Thursday, June 4, 2009

Toccata for Toy Trains vs. The Fountainhead

Watching Ray and Charles Eames' Toccata for Toy Trains (1957) and Ayn Rand & King Vidor's The Fountainhead (1949), I noticed a strange dissonance between the two works. Apart from the obvious differences (that one is a short, the other feature length, one is experimental, the other Hollywood etc.), one particular anomaly seemed to stick out the most; that Toccata for Toy Trains was a far more enjoyable and human experience than The Fountainhead.

Toccata for Toy Trains is populated entirely by toys made of metal, wood and plastic, it has no dialogue, and no story to speak of. The Fountainhead is character-focused and dialogue heavy, and its cast is made up of popular, well known actors. Yet I found myself drawn towards the first film, and indifferent to the second. Somehow the two films seemed to have switched places, so that Toccata for Toy Trains feels as though it's filled with people, while The Fountainhead comes across as cold, mechanical and distant.

Toccata for Toy Trains achieves this humanising effect through movement, rapid editing, and its focus on the toys from an angle that makes them appear life-sized. Through this, the toys shed their appearance as mere commodities - as simple, lifeless objects - and are given the breath of life. In the world of Toccata for Toy Trains, where toys go about their business free of human influence and witnessed by us at eye-level, how could we imagine them as anything less than living?

As The Fountainhead begins, we are shown a montage of Howard Roark being scolded for his stubborn attitude by various figures of the establishment. This sequence - which is designed to immediately establish the ideas the film will present us - shows Roark only from behind. Throughout these opening shots we see only the back of his head; a shot that is replicated again as Roark sits in court, awaiting the results of his trial. In denying the audience a view of Roark's face, the filmmakers deny the audience any chance of connecting with his character. Without a face, we can't see how he feels about his situation, and so we are held back at a distance. Characters speak more like mouthpieces for Rand's philosophy than they would as real, and therefore emotional, human beings. Roark usually answers people with a cold "yes" or "no". He is blunt and all conversation is simply a way to further explain his attitude to life.

The Fountainhead's characters, who serve as examples to explain Rand's thinking, thus comes across as not only preachy, but as an attempt to educate, rather than entertain. Toccata for Toy Trains is pure enjoyment - it is playful and fun. Many people, especially as children, fantasize about their toys having lives of their own, of being real and alive, and the Eames' film is a realisation of this fantasy. It has a dreamlike quality to it, yet it is completely unaware of itself - the toys live as real people do, without irony or self-awareness.

Perhaps the two films, and the striking differences they suggest exist between people and commodities in the modern world, offers us an understanding of how much our relationship to our property has changed and of how we ourselves have changed because of this. We can easily imagine situations in which people say they love their phones, or where someone names their car. Products have become more than simple objects, as Toccata for Toy Trains suggests. We have given them their own lives by making them so important to us in ours, and, as The Fountainhead implies, we have lost something of ourselves because of this. No longer are people just people and things just things; throughout modernity, we find ourselves becoming united as a single entity, so that people without objects, are not fully human at all.

**** just in case things sounded muddled, I want to note here that in the last paragraph I'm not talking about the ideas in The Fountainhead, but rather the way in which the film expresses itself.

3 comments:

  1. I was also transfixed by the Toccata piece, for the reasons you mentioned. Also, I found that as it was incredibly easy to get over the initial concession that what we were watching were just little 'toy' models, I then began to see more and more 'realism' in what the Eames were depicting, notably through the use of lenses, focus pulls, and depth-of-field compositions.

    It was as if all the sensations of life were there, just without life itself.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Indeed, Roark would be nothing without his buildings. This is why he cannot comprimise them as he would comprimise himself.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Ah, but toy trains run on tracks, much as Rand's characters follow entirely her directions.

    That was probably unnecessary. I mean, yes, all of that was true and good.

    ReplyDelete