Kurt Vonnegut: Unstuck in Time
Written by Robert Weide
Directed by Robert Weide, Don Argott
In cinemas
鈥淟isten, Billy Pilgrim has come unstuck in time,鈥 wrote Kurt Vonnegut聽in his most famous novel, Slaughterhouse-Five.
Vonnegut, like the novel鈥檚 Billy Pilgrim, witnessed the effects of the Allied fire-bombing of Dresden in World War II 鈥斅燼 massacre and a war crime. In the novel, Pilgrim mentally flees the terrible memories by fantasising about extraterrestrial time travel, but can鈥檛 stop his mind from straying back to the trauma.
At a critical moment in Slaughterhouse-Five, Vonnegut breaks through in the first person: 鈥淭hat was I. That was me. That was the author of this book.鈥
Being 鈥渦nstuck in time鈥 is an apt metaphor for post-traumatic stress syndrome and reflects聽Vonnegut鈥檚 experience. His coping mechanism was the mordant humour that he used in person and in his many literary works 鈥斅爄ncluding 14 novels 鈥斅爐o deflect attention from his sorrow.
It allowed him to explore deep issues under a聽cover of apparent flippancy. It won him a mass audience, after decades of struggling to make it as an author.
The documentary聽shows Vonnegut聽joking and his desolation as he reflects on his life鈥檚 trajectory. It covers his entire personal history, parenting abilities (atrocious), struggle to become a writer,聽friendships and loneliness.
Slaughterhouse-Five was published just as the US public became aware of the M峄 Lai massacre in Vietnam. The youthful anti-war movement adopted Vonnegut as one of their own.
In the documentary聽it is said that, just as people today read Mark Twain to understand 19th century聽America, future generations will turn to Vonnegut to grasp 20th century US reality. The America these readers will discover is populated by over-consuming, emotionally stunted people maintaining silence about national crimes against humanity.
Slaughterhouse-Five was the point where Vonnegut was propelled from obscurity to celebrity, turning his life on its head. Overnight he went from being a grumpy, barely known writer supported by his loving wife, bent over his typewriter with his seven children rioting outside, to acclaim, divorce and writer鈥檚 block.
His children say that they had no idea what was going on inside him until they read his books. Neither of his wives speak for themselves in the movie, so their feelings are unknown.
Filmmaker Robert Weide gained Vonnegut鈥檚 approval to make a documentary about him in the 1980s, and the project continued intermittently over the decades until Vonnegut鈥檚 death in 2007.
In the process, the two became close friends and Vonnegut gifted Weide many of his personal archives. So, just as Vonnegut鈥檚 novels weave disparate elements and timelines, Weide鈥檚 documentary is non-linear 鈥斅爑nstuck in time as well.
He cuts back and forth between many interviews with Vonnegut鈥檚 children and friends to expose different layers of meaning.
The film聽uses footage of Vonnegut鈥檚 public speeches, for which people packed auditoriums to the rafters to listen to. He was hilarious, cynical and scathing about US warmongering.
Weide is the touchstone between the components;聽the authorial voice聽holding the narrative together, surveying Vonnegut鈥檚 biography and his own part in it.
His film is as much a work of love for a dear friend as a glowing tribute to a great and suffering writer who exposed the core futility of US culture.
[The trailer for聽Kurt Vonnegut: Unstuck in Time can be seen .]