court historians, from
our time or the 10th century, have told us.
November
24, 2007
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
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